Euromonitor, a provider of strategic market research, surveyed a sample of 150 Vietnamese to analyse the online travel landscape as well as browsing and purchase behaviours. Commissioned by performance marketing firm Criteo, the survey was conducted to help travel businesses and online travel agents identify and adopt digital strategies that will attract customers.
“Travel expenditures in Việt Nam will rise rapidly due to increasing disposable incomes and growing middle-class affluence," said Alban Villani, general manager of Criteo Southeast Asia, Hong Kong and Taiwan. "Việt Nam is a mobile-first society, and for 2017, the number of smart phone users in the country is expected to reach 28.5 million, and 37.8 million by 2020."
Last year, Vietnamese took 6.9 million international trips and 52.8 million domestic trips, while expenditures on leisure and recreation from now to 2020 are expected to grow at a 7.7 per cent CAGR.
In the 2011-16 period, online travel sales grew at an 18.3 per cent CAGR and totalled over $27 million in earnings in 2016. Mobile travel sales, which outpaced the growth of online travel sales, are expected to see a 22.4 per cent CAGR from now to 2020.
Villani said that travel websites and online travel agents should focus on providing a user-friendly mobile experience that is easy to navigate with add-on features and secure payment methods.
To drive transactions, they need to engage with shoppers during the discovery, search and booking phases, and re-engage them across all devices after they leave websites, he added.
Browsing behaviour
Euromonitor’s study found that all shoppers, while browsing online, used a combination of online travel agents, vendors’ own websites, apps and online-travel price aggregators.
Across all age groups, laptops were the most preferred device for online browsing of travel products and services, at a 45 per cent rate, followed by smartphones at 30 per cent and desktops at 19 per cent, according to the study.
Two-thirds of those who used their smartphones for browsing said it was more convenient, and 79 per cent said it allowed them to browse on-the-go, source from Vietnamnews.