Thursday, February 28, 2008

When Travel Arrangements Go Bad

Every year, I hear more horror stories of travel arrangements gone bad. Look at any of the online blogs and you will see what I mean. Our own favorite travel ombudsman, Christopher Elliott, is busier than ever, and my colleague Anita Dunham-Potter recently told a travel horror story about a group of 73 would-be cruise vacationers who were left stranded when their so-called “travel agent” abandoned ship.

Bad travel arrangements don’t have to happen to you. Just keep these four pointers in mind as you plan your next trip.

The Internet is not God
Savvy travelers know that the Internet is nothing more than a huge brochure for travel. Before they rely on any online information, they make sure they can trust the source. Do you expect your local restaurant to divulge that cockroaches routinely scurry across the floor or that mice are snuggled up in the cutlery drawer? No? So why would you expect such information to be disclosed on a travel supplier’s Web site?

So-called “third-party” or “consumer-reviewed” sites are not necessarily any more reliable. Trip Advisor is one of the largest travel Web sites on the Internet, but unfortunately a lot of its content is now suspect. Why? Because savvy hotels have started hiring people to post positive reviews. Just look at Craigslist.org and see how many “pay for review” jobs are out there.

Lesson? Take what you find on the Internet and double-check it with several different sites, a travel agent or perhaps a neighbor or friend who has been to the part of the world that interests you. If it all jives, you are probably good to go; if not, move on. Yes, diligence is time-consuming, but negligence is more so – as you will learn when you try to fix your ill-considered trip.

Your travel agent may be untrained
Lately I have seen an unprecedented increase in what I call “travel-agent-in-a-box” programs. For a $500 fee, these programs offer mostly-useless credentials, promises of perks that seldom materialize, and travel discounts that rarely offset the expenses. But the real issue is that they are infesting the travel industry with untrained, unmentored and unsupervised “agents” all trying to sell you travel — or, in worst cases, the opportunity to join them in their dubious enterprise. Those 73 cruisers would not have been left high and dry had their group leader, Jerry Wilkinson, been dealing with a professional.

Travel suppliers are slowly taking notice of these quickie-agent operations, and are refusing to do business with them. Both Royal Caribbean and IATAN, the International Airlines Travel Agent Network, have terminated relationships with several such companies, including YTB, Your Travel Biz. If you are interested in reading up on these scams, I covered them in a prior column, or you can read the informative, adversarial – and controversial — blog called MLMs and Travel: A Bad Mix, which discloses all the downsides.

How do you separate the wheat from the chaff? Ask your prospective agent these questions:

* How long have you been selling travel?
* Are you bonded?
* Do you have errors and omissions insurance?
* Can you connect me to some clients who have traveled with your company in the past?
* Are you a member of ASTA, the American Society of Travel Agents?

And then verify the answers.

You would not trust your legal needs, accounting needs or financial-planning needs to an amateur. Why risk it with your travel arrangements?

Price is not the most important thing
Sure, price matters. In today’s economy we are all watching our pennies. But remember that when you purchase travel, you are purchasing an experience — not a product. You are looking to lie on the beach with the soft Aruban breezes flowing over you while a waiter refills your piña colada and adjusts your umbrella. You are not looking to just sit on a pile of sand. See the difference?

So, when comparing prices (and I recommend that you do compare prices), make sure it is apples to apples. All too often a client will insist that someone else offered the same experience at a much cheaper price. Usually that is not so. A $299 weekend in the Bahamas including airfare from Baltimore is a bargain, alright — until the bedbugs take over and you find yourself saddled with a $1,200 Bahamian hospital bill. When you see a price that seems too good to be true, be skeptical. I’ll bet there’s a reason it is so low.

Common sense will serve you well
Having a great vacation experience is not rocket science. Unfortunately, some people get so wrapped up in the planning that they let their guard down. Jerry Wilkinson let his guard down and it cost his group $21,000. Had he been skeptical of the price, used some common sense, and dealt with a professional agent, he could have avoided the whole mess.

Sure, I’m biased. I’m a professional travel agent myself, and I generally recommend booking with a qualified agent for all but the simplest travel plans. That way you are guaranteed that someone is looking out for your best interests. But if you have an easy trip in mind and you are comfortable going it alone, go ahead and book your travel online. Just make sure there is someone to personally contact if a problem surfaces. If you do book online, book direct with the airline or hotel (my first choice) or with one of the established online agencies like Orbitz.com, Travelocity.com or Expedia.com. Don’t get suckered in to any travel deal. There are too many agency scams operating today, and it can be hard to tell the good from the bad. Look before you leap.

