Welcome to Kankakee County, IL home of the Chicago Bears Summer Training Camp, Barn Quilts, the Kankakee River and more. The mission of the CVB is to create vibrant growth for the local economy by promoting Kankakee County as an overnight destination, increasing visitor awareness and developing a united tourism industry. Get updates on attractions and events in Kankakee County... an affordable destination just an hour south of Chicago at our website, www.visitkankakeecounty.com.
Showing posts with label lodging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lodging. Show all posts
Friday, March 7, 2014
Heartland Travel Showcase, March 7-9, 2014
Kankakee County CVB will be attending Heartland Travel Showcase in Ohio this weekend. This showcase invites tour operators from North America that run tours to the Heartland region to meet one-on-one with vendors like the CVB, to showcase their attractions. More than 100 operators from Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Ontario, Canada will be on hand at Heartland Travel Showcase.
Unlike many other shows, Heartland Travel Showcase allows the Kankakee County CVB to bring experiences right to the buying floor and build relationships directly with tour operators. In addition to personal appointment times with operators, we can showcase our area to a variety of groups during the open floor times.
Group travel is strong in the Midwest, according to Heartland Travel, 92% of operators reported more customers in 2013 over the previous year. Heartland Travel also reports an average of $33,000 is spent per each motorcoach visit to an area. This includes money spent on lodging, dining, tickets to attractions/events, fuel and retail sales.
Contact the Kankakee County CVB to get more information on group travel.
Monday, December 23, 2013
Six Travel Trends to watch in 2014
Trend #1. Impact of millennials
Trend #2. Seniors are unstoppableTrend #3. Rise of conspicuous leisureTrend #4. Growth of ‘creative tourism’Trend #5. Strength of luxury travel Trend #6. More multigenerational travel
Please visit their website for more information on these emerging trends. Contact the Kankakee County CVB for more information.
Monday, November 11, 2013
4 Social Media Strategies for the Holiday Season
As the
holiday season quickly approaches, you may be asking yourself, how do I promote
my hotel during the holidays? Using social media, of course! The opportunities
to capture the holiday traveler's attention are nearly unlimited. In this video, explore four strategies to engage and convert your social media
audience this season, including design tips, promotion suggestions, and video
concepts.
- Holiday-ify your profiles' designs. Add a little flare to your profile icons and cover images to stay fresh for your audience.
- Create a holiday focused promotion or contest. Take advantage of Facebook's recent relaxation of the promotion guidelines, or go all out and create an interactive custom application to build engagement and increase your social reach.
- Leverage repeat-posts with holiday themes. The holidays are a time for fun and impatience. Help build excitement (and repeat engagement) with a countdown of your own, rewarding users and encouraging them to share.
- Create holiday themed videos. Let your employees share their excitement and voice by shooting short clips of them giving thanks this season, and upload them to Vine or Instagram.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Responding to RFP’s
Electronic RFP’s are a standard in the event planning
industry. Meeting planners can contact several potential properties with the
click of a button, resulting in overloaded in boxes in the sales department. As
a result, the vast majority of sales offices fall short on response times, even
when it is a hot lead for low demand dates.
More often than not, those who inquire about dates that are
sold out, or those that have needs that cannot be met at this time by the
property, fail to receive any response. This leaves the meeting planners
hanging and leads to frustration and complaints, not to mention a loss of any
future business from that client. It seems that at most booking properties, no
one responds anymore to say, “We are fully committed for your requested dates,
but if your plans are flexible we would welcome a chance to look at other
options.” Few if any respond to say “Since your meeting space cannot
accommodate a group of this size, we do hope you will keep us in mind when you
are planning smaller meetings.”
Here are a few tips
to help get more mileage from RFP’s – even if your property is not available:
1. Respond promptly to all inquiries, even those
for which you have no inventory or otherwise cannot meet their specifications.
Plans change as meeting details are finalized, and many planners are involved
with multiple meetings. A well worded response indicating those dates are not
available that provides the planner with alternate dates and a description of
what you can offer may make the difference for another meeting date. Utilize
your word processing software or brand resource tools to develop templates to
streamline the process so every planner receives a response, whether you can
accommodate the proposed dates or not.
2. Never assume that your property isn't right for
a prospective client or that your rates will be too high. Limiting yourself to
this mindset could result in missing out on potential future business if the
planner coordinates multiple events with different requirements.
3. Even if you have hosted an event or group in the
past, don’t assume they will choose your facility without receiving a response
from you. Perhaps the planner’s objectives for the event have changed or they
are not aware of a recent upgrade to your property. Taking the time to send an
appropriate response such as “since your last event we now offer (new item) and
look forward to continuing to serve you needs.”
4. Just because you did not win the bid for an
event in the past does not mean you shouldn’t respond to future bids. Consider
that although you may not have gotten business in the past, you don't know that
organization didn't recently have a problem at the hotel that did get the
business. So, always respond.
Need more ideas? Contact the Kankakee County CVB for more information on responding to RFP’s.
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Event crowd size counting; why it’s important
Knowledge is power at the negotiating table. To achieve an
outcome that is the best value for an event means having data to back up an
explanation for why such things as reduced rates or comp rooms are in a hotel
partner’s best interest. Rights holders need to track attendance numbers over
time to accurately define economic impact generated from the event. Having an
accurate attendance number gives you an advantage when negotiating fees and requesting
sponsorships; you have the history of how many people attend the event.
