In a well written post the Guardian lists their 50 most influential Bloggers: The World’s Most Powerful Blogs. In a quick scan I see some travel related Blogs on the list:
Category: T-List
Winding Down from ITB Berlin part 1 – General
After returning from ITB Berlin I needed some time to digest my experiences. Moreover I had to look after guests and address various social events.
I have a couple of observations. Some of them will result in separate posts.
- Tuesday March 4, 2008:Berlin’s more than 531 hotels were almost sold out. Consequently getting a hotel was difficult. I have reported already about my experiences. I will give a review of the hotel I actually slept in in a separate post. I was able to leave The Hague around 16.30 hr (4.30 hr PM) and drove the 700 km in 8 hours including traffic jams because of the snow that lasted until half way Hannover. I arrived at 24.30 in my hotel.
- Wednesday March 5, 2008, morning session:My main goal was to meet a couple of fellow Travel Bloggers who would attend the Bloggers Summit that was organized by PhoCusWright together with three Bloggers. In that respect the summit was a success. In a separate post I will introduce the Bloggers to the readers.
There was a strike going on in Berlin and many people had troubles finding their way to Berlin Messe.
Finding your way inside the Berlin Messe is even more cumbersome if you are a first time visitor. It has 26 or more different numbered halls while various halls are subdivided. They are draped around a square with the Messe Tower. Some halls are interconnected. Some are not. Their system of road signs is simply horrible. There is no clear map. In that respect WTM at London Excel, maybe not as huge as ITB, is much more compact and has several strategically located information points where you can tie exhibitors’ names, boot numbers and boot locations together.
As a result most Bloggers didn’t show up at the anticipated time, or not at all (but that was for other reasons).
In addition there was the opportunity for Bloggers to get in contact with various new and/or interesting players in the field. So the major part of the morning session was, after a short introduction by the Bloggers of themselves, filled with short introductions by various people.
All in all there was very limited time left to get to know the colleagues a little bit better, which I regret.
- Wednesday March 5, 2008, Afternoon Sessions:
In two sessions two subjects were covered. The first session was more or less an introduction to travel Blogging for the uninitiated. The second session’s subject was Journalists vs Bloggers: - Organize yourself: Be (like) a real Journalist
It happened to be the subject of an afternoon session, but organizing yourself for such an event is a hassle in itself. I had two bags, one with my camera and lenses and one with my laptop with me. My laptop is so old and bulky, it didn’t fit in my backpack, also because it is in constant dire need of a wall outlet, as it has a short battery life.
During the morning session it was difficult to connect with the Wifi access point. The same happened the next day, which made Kevin of Travolution Blog make the assumption that Google was down,
Furthermore I had forgotten my card reader. So I wasn’t able to put photos on my laptop nor upload them on the fly. When I returned home, I found out that I had run out of space on my computer HDD and had to address that problem as well….As to the discussion itself I would like to refer to an excellent article of John Glaser on the subject that I found through Joe Buhlers Blog . In the “Talk Back” part of the session I would have liked one or two journalists to ask questions rather than only Bloggers giving their opinion. Claude had the best observation: Bloggers usually have other jobs and don’t blog full time.
- The March 6 PhoCusWright@ITB BERLIN seminarIt was the first time I attended one of their seminars. They do an amazing and very professional job. Every session starts and ends in time. Speakers are well introduced. Sometimes the speeches are followed by a “Talk Back”. Then one or to three panelists ask questions. The people who are at the panel are extremely well connected. During the speeches, the presentations are on one or two giant screens while sometimes one of the screens is used. There was a nice mix of old know it alls an new startups. I will devote one or two separate posts to the various subjects.
One small note is that the sessions follow each other at such pace over a whole day that at the end of the day I had the feeling I had an information overload. Hardly time to regroup your thoughts. Hardly time to mull over the presentations with other attendants.
