New Sabre Asia Pacific traveller study has the answer!
Download ‘The Polarisation of Asian Travellers’ report here, conducted by Sabre in partnership with The Futures Company.
Travel in Asia Pacific is booming. One in three Asians now plan to travel three or more times per year, and four out of five of these travellers believe travel is no longer a ‘luxury’, it’s a ‘necessity’, according to the study. Access to cheaper flights and more affordable travel options alongside a steadily rising middle class population will continue to fuel this growth in 2017 and beyond. But as barriers to travel break down, the way people are travelling is also changing.
Major polarisation of Asian travellers exists
Using a psychographic assessment of travellers, Sabre’s new report identifies major polarisation emerging two key dimensions around the region: ‘Motivation’ – whether a traveller is motivated by ‘self’ or ‘others’ in their travel choices – and ‘Behavior’ – specifically the level of control a person wants to exert over their trip.
Self-oriented travel with a personal touch
However a small majority of travellers are more likely to be motivated to travel by self-oriented reasons (56%), seeking to build their own individuality and life experiences rather than the opportunity to gain experiences to share with others (44%). When it comes to behavior, more travellers would rather exert control in their trip (58%) over letting someone else take charge (42%) – reflecting a growing sense of consumer empowerment and willingness to invest more effort in personalising the travel experience; pre, mid or post trip.
Introducing the four Asian traveller types
Mapping these polarisations across behaviour and motivation gives rise to four distinct Asian traveller types: the Explorer, Connector, Follower and Opportunist.
‘Explorers’ take top spot but national preferences also exist
One in three Asian travellers fall into the ‘Explorer’ category, making this the most common traveller type around the region. Notably after this there is an almost even split of travellers, by volume, between the three remaining types.
Geographic groupings of travellers do exist though. After Explorer, which is the top traveller type for all 11 Asian markets surveyed, the following groupings were recorded:
- Connectors tend to be swaying their influence in Australia, Indonesia, Korea and New Zealand.
- Followers are gathering together in Hong Kong, India, Japan, Malaysia and Singapore.
- Opportunists are ready to go in China and Taiwan.