Omega
World Travel
Moving To Build
Leisure Powerhouse
Escalating
consumer complaints may give the airlines pause before they
again cut travel agents' commissions, according to Gloria
Bohan, president and CEO of Omega World Travel, Fairfax,
VA.
"Travel agents today are servicing
the needs of airline passengers at uneconomic levels, but
I doubt that the carriers themselves want, or have the capacity,
to do the job that we are doing for them," Bohan said.
Bohan, who has built OWT into a
$612-million giant - ranked as one of the largest agencies
in the U.S. and the largest woman-owned business in the
Washington, D.C. area - has confidence in the ability of
professional agents to survive and prosper - no matter what
the airlines do. "Travel agents - large and small -
have to have sharp pencils and pay close attention to costs,"
she said.
Profitability Essential
"Profitability is essential
to fuel growth. It's also critical that travel agents develop
and maintain a solid professional reputation with their
clients. Clients must see travel agents' services as valuable,
especially as we move to management and service fees. Agents
must create value."
While their agency is a corporate
travel powerhouse, Bohan and her husband, Dan Bohan, have
moved aggressively into the high-growth leisure travel market,
including cruise and tour sales. And, they are positioning
Omega World Travel to be a leader in online travel sales
- adding clicks to their well-established bricks. OWT has
200 locations in the U.S, Japan, Guam, Germany, and the
U.K.
"We want to be positioned as a leader
in online travel services," noted Bohan. "Online
technologies help us to deliver service and convenience
to clients, whether corporate, government, or leisure."
In fact, OWT's online cruise unit, Cruise.com, is believed
to be the largest seller of cruises on the Internet.
Tour Discounts
Another online leisure unit, TourDeals.com,
which is accessible to other travel agents, offers discounts
on tours worldwide. AirDeals.com offers airfare discounts
on major carriers, and still another OWT E-business, Top9.com,
is a Web site ranking service and directory. The Omega corporate
Web site is www.owt.net. "Innovation is a constant
process," Bohan said.
"To grow and prosper, travel
agency owners and managers have to look beyond the day-to-day
events and take the time to analyze their businesses and
understand their client base. They have to invest in client
services, good staffs and know what their core competencies
are." She added, "Above all, agents have to invest
in and consistently deliver superior, high integrity services."
Founded in 1972, OWT, like other agencies, has had to cope
with constant changes in the industry, including the advent
of new, business-transforming technologies. "Successful
travel agencies have had to be very well-managed and to
adapt to constant changes," Bohan noted.
"We as an industry have survived
airline deregulation, the emergence of CRS and Internet
technology, globalization, commission cuts and the emergence
of fees for services. It shows that good agents are survivors
because they are resilient."
Business Mix
Bohan said that to be viable, travel
agents can and should develop a mix of business -- leisure,
groups, corporate and government, as well as domestic and
international sales. She predicts more agency consolidation,
alliances and partnerships as the industry responds to changing
consumer demand. "Travel agents have not got the credit
they deserve for their ability to deliver real value to
consumers and corporate clients. Hopefully, this will change,"
said Bohan, contrasting the personalized services agents
deliver to the take-it-or-leave-it commodity mentality among
airlines.
OWT constantly surveys its customers,
as a way of monitoring its performance, and Bohan urged
other travel agents to do the same so that they will be
alert to changes in consumer demand and maintain high levels
of professional performance.
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