Rapport
How Does India Travel?
How Does India Travel?
Decoding the decision-making process for Indian travellers.
Rapport
Decoding the decision-making process for Indian travellers.
The Indian travel and tourism industry has achieved scale. Indian travellers went on approximately 2 billion domestic and international trips in 2018, spending nearly $94 billion on transportation, lodging and consumption during their travels. As Internet penetration increases throughout the country, more travellers will book online—nearly 35% by 2021. To take advantage of rising online spending, companies need to facilitate new user adoption and increase penetration among existing travellers across the purchasing phases: interest, researching, booking, experiencing and post-trip sharing.
Online channels now influence customers’ decisions as much as offline channels. More than 86% of consumers with Internet access were influenced by online channels in the research-heavy pre-booking and experiencing phases. Provider websites, price-comparison sites and search engines are the dominant online channels. Although offline channels have similar influence in those research-heavy phases, our research shows that online channels prevail in the critical booking and sharing phases. Nearly 60% of customers book transport and lodging online, and more than half of consumers share feedback online.
Business travellers spent $37 billion in 2018, and leisure travellers spent $57 billion. We placed travellers into five cohorts:
To meet the expectations of all travellers, companies must overcome some customers’ perception that online channels are geared toward the frequent flyer and experience-oriented traveller—the premium traveller cohorts. Meanwhile, the mass cohorts are underpenetrated: Of the 160 million non-transacting active Internet users in India, less than 5% of online travellers are from Tier-2 or Tier-3 cities. There is also opportunity among existing users who tend to distrust online channels when it comes to payment and terms at the booking stage. Their online engagement drops after the research phase, as many still prefer to book offline.
Adapting to the needs of online consumers will take time. Businesses can shift their approach to the market in the following ways: