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Brand awareness research

Case: TravelBird

LAHTI UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED


SCIENCES
Faculty of Business
Degree programme in Service
Management
Bachelor’s Thesis
Autumn 2016
Sara Antila
Lahti University of Applied Sciences
Degree Programme in Service Management

ANTILA, SARA: Brand awareness research


Case: TravelBird

Bachelor’s Thesis in Service Management, 39 pages, 4 pages of


appendices

Autumn 2016

ABSTRACT

The subject of this thesis is to research Finnish consumers’ behaviour


when buying travel services online. The aim is to find out the level of brand
awareness of the case company, online travel agency TravelBird. The
purpose of this study is to figure out what kind of images consumers have
about the case company and do they see it as an attractive brand.

The theoretical framework of this thesis consists of online tourism


intermediaries as well as brand and brand awareness. Theoretical part
also includes an insight on consumer behaviour generally but also
specifically when buying tourism services.

The empirical part of the thesis was implemented as a quantitative


research where the target population were all the Finnish people who are
interested on travelling divided into TravelBird’s current customers and
potential customers. The research was created and implemented using the
online program, Webropol.

From the results of the study it can be concluded that the images of
TravelBird are quite positive. TravelBird can be held as an attractive online
travel agency since according to the results of the survey, most of the
respondents could imagine using their services in the future. However, the
brand awareness level in Finland is still relatively low and would need
bigger investments on marketing to raise the status on the Finnish
markets.

Key words: online travel agency, consumer behaviour, brand, brand


awareness, travel service
Lahden ammattikorkeakoulu
Liiketalouden koulutusohjelma

ANTILA, SARA: Tunnettuus tutkimus


Case: TravelBird

Palveluliiketoiminnan opinnäytetyö, 39 sivua, neljä liitesivua

Syksy 2016

TIIVISTELMÄ

Tämän opinnäytetyön aiheena on tutkia suomalaisten ihmisten


käyttäytymistä ostettaessa matkapalveluita internetistä. Tavoitteena on
selvittää hollantilaisen online-matkatoimiston, TravelBirdin, tunnettuuden
tasoa suomalaisten kuluttajien keskuudessa. Tarkoituksena on selvittää,
minkälaisia mielikuvia kuluttajilla on yrityksestä sekä nähdäänkö brändi
vetovoimaisena.

Opinnäytetyön teoreettinen viitekehys käsittelee internetissä toimivia


matkanvälittäjiä sekä brändiä, tunnettuutta ja siihen vaikuttavia tekijöitä.
Teoreettisessa osassa käsitellään myös kulttajakäyttäytymistä niin
yleisesti kuin myös matkapalveluita ostettaessa.

Opinnäytetyön empiirinen osuus on toteutettu kvantitatiivisena


tutkimuksena, jossa kohderyhmänä olivat kaikki suomalaiset matkailusta
kiinnostuneet ihmiset jaettuna kahteen ryhmään: nykyiset ja potentiaaliset
asiakkaat. Kysely luotiin ja toteutettiin Webropol -ohjelmalla.

Tutkimustuloksista voidaan yleisesti todeta, että mielikuvat TravelBirdistä


ovat pääosin positiivisia. Tulosten perusteella TravelBirdiä voidaan pitää
vetovoimaisena yrityksenä, sillä suurin osa vastaajista voisi kuvitella
tulevaisuudessa käyttävänsä heidän palveluita. Kuitenkin yrityksen
tunnettuuden taso suomalaisten keskuudessa on vielä melko heikko ja
sen nostamiseksi tarvittaisiin suurempia sijoituksia markkinointiin.

Asiasanat: online matkatoimisto, kuluttajakäyttäytyminen, tunnettuus,


brändi, mielikuva, matkapalvelu
CONTENTS

1 INTRODUCTION 1

2 ONLINE TOURISM INTERMEDIARIES 4


2.1 Online travel agencies 5
2.2 Online tour operators 6
2.3 Consumer behaviour in online tourism 7
2.4 European Union consumer protection law 8

3 BRAND AWARENESS 10
3.1 The definition and meaning of brand 10
3.2 The formation of the brand 11
3.3 Brand awareness 12
3.4 Images and brand image 14

4 EMPIRICAL RESEARCH 15
4.1 Research design and methodology 15
4.2 Data collection 16
4.3 Target population and sample 17
4.4 Research Implementation 19
4.5 Research results 21
4.5.1 Online purchase behaviour 21
4.5.2 Brand awareness of TravelBird 25
4.5.3 The attractiveness of TravelBird 28