I found out that I am not able to divide my attention between paying attention to what is going on and at the same time blogging on the fly. In that sense I am not a journalist and I admire Kevin who was extremely productive during the various sessions. Look at Travolution Blog for more detailed coverage of the Bloggers Summit and the PhoCusWright@ITB BERLIN seminar
- Bloggers Summit Final Gathering
Thursday March 6, Anhalter Bar Mövenpick Hotel, Berlin: 8:30 p.m. – ??
Again I was one of the first to arrive at the bar. Traveling by car proved to be one of my best decisions. I was totally worn out from the information overload. I stepped into the Mövenpick Restaurant to have a quick bite before the drinks. When the others arrived, they were as hungry as I was a few moments earlier and they decided to step outside for a quick bite, only to return past 10.15 pm, when others had left already. In the meantime I had a chance to have some chats with the ones who stayed. I kindly suggest for the next summit the seminar to end earlier, or the get together to be planned directly after the seminar at or close to the premises of the seminar rather than in Berlin center. Then everybody could have hit the restaurants for a bite at around 9.00 pm. My 2 cents.
Conclusions
Friday I had to return to look after our hotel guests. This was a bit unfortunate, as I had hoped to be able to look around a bit more at ITB and in Berlin, but alas, no time left.
The next time I’ll need to have a smaller format laptop with me with and a card reader and I also have to re instate my UMTS card for mobile internet connection in case the local Wifi doesn’t work or is overloaded.
All in all I don’t regret having attended the Bloggers summit at ITB Berlin. A Big “Thank You” to all organizing people.
ITB Berlin Blogger summit – Snow and Strikes, but Bloggers come through
Very unusual: I am the first to find the meeting room where the first informal get together, the ITB Berlin Travel Blogger Summit, is taking place. I have seen some of the fair. Almost lost my way on the fair and am not impressed by the way Berlin Messe provides road signs.
As to snow: Detlef , who is from Berlin, comments this is the start of ITB and the first snow of Berlin this winter.
A huge strike lames the whole Berlin public transport system, but at around 11.30 I count around 25 Bloggers.
Chapeau to the Bloggers! Not even do they prove to be able to maintain the uphill struggle to keep a travel blog in the air, but they seem also able to beat difficulties as public transport out of function because of a strike and a traffic infarct in Berlin due to the first snow!
Happy Hotelier – Off to ITB Berlin
Before I jump in my limousine heading for Berlin, I would like to feature two great Bloggers who I will miss at this summit, pictured here together at WTM in November where the three of us shortly met and unfortunately had no time to get acquainted better. Time is an asset Bloggers have not much of, which reminds me I had not enough time to update the T-List ranking as per March 1 It is almost finished, but publication has to wait until after ITB.
To your left Guillaume Thevenot of Hotel Blogs by Guillaume Thevenot and to your right Albert Barra, author of many Blogs among which: Spanish language Blog Albert Barra Com.
Booking a Hotel Online in Berlin: Nothing Zen Part 6
Where to stay in Berlin?
General
So I will be meeting a couple of fellow Travel Bloggers (T-Listers) at the PhoCusWright Travel bloggers Summit.
As a hotelier, my primary focus is Luxury Hotels, although I must admit that anyone who sees the various subjects covered here, might doubt that.
I use the tag Nothing Zen, because when you want to find a real gem, something special, something that doesn’t appear so easy on one of the big sites like Booking or Expedia or so, you have to spend still an enormous amount of time.
When I started this Zen Series I reached as conclusion:
My first conclusion is: Look at various dedicated hotel sites, be it luxury, design, romance or whatever you have in mind and then check back with the bigger sites as Booking, Expedia and the like.
And that still is basically my approach. Cumbersome? Yes! Time consuming? Yes! Stupid? No! The main reason for this approach is to see whether the search possibilities for the real small real luxury hotels (maybe B&B’s) are getting better on the Internet.
For the question “Where to stay in Berlin?” I did even more research than for the same question in prior posts of my Zen Series because there are a lot of hotels in Berlin and there is a bit of progress online:
- I discovered Tumblr and used it to scrap and paste a lot of Berlin Hotel related stuff (over 80 items thus far) in Happy Hotelier | Tumblr.
