Evidence shows that spending time in nature helps reducing anxiety, improving mental health and well-being, let alone boosting physical health. Nature is good for us; can we be good to nature too? It's no wonder that one recent large-scale survey conducted by Booking.com (2020) identified 'Impact Awakening: The Rise of Responsible Travel' as one of the nine predictions on the future of travel. Half of the global travelers surveyed expressed the desire to travel more sustainably in the future with over two-thirds of respondents expecting more sustainable travel options from suppliers. Demand is (and expectations are) building up and post-pandemic will see a surge in travel with purpose. But do travelers easily have access to all information needed to make wise decisions on sustainable travel and hotels? Where are the gaps in the search and booking stages? And which company manages to fill those gaps well? What are some best practices in showcasing hotel sustainability online?

Booking.com (20 Oct 2020). Smarter, Kinder, Safer: Booking.com Reveals Nine Predictions For The Future of Travel. https://www.booking.com/articles/category/future-of-travel.html.

Christopher Warren
Christopher Warren
Founder of My Green Butler

Best Practices of showing Tourist Accommodation sustainability on-line Sustainability is complex. Communicating it well requires storytelling. My thoughts for OTAs, NTO, and Regional tourism is:

  1. On-site Search engine tools: Tourism sites and OTAs must offer adequate criteria to enable potential guests to select tourist accommodation by factors most of interest to guests, such as plastic-free, chemical-free, renewable energy, and community projects. This is more meaningful than eco badges.
  2. Focus on Benefits: Tourism sites and OTAs should provide space for each accommodation listing to show how the property's sustainability efforts improve the guests' experience?
  3. Turn sustainability actions into exciting learning experiences for the visitors: Preachy messages are not appealing. Instead, tourism sites and OTAs should provide space for each listing to illustrates how their redesigned sustainable activities can teach guests to apply their newly gained skills.
  4. Staff social contracts: Tourism sites and OTAs should allow tourist accommodation to demonstrate how their staff are involved, disclose fair work policy policies, and how guests can become involved in creating a better stay.
  5. Verification & Reviews: Participating properties must verify that their actions have demonstratable results. Guests should be encouraged to review the claimed activities/policies and applaud good practice or call out irresponsible practice.
  6. Proof of benefits: Tourism sites and OTAs should highlight independently verified claims of sustainable practices. Share these as short videos/stories/social media campaigns to raise awareness of tourism's good results. Tourism should not only focus on reducing impacts but celebrate how it can positively put back into communities and nature. This adds a positive reason for staying to prospective guests.

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