5 ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION 29


5.1 Finnish peoples’ behaviour when buying travel services 29
5.2 The level of brand awareness 30
5.3 Validity and reliability 32
5.4 Own process 33

6 CONCLUSIONS 35

REFERENCES 37

APPENDICES 40
1 INTRODUCTION

The tourism industry has significantly changed during the past 10 years
due to the development of internet as well as information and
communication technologies. It has led the tourism industry to the point
were travel agencies have moved partly or completely online. TravelBird,
Dutch online based travel agency, is one of these, as well as the case
company of this thesis.

I did my internship at TravelBird as a customer advisor and during that I


also got an idea of doing my thesis for them. Since my second week of the
internship, I noticed how suspicious Finnish people were about TravelBird.
This led me constantly think about the reasons behind these thoughts and
afterwords to the subject of this study. With the help of the country
manager of TravelBird Finland, I ended researching how well Finnish
people actually know TravelBird.

The aim of the thesis is to research Finnish people’s behaviour when


buying travel products online. What are the most important factors
affecting when choosing a travel agency? The purpose of the study is to
research the brand awareness of the principal company, TravelBird,
among Finnish people. The aim is to find out if Finnish people know the
principal company, if yes, what kind of images they have about it and do
they see the brand as attractive. Another objective is to get information of
the level of the brand awareness and about the interest towards its
services.

The theoretical framework consists of two bigger subjects. The first one is
online tourism intermediaries delimited to online travel agencies and tour
operators. The second one consists of brand, brand awareness and the
affect of brand awareness on consumers buying behaviour. The empirical
framework consists of quantitative research made for current and potential
customers of TravelBird with an online questionnaire.
2

TravelBird is a Dutch online based travel agency who provides travel


packages in 12 different countries. It was established at 2010 by two
Dutch men, Symen Jansma and Dennis Klomparberts. In 6 years
TravelBird has grown from a company of a few people to a company of
over 400 employees. There are employees from almost 30 different
countries and thus provides a very international working environment. The
office is located in the city center of Amsterdam. There are around 20
different deparments which all has their own responsibility area. Those are
for example global marketing, sales and IT which is concentrated on
developing the website. (TravelBird 2016).

Figure 1. The logo of TravelBird (TravelBird 2016).

TravelBird’s main idea is to inspire people and make booking and


travelling as easy as possible. TravelBird mostly offers ready packages
that normally includes flights, hotels, transfers and excursions. These
packages can be city trips, sun holidays, roundtrips or such as a ticket to a
spa and all of these can be booked by families, couples or single
travellers. TravelBird also offers hotel packages with competitive prices.
TravelBird has been now operating for 6 years and 4 million travellers
have travelled with them so far. TravelBird Finland started in May 2014
and is now a group about 10 employees, including for instance web
editors, marketing- and sales persons and customer advisors. (TravelBird
2016.)
3

TravelBird publishes 6 new offers everyday and these will be presented on


their daily newsletter that goes to everybody who has subscribed for their
newletter (TravelBird 2016). Below (picture 2.) is presented an insight of
TravelBird’s website and their way to marketing their offerings.

Figure 2. Screenshot from TravelBird’s website (9.10.2016)


4

2 ONLINE TOURISM INTERMEDIARIES

After the development of the printing press, internet is the most important
innovation ever since. Many of the existing media are combined through
internet. It brings new capabilities of interactivity and addressability but it
also transforms the very essence of what it means to be a human being in
society and the way individuals conduct their business with each other.
Millions on people worldwide use internet for working, learning,
entertainment, socializing, leisure and shopping. (Buhalis & Jun 2011.)

Information and communication technologies (ICT) improve the ability of


organizations to increase their productivity, manage their resources,
market their offerings and communicate their policies, and develop
partnerships with all their stakeholders, such as consumers and suppliers.
ICTs also helps and enable organizations to expand geographically and
coordinate their activities globally, nationally and regionally. ICTs include
hardware, software, groupware and netware as well as the intellectual
capacity to program, develop and maintain the equipment. (Buhalis 2003,
6.) Buhalis (2003, 7) considers ICT’s as:

“the entire range of electronic tools that facilitate the


operational and strategic management of organizations by
enabling them to manage their information, functions and
process as well as to communicate interactively with their
stakeholders, enabling them to achieve their missions”.

