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This book focuses on the information and communication technologies (ICT) impact on the travel industry with a focus on the New Zealand travel agent (TA) sector. Key findings from longitudinal study on TA businesses conducted during seven years are presented. A theoretical approach based on regulation theory combined with a mixed research method approach was used to investigate the main issues of the sector. The study explores major pressure factors on TA businesses: direct airline- consumers sale, introduction of the internet, and emergence of the well-informed consumer. This research has…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book focuses on the information and
communication technologies (ICT) impact on the
travel industry with a focus on the New Zealand
travel agent (TA) sector. Key findings from
longitudinal study on TA businesses conducted during
seven years are presented. A theoretical approach
based on regulation theory combined with a mixed
research method approach was used to investigate the
main issues of the sector. The study explores major
pressure factors on TA businesses: direct airline-
consumers sale, introduction of the internet, and
emergence of the well-informed consumer. This
research has also established that there is great
variation in the extent to which travel agents use
the advantages associated with new technology and
how New Zealand travel agents perceive ICT. These
findings are compared and contrasted with
information gathered from in-depth interviews with
consumers. It is argued that in such a crucial
moment in disintermediation and the fight for a
consumer TA will need to implement more aggressive
advertising policies with a strong emphasis on their
professional advice, personal financial and time-
saving attributes for clients.
Autorenporträt
Vladimir S. Garkavenko, MA, PGDBA, MBS, PhD: Studied French
Language and Literature and Arabic Language at Kiev State
University, Management at Massey University, Albany, New
Zealand, and Tourism at Auckland University of Technology,
Auckland, New Zealand.