Have you been the victim of bad travel planning? Or maybe been scammed by one of these “travel agents in a box”? Send me an e-mail and I will include your story in a future column.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Kids Love These 6 Museums

When I was a kid and traveling with my parents, they used to drag me, kicking and screaming, to museum after museum so I could get some "culture." I hated it! I hated them! My travels were filled with commands and threats like "Shhhh!" "No," "Be quiet," "Stop running," and the all-too-familiar "Just you wait till we get you back to the hotel."

Well, times have changed and now I am a parent. It always surprises me how I much I've morphed into my own parents with my kids. But things are not as bad as they were way back in the 70s, thanks to real men of genius like Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and to companies like IBM. Today, even the stuffiest museums have incorporated interactive experiences into their exhibits. My own kids actually enjoy museum-hopping now that they serve up some technology with the pictures and dinosaur bones. While most museums now embrace technology, I feel these six do it best.

Tate Modern (London)

Innovation: Hand-held PDAs, touch screens and a digital audio guide
This gallery will satisfy almost any geek - in fact, it earned an innovation award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA). Its wireless data link beams information about the exhibits to your rented PDA (about $4) as you walk around. The PDA has different programs in several languages and there is a special one of interest to the smaller kids. The museum's server can even send information to your mobile phone or e-mail address -- so you literally can take it with you.

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
Phone: 020 7887 8888
www.tate.org.uk/modern

Haus der Musik (Vienna)

Innovation: The virtual conductor
Didn't make the cut on "American Idol"? Then head over to Vienna and give it a go with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. Yes, you can take the podium and conduct the orchestra virtually. There is even an "American Idol"-type panel of musicians that will tell you if you are way off key. You can compose your own Viennese waltz by playing the "Waltz Dice Game" and you can journey back in time to see biographies of some of Vienna's great composers, including Brahms, Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.

Seilerstätte 30
A-1010 Vienna
Tel. ++43-1-516 48
www.hdm.at

Museum of Modern Art (New York)

Innovation: Wireless technology
You don't have to be a geek to see that MoMA has its finger on the pulse of technology. Even its floors are iPod white. Working in conjunction with IBM, MoMA has installed a seamless wireless network that links to flat screens on the walls and hand-held pocket PCs that can display full-motion videos. The network is so sophisticated it is able to sync with smart phones, display exhibits in 3-D, and allow you to communicate with others in silence through instant messaging. No more fuddy-duddies "shushing" you!

11 W. 53rd St.
New York, N.Y. 10019-5497
Phone: (212) 708-9400
www.moma.org

National Gallery (London)

Innovation: Touch-screen index
ArtStart is a high-tech terminal system installed throughout the museum that lets visitors examine and download information on every one of the gallery's 2,300 paintings via a high-resolution touch screen. It took more than three years to scan the works to the 100-megapixel standard (think about that for a minute the next time you take out your 10-megapixel camera). Now you can not only examine a Van Gogh painting in detail, but also zoom in to see individual brush strokes. Many of these features are also available online on the gallery's Web site.

Trafalgar Square
London WC2N 5DN
Phone: 020 7747 2885
www.nationalgallery.org.uk

The Hermitage (St. Petersburg)

Innovation: QBIC (Query by Image Content) technology
The Hermitage worked with IBM to develop a new digital collection that allows visitors to search for paintings, sculptures, ceramics, jewelry, furniture and archaeological artifacts using simple visual tools. Art lovers can access more than 8,000 masterpieces by such artists as Michelangelo, da Vinci, Raphael and Rembrandt; each piece has been scanned to be rendered in its full glory. The museum also has virtual exhibitions of ceramics and textiles, as well as 3-D animated films.

2 Dvortsovaya Square
190000, St. Petersburg
Phone: (812) 710-96-25
www.hermitagemuseum.org

Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum (Springfield, Ill.)

Innovation: Ghosts
Ghosts? Yes, you read that right. A key part of the museum's mission is to preserve the legacy of Abraham Lincoln, America's 16th president. In "Ghosts in the Library," a life-size holographic image of Lincoln will appear out of thin air and interact with actors on the stage. Two permanent exhibits, "Journey One" and "Journey Two," pull you into vignettes from Lincoln's life both before and during his White House years. Don't know how this happened -- maybe a group of Disney's Imagineers got lost in Springfield one day and loaned some expertise -- but this museum is about as high-tech as you can get.

112 N. Sixth St.
Springfield, Ill. 62701
Phone: (217) 558-8844
www.alplm.org

Have you been to a museum that blew you away with technology or science? Send me an e-mail and let me know for a future column. My fave? As a single-parent traveler with kids ages 11-16, I would have to go with the Haus der Musik.