Intermediaries are the ones who unite buyer and seller with the aim of
reducing transaction and supply costs between buyer and seller instead of
totally eliminating the intermediary. If a producer chooses to use
intermediary, they can reduce promotion costs and possibly transfer a
certain risk to the distributor depending on the contracts made. However, a
producer might suffer from a loss of margins and influence on the
distribution process. For the consumer, the use of intermediaries often
offers competitive prices, special expertise and no need of search and
transaction costs. (Cooper 2005, 422-423.)
5

Travel planning, including travel information search and booking, are one
of the main reasons people use the internet. One of the most successful e-
commerce implementations are online travel booking and associated
travel services. For a successful organisation especially in the tourism
industry, e-business is an essential prerequisite in the emerging, globally
and internet-empowered business environment. (Buhalis & Jun 2011.)

2.1 Online travel agencies

The main distributors of the tourism product are travel agencies. For
customers, they offer objectivity in the advice and expert product
knowledge. Outgoing travel agencies offer travel services such as
provision of passports and visas and travel insurance. Travel agencies can
not stock travel products since they do not own the services instead they
can stock travel information in the form of brochures, data and leaflets as
well as personal expertise of travel consultants. They do not purchase
tourism products in advance but they reserve/issue travel documents such
as tickets and vouchers. (Buhalis 2003, 261-262.) Outgoing travel
agencies can be divided into numerous categories depending on several
variables such as size, type of business, appointment and geographical
spread. Only a few travel agencies operate globally but most of them are
multinational, national or regional. (Buhalis 2003, 263.)

The travel agency industry has been revolutionised by the internet since
the agencies now can reach their travel inventory directly. They are able to
book and search everything such as hotels and airlines online, increasing
their bookable inventory. Internet enables them to promote their
organisations and sell their own services. (Lai, Huang, Lu & Chang 2013.)
The internal organization of travel agencies experienced major
improvements because of the development of information and
communication technologies. With the internal systems and intranets
travel agencies can maximize their efficiency. (Buhalis 2003, 6.)
6

2.2 Online tour operators

Paid holidays, more free time and income disposal were the significant
changes in society which enabled tour operators to become a significant
part of the travel industry in the 1950’s. Since then, there has been a huge
progress in the tour operator industry which has been assisted by
developed information technologies and transportation, such as faster
airplanes with bigger capacity. (Cooper 2005, 427.)

Tour operators are organizers who create and put together travel
packages. They can sell them directly or offer them for sale through
retailers. Packages are pre-arranged and sold at an inclusive price,
normally including different combinations of accommodation, transport and
sometimes services such as catering or attractions. Tour operators
sometimes even pre-purchase a number of travel services but normally
they only pre-reserve them and set up a package at a single price.
(Buhalis 2003, 242.)

There are two types of tour operators where there is a clear distinction
between them. Large/mass operators cover a very wide range of tourism
products and destinations when small/specialist operators are
concentrating on themed or activity holidays and provides holidays for a
few destinations only. Small/specialist operators tend to charge premium
prices for specialized services when covering niche markets while bigger
operators concentrate on sales volume instead of profit margins. (Buhalis
2003, 242-243.)

Information communication technologies plays a crucial role in


communication between a tour operator and all the partners, including
transportation and accommodation principals, travel agencies and
consumers. Their function in the marketplace obligates them to coordinate
simultaneous movement of large number of travellers and it represents a
major operational management challenge. Internet together with intranet
and extranet are stratetic tools and have many critical benefits for tour
operators. (Buhalis 2003, 244.)
7

2.3 Consumer behaviour in online tourism

Online tourism empowers the interactivity to unpredecedented levels. It


offers new tools and mechanisms for direct communication with
consumers. They can now access information on everything on 24-
hours/365-days-a-year basis. This creates more experienced and
sophisticated travellers since they become more and more knowledgeable
and seek exceptional value for time and money. Consumers increasingly
require special expertise that involve rich artistic, cultural, environmental
and social resources. (Buhalis 2003, 313.) When organisation wants to
make their marketing activity more successful, an understanding of
consumer behaviour is crucial. (Horner & Swarbrooke 2016, 3.)

People are becoming more and more reliant on internet since it includes a
huge amount of information and essentially represents the “external
memory” of people. Social media, which has tremendously grown in the
past years, has also changed the dynamics of online communications.
Search engines of internet also have a major impact on travelers’ access
to tourism products. Smart phones and their apps for travel, also creates
easier access to travel information and experiences of other people which
again influence on individuals decicions. (Xiang, Magnini & Fasenmaier
2014.)

