Letting
Gites Successfully
New
Legislation.
Ferry prices and the cost of travel to France are
doing nothing to help the depressed markets. Owners providing accommodation
at the smaller, cheaper end of the market are likely to be hardest
hit as travel costs surpass the cost of renting many properties, making
the package look financially unattractive. Blame was initially laid
at the feet of the European commission in Brussels for the loss of
revenue from duty free sales but costs have continued to spiral since
then. These companies know they will lose a certain number of passengers,
maybe as many as 3-4% of those taking short breaks and holidays but
this will be more than compensated by the
increase in revenue. Day-trippers, knowing the savings that can be
made by buying their alcohol and cigarettes in France will not decline
significantly. The bottom line is profit and all these companies are
driven by their shareholders. Short-term solutions always cause long
term and bigger problems. Once lost, clients are more difficult to
attract back, especially if they find other destinations that they
can enjoy. Rising motoring costs also add to the equation along with
poor weather which was responsible for thousands of French tourists
deserting France this year for the warmer climes of the Spanish Costa's.
Smaller parties will definitely find it more attractive to fly into
Toulouse, Carcassonne and the other moe southerly airports. People
do not use the ferries or the tunnel because they want to, but because
they cannot circumnavigate them. They are a necessity only if people
have the desire to visit France in the first place and they may well
be the cause of them not coming next year.
To compound this problem, interest rates are at an
all time low in the UK, bringing a weaker pound and confidence in
the UK economy is floundering. This does nothing to help see a return
of the mid-season visitor who is dependent on the returns on his savings
to supplement his income. This is not the time to be complacent as
a weak pound creates problems to those seeking a decent exchange rate
and a downturn could just as easily be around the corner. Just to
throw another spanner in the works, Tony Blair, bless him, is planning
on shortening the summer school holidays. They will be staggered over
a period, depending on county or area, with five terms with two week
breaks. This could work in our favour but until we are fully aware
of the details it is hard to say. The brochures generally do a good
job. Let's hope they have some innovative marketing strategies and
are not dependent on the same boring let's stick an advertisement
in the Sunday papers and hope for the best. It's a tried and trusted
formula but will it make people think about coming to France? "Ah,
but I'm advertising on the Internet and that gives me access to the
world." I hear you say. I'm afraid it does't; it gives you access
to people who either know the address of the web site or stumble across
it whilst trying to find accommodation. The Internet is only an electronic
magazine with billions of pages. This is why you see Internet companies
advertising their web addresses on the television. I've heard of companies
providing Internet advertising for as little as £20.00. Sounds
like a bargain until you ask yourself where the revenue is going to
be generated from to promote the site? If the Internet site is only
being advertised in the UK the bulk of people visiting it are likely
to be British and that market is flagging badly.
The fact that you are reading this gives you a distinct
advantage over 92% of the people letting holiday accommodation in
France. You speak English, as do Americans, Dutch, Scandinavians,
Germans, Irish, most Europeans and the rest of the world who have
had a decent level of education. How many of these nationalities stayed
in your property this year? These are all markets that need developing
by being given access to the information required in
order to find you. So, if you are advertising on the Internet, is
the site being advertised globally? It would not be economic for you
to mount a global advertising strategy so make sure that the brochure
or Internet advertising company to whom you have entrusted your marketing
has the esources and understands what is required of them. The only
way to guarantee increasing demand is to widen our market. (Click
here) The way to do that is to increase awareness of the benefits
to a wider audience and so increase desire. If the cost of travel
continues to rise, remember that there are 330 million people living
in Europe who don't have to cross the channel. The Dutch and Germans
are visiting in even greater numbers as are Scandinavians but how
often do you see an Italian or Spanish number plate? Language barriers
and lack of access to information are the main cause but I believe
these countries have enormous potential for development.
With fares so high, it is even more important to
get your marketing right. People have to be given good reasons to
visit France and client loyalty is going to play an even more significant
role in who retains and increases their market share. Service, access
to information and costs are more important today than they have ever
been and quality and security for the consumer is going to be the
predominant factor when it comes to choosing a property.
The European direct letting market comprises of hundreds
of thousands of individuals and small businesses that provide holidays
to millions of people every year. A multi-million pound business that
unlike agencies, tour operators and travel agents does not currently
have any specific controlling EU directives. Most countries in Europe
have the equivalent of ABTA and ATOL regulating their sector of the
tourist industry. Subsequently, most EU directives are based on what
these associations have already put in place. However, the direct
letting market does not benefit from these umbrellas. With the number
of complaints rising regarding poor accommodation, misrepresentation,
double bookings with people arriving to find the house they have booked
unavailable and in a number of cases this year, people turning up
to find that the property in fact did not exist. Scams like the latter
are rising, with con men placing advertisements for properties and
even producing brochures. They then sell the same weeks repeatedly
only to disappear a fortnight before the first guests arrive. This
is an industry that depends enormously on trust and fraud like this
taints everyone. What other product is sold on the basis of parting
with thousands of pounds based on a couple of photographs and a description.
Direct letting is the last area of tourism that has no specific legislation,
but a recent EU working party suggests that this is about to change.
When it does, the consequences could be disastrous to many property
owners; unless the industry as a whole
puts its house in order. By the time the EU
commissioners have put together a common legislative policy that will
cover every aspect and eventuality with regards to building standards,
consumer rights and industry practices throughout Europe we will have
regulations that will be unworkable for many property owners. Greece
has building regulations because of earthquakes, UK laws insist on
fire retardant furniture, French laws are being introduced regarding
enclosed and single depth swimming pools and Italy insists on electrical
sockets being
set more than 1m30 high. No doubt the Spanish who appear to have few
sensible regulations, not to be left, out will insist on all houses
being equipped with a paella dish and some bulls ears nailed to the
door. Worse still would be the introduction of price controls, like
Gites de France and the CAA. Whilst we have to recognise that some
laws will be necessary, it will be in everyone's interest to be self-regulating
rather than legislated by central government. Sadly, we all get tarred
with the same brush and with more watchdog programmes and journalists
targeting our industry we make a very soft target.
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