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8 Oct, 2013

Survey Charts Online Queries for Boutique & Lifestyle Hotels

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London (PRWEB UK) 7 October 2013 – There were three times as many online searches for Lifestyle & Boutique hotels in the UK than there were for those located in short-haul and long-haul destinations combined, reveals the latest analysis of specialist hotels search data from independent digital marketing agency, Greenlight.

The agency’s Boutique Hotels Sector Report – Issue 3” (Registration required) found that in August, consumers made a total of 136,650 searches on Google UK for small, fashionable, luxury and trendy hotels.

Of the total, 57% were for accommodation in the UK compared to 17% in short-haul and just 3% in long-haul destinations.

On the domestic front, the term ‘boutique hotels london’ was the most queried, accounting for 7% of searches made for boutique hotels in the UK. In fact, of the ten most popular search terms used, four pertained to the UK capital.

Other popular local spots UK consumers sought this style of accommodation included Brighton, the Lake District and Edinburgh.

On the continent, despite consumer online searches for boutique accommodation in Paris being prevalent, Spanish destinations proved more popular.

Ibiza, Barcelona, Majorca and Majorca’s Puerto Pollensa, featured in five of the top ten queries. Combined, they accounted for a 13% share of the 23,800 UK consumer online queries for boutique lodgings in short-haul destinations.

Further afield, the US, particularly New York, followed by Turkey, Istanbul proving a popular draw, then Singapore, were the prime long-haul locations consumers searched for boutique & luxury accommodation in.

Greenlight charted the most visible websites to consumer searches for boutique hotels overall and also split by destination, in the organic* and Paid Media** listings.

Tripadvisor.co.uk was the most visible website for specialist lodgings both in domestic and short-haul destinations, attaining a 39% and 20% share of visibility, respectively, in the organic listings. In the case of long-haul destinations, Mrandmrssmith.com was the most visible capturing 16%.

However, in the paid listings, trivago.co.uk was the most visible site for both domestic and long-haul related queries, achieving a 40% share of voice in the former and 39% in the latter. Booking.com, with 34%, was the most prominent site in the case of short-haul searches.

Greenlight’s report also shows that over 65% of the 40 most prominent sites to consumer searches for boutique hotels, had no visibility in the organic listings, instead relying solely on that garnered via paid ad listings on Google, to attract the searchers’ attention.