- Some fellow Travel Bloggers that I will meet in Berlin, posted about their hotel reservations earlier:.
- Tripadvisor is now totally UGC oriented.
- Booking.com now is more UGC oriented and getting some weight.
- Venere was already UGC oriented much earlier an has tons of reviews.
- Unfortunately Kango is developping the technique of review scraping, but has that only implemented for a few USA cities, fortunately, recently they have implemented a dedicated Google derived Travel Blog search engine that is helpful to search the Travel Blog scene
- I was a beta tester at VibeAgent and although it has some very nice features and is constantly developing new features and additions, it takes some more time until it is fully usable.
- I discovered Hoteltip.
Some Finds collected in Tumblr that have my attention:
- Hotel De Rome. Gee I would love to stay there!
- Spreebogen. Near the Hauptbahnhof;
- Hansablick, mentioned positively on various sites.
- ArtOtel Center West;
- Bleibtreu;
- Lux 11, also mentioned positively on various sites;
- Hotel Qmentioned positively on various sites;
- Radisson SAS With the famous Aquadome in its lounge: Alas fully booked;
- SORAT ArtOtotel Berlin;
- Generator Hostel in east Berlin,where Europe A La Carte stays, cheap, but a bit too basic for this spoiled hotelier :-);
- Honigmond Garden Hotel;
- Kuntlerheim Luise, a tip from Willem my co author at Dutch Weekendhotel Weblogand already on my wish list for quite some time.
- Miniloft Mitte also a tip from Willem;
- Ackselhause Berlin, again from Willem. Ouch It has a Flash website. Hoteliers should be forbidden to use flash on their websites
- Corbusier Hause, Willem again;
- Grand Hyatt Berlin Hotel ;
- Mitart, very interesting, unfortunately no TV that I need to get asleep and no Internet connection, a necessity when you attend a Bloggers Summit.
- ELLINGTON HOTEL BERLIN a find of Guardian writer Sean Dodson who initiated my Zen Series
- Hotel Concorde; huge;
While Tumblring around I found out that Hotel Chatter is easy navigable and quick and to the point (easy to Tumblr, Gridskipper is also good navigable, but has clustered 10 hotel suggestions around themes like Cheap, Historic, Pensions and so on. The creative Bloggers sites like Les Explorers and Wandalust are unsearchable. The International Herald Tribune Travel blog has hardly anything worthy to say about Berlin Hotels. The Guardian Site is very good navigable and searchable.
The “Classic” approach as per my earlier Zen Series posts:
- The Hedonist Guide (Hg2),
Style 8, Atmosphere 7, Location 8
Arcotel Velvet
Smart but simple, this design-friendly hotel has a great location in the heart of Mitte…
From EUR 138I skipped the really expensive ones here
Style 7, Atmosphere 7, Location 8
Westin Grand
Luxurious, classically designed five star hotel in Mitte – perfect for shoppers and gourmands…
From EUR 390 - Mr and Mrs Smith: No Berlin Hotel in their Portfolio!!!
- Relais et Chateaux: just one: Bayerisches Hous;
- Luxury Culture:No Berlin Hotel in their Portfolio!!!
- The Kiwi collection: They have 8
One of the latest boutique hotels in Berlin. After reunification, the Dorint chain carefully converted the structure into an upscale hotel of artfully simple, Zen-like minimalism.
Enjoy the opulent splendour of a castle full of history and charm. Now a luxury hotel, the Schlosshotel is an oasis of calm within easy reach of Berlin’s city centre.
Known for its personal service and classic elegance, The Regent Berlin is one of the most prominent hotels in the capital city.
A holistic atmosphere, where spaciousness, brightness and outstanding service combine to create an exceptionally personal ambience as tranquil as the countryside, all in the very heart of Berlin…Welcome to the Mandala Hotel!
Like its famous predecessor, the Hotel Adlon Kempinski which was reopened in 1997, is a symbol of luxury. Modern upgrades and uncompromising service standards have kept it a premier location in Berlin for either the business or leisure traveler.