Most importantly, estimated attendance numbers help keep the
crowds at large gatherings safe. Event coordinators and officials are able to
plan how to manage traffic in the area, how many medical response personnel
will be needed in case of an emergency, as well as how much security to hire.
Crowd size is also needed for media news reports and to historically record the
event.
Whereas crowd counting is not an exact science, using ticket
sales or counting turnstile entries is one of the easiest ways to keep track of
how many people attend. Additionally, there are grid systems that measure the
maximum number of people that can fit in a defined space. The “Jacob’s Method
of Crowd Counting” is one of the most widely accepted methods of using the grid
system. The basis of his system is a loose crowd, one where each person is an
arm's length from the body of his or her nearest neighbors, needs 10 square
feet per person. A more tightly packed crowd fills 4.5 square feet per person.
A truly scary mob of mosh-pit density would get about 2.5 square feet per
person.
Please read more about the methods of crowd counting here.
Contact the CVB for help planning your next event!
Friday, March 29, 2013
Motorcoach Travel on the Upswing
If the motorcoach, tour, and travel industry were a stock, now would be the time to buy. A host of recent studies suggest this is an industry gaining momentum and barreling further into national, state, and regional tourism markets.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
5 Ways to Enhance Your Next RFP Response
If you are a hospitality marketing representative, I know you answer a lot of Request For Proposals (RFPs). And even though "dates and rates" are still part of the process, they are not the total package. Think instead of your RFP response as a way to tell your story. Yes, it will take more time to accomplish this, but in the end, it will hopefully yield more group business to your destination.
Here are five things planners ask for, the usual hospitality response, and tips to enhance it:
PLANNER PICK #1: Event Date With a Few Alternatives
TYPICAL RESPONSE: Most sales personnel look at the dates and either respond to the proposal or throw it in the trash because they do not have those dates available.
ENHANCED ALTERNATIVE: Discuss what dates you do have available. Try to determine if there is any flexibility with their company or association. Let them know there are savings to their bottom line if they can be flexible. If they still won't budge, thank them for their time and then discard the paperwork.
PLANNER PICK #2: Number of Attendees, Meeting Rooms and Sleeping Rooms Required
TYPICAL RESPONSE: If your convention center or hotel isn't large enough to accommodate the group, the RFP is discarded.
ENHANCED ALTERNATIVE: Perhaps you need to know more about the meeting before your respond. How many meeting rooms do they need and what sizes? Can you spread the meeting over several spaces instead of just one? If your hotel has the meeting space but not the hotel rooms, perhaps you work with another hotel next door on overflow?
PLANNER PICK #3: Cities, States, and Areas of Interest
TYPICAL RESPONSE: Looking at the cities the planner is considering either has you slumped in your seat or feeling you have a great probability of a win.
ENHANCED ALTERNATIVE: Looking at all the other cities and states, put together a plus and minus page compared to the competition. Tell your story by accentuating the pluses. Use referral quotes but most importantly tell the planner why they want to meet in your city. Think of it this way: give them the story that makes it easy for them to convince to their boss.
PLANNER PICK #4: Venue Requirements
TYPICAL RESPONSE: Just the facts ma'am and lots of them. Number of meeting rooms, dimensions, sleeping room types, urban, suburban, or resort hotel. Amenities. Distance from the airport and shuttle service. Restaurants and bars on premise.
ENHANCED RESPONSE: Find out more about the group. What are their interests? Are they bringing their spouse or significant other? Do they want to be downtown or out near the airport? What do they like to do after the meeting? Again, tell a story about your property and what makes it special, but tailor your response to their needs.
PLANNER PICK #5: Food and Beverage
TYPICAL RESPONSE: Usually the hotel staff includes every choice available to the planner or a very short listing of food and beverage choices. Neither alternative is particularly helpful.
ENHANCED ALTERNATIVE: If the planner is making a site visit, ask them to sample some of the menu ideas your banquet staff has come up with. If this is not possible, put together alternative menu choices for the days they are there. Determine if the group wants plated entrees or buffet style. Include healthy choices and local influences, including your beverage choices.
In summary, it is important to cover the facts about your property and destination in your RFP, but equally important is the ability to sell it. Tell your story and don't be afraid to take risks. Sell the benefits of going to your destination, convention center, and hotel. Contact the CVB for more information.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Creating a Professional Proposal
A proposal is often the first documented impression that you serve up to your client representative of your property. SCENARIO: Your client wants the proposal “yesterday.” You want to give the client the proposal in the requested time frame so you rush through using a proposal you have used before. You forgot to remove references to the past client, the formatting isn’t neat and words are misspelled. If you had used a template, you would be in a better position with your client!
Yes,
creating a proposal template that creates a “Wow!” from every client will take
hours but they will be hours well spent. Putting together the template at a
time when you are not under a tight deadline ensures a better product. After
you complete the template you will have time to put it away, let it rest, and
review again with a fresh set of eyes or even a new set of eyes of a trusted
coworker or editor for fine tuning. When you receive a new request, just tweak
your effective proposal template with specific, unique client information that
is “dressed to impress!”
Creating a professional proposal template is sure way to give your location the best impression possible to potential clients. The Kankakee County CVB even has a sample template available to style your own. Additionally there are numerous examples available on the Internet by searching "professional proposals". Here is a link to a website with some great examples and ideas.
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