Hotel de Rome, originally an old bank, was converted to make use of the buildings full architectural splendor, thereby offering guests an authentic Berlin experience.
Amid the energy of the city, The Ritz-Carlton, Berlin welcomes guests with a gracious atmosphere, exquisite amenities and impeccable service. - Travel Intelligence have a few: They do not allow you to kwout, but via Tumblr I could go around that:
- Hotel Designs UK reviewed 3 Berlin Hotels:
- Adlon
- Rezidors Regent
- Park Inn
- Great Small Hotels:: No Berlin Hotel in their Portfolio!!!
- Epoque Hotels have the Bleibtreu
- Avant Garde Hotels have the Bleibtreu and the K Damm 101
- Design Hotel have the Bleibtreu, the Lux 11 and the Mandela
- Small Luxury Hotel has the Brandenburger Hof.
- Alastair Sawdays has no German hotels in his portfolio!!
- Room For Romance have no Berlin hotels in their portfolio!!
- XO Private Collection have improved their site considerably and have 3 Berlin Hotels in their portfolio:
- Adlon Kempinski, off course
- Brandenburger Hof and
- Schlosshotel im Grunewald.
- Perfect Escapes Improved their site and offer 5 or 6 Luxury Hotels In Berlin (one problem is that they didn’t get their addresses right yet) easily to click trhough to availability and in that respect an example for other OTA’s
- I-Escape has 3 hotels:
The OTA Sites
Haha I spent so much time on the research for this post that I almost forgot to make a reservation. Berlin is quickly selling out…
- Expedia.com is, as Booking, a huge OTA. What I don’t like is that they list all hotels, even if there is only partial availability. You have to click through many screens. On the other hand that is helpful if you want to break up a stay of several days and stay in two accomodations. Also clever is that you can click up to 4 accomodations in order to compare them. I like their maps!
- Tripadvisor: Although great for it reviews, it is not very helpful for direct booking. If you try to get a price comparision your screen gets full of new windows and then you have to do a lot of DIY….
- Booking.com Thusfar my trusted one, you can search on guest reviews. It tends to be a bit slow. Its availability is very reliable.
- VibeAgent Unfortunately not there yet at all for direct bookings. One example: Radisson SAS was sold out according to several sites, but open according to VibeAgent…when clicking on Rates to Go rate that popped up. I only got a few (very few compared to the other sites Bookings had availability on 50 and Rates to Go only 7 or 8) available hotels…No Radisson SAS. Therefore I have the distinctive impression that the deal between Rates to Go and VibeAgent is only to lure visitors into visiting the Rates to Go Site. It became worse when I clicked another hotel that via Venere (while not visible on Verere’s own site. Venere in VibeAgents frame gave the impression that there were rooms available. It asked me to fill out my credit card details, which I did and only thereafter came back with the announcement that there was no availability…Very disturbing and now I have to check my creditcard invoice if nothing is happening with it….
- Hoteltip. It comes fast with some interesting deals, but has as a trade in for its speed not very much details, so you need other sites for the backup info.
- Hotels Combined.Com I had seen it once, but it was Europe A LA Carte who drew my attention to it again. Much Sleeker than Hoteltip, but for the details of the rooms you have to click trough to another OTA. Hm after a few trial and errors the site kept coming up with Asiativ, but there you have the same problem as with tickets for flights: You can only book 14 days in advance. Grrrr.
Updated Monday March 3, 18.00 hr
Finale Verdict
Finally I found a moderately priced place to stay in Pension Elite through Booking.com. I have not looked into Priceline.
My conclusion is that the aggregators like Hoteltip. Hotels Combined.Com and VibeAgent are becoming stronger and offer some help, but you need the reliability of a real OTA and you cannot book something without having checked out the property on Tripadvisor.
To to my view it is still much more of a hassle than would be necessary to DIY hotel bookings if you want something special, especially when you have time constraints or are a notorious late booker like myself.
Updated March 4, 2008 14.00 hr