In recent years, this word-of-mouth effect is considered extremely


influential what comes to people’s travel planning. Travel related
information is easily obtained from the internet, for example, experts’
suggestions on tourist attractions or accommodation price and information.
(Lai, Huang, Lu & Chang 2013.) Electronic word-of-mouth as well as the
whole social media is changing the way people read, search and trust and
same time collaboratively produce information about tourism destinations
and suppliers. Thus tourists become co-marketers, co-producers, co-
designers and co-consumers of travel and tourism experiences. Personal
channels of communication exist when two or more people communicate
directly with each other using various forms: on the phone, face to face,
through mail or e-mail, online reviews (electronic recommendations and
8

experience sharing) or through internet ‘’chat’’ designed for electronic


word-of-mouth. (van Zyl & Sotidiaris 2013.) Comprehensive knowledge
and increasing travelling experiences available are creating more and
more demanding travellers who have different motivations and desires.
This leds to a point were more personal and unique services become
desired. (Buhalis 2003, 110.)

Trust can be defined as consumers will to believe that the sellers are
sincere and they acknowledge their high degrees of trustworthiness on
online shopping and transaction processes. This in turn generates
consumers’ goodwill belief that the sellers are kind. Website trust can also
be defined as the extent of belief that people produce throughout using
online shopping websites. These are mainly based on the hypermarket’s
image, good reputation, performance, commitment and emphases toward
service attitudes and operating performance. Stable privacy polices and
terms and conditions on the website, allow consumers to generate more
trust and confidence toward the website. (Lai et al. 2013.)

2.4 European Union consumer protection law

Traveller’s rights are affected by a choice to buy a package tour or to


travel independently. When choosing a package tour, tour operator is
responsible for all the services, for example transfer and accommodation.
Responsibility can not be transferred to the subcontractors, such as
transfer company, accomodation or another travel agency, which are
needed when building the package tour. On a package tour, the traveller
has a protection of package travel conditions from the moment of buying
the trip till the end of the trip. They have a right to cancel it and get help an
emergency situation. (Finnish competition and consumer authority 2014.)
Often traveller was neither protected for example in case of bankruptcy of
travel agency or tour operator nor in some unexpected situation at
destination where help was needed. Nowadays, the new legislation of
package tours protects traveller in these situations. (Mäki-Fränti 2015.)
9

The tourism industry has gone through big changes after the first package
travel directive was published in 1990. Since the increase of competition,
changes in consumer behaviour and internet development it is important to
keep the tourism legislation up to date. Before the new directive, travellers
have thought they have much bigger protection than they had in reality.
All travel agencies and tour operators, who sell a combination of two or
more tourist services, belong to the legislation of package tours since they
have an obligation to have an insurance. This new legislation of package
tours creates more equal competition situation amongst all travel
companies since they are all bound by the same rules. For the traveller,
this also brings a right to claim a compensation of displeasure in case the
trip does not correspond to what has been agreed but only when it is the
fault of tour operator. (Mäki-Fränti 2015.)
10

3 BRAND AWARENESS

In this chapter, I discuss brand and brand awareness as well as images


and brand image. First I tell how brand is defined and what is the meaning
of it. Second I introduce the formation of the brand and the meanings of
image and brand image. The last part is about brand awareness and
establishing it.

3.1 The definition and meaning of brand

Brands has been used for centuries to distinguish the products or services
of different companies from each other. In principle, whenever a marketer
creates a new name, symbol or logo for a new product, she or he created
a brand. (Keller 2008, 2.) Brand is a multi-dimensional phenomenon which
is traditionally defined as name, symbol, concept, sign, or some other
feature (Malmelin & Hakala 2008,17-18). The meaning of that is to
distinguish the product or a service from competitor (Keller 2008, 2).
Creating differences is what branding is all about (Kotler & Keller 2016,
387).

In the Finnish media guide (Brand 2016) it has been told that brand is a
positive reputation, which is formed around a trademark. The factors that
influence on the formation of brand value are its name or logo’s
awareness, customer loyalty, the feeling of quality which comes with a
brand and images attached to a brand. Brand can also be seen as a
summary of content or identity of the product or service. Brand makes the
product attractive in the eyes of the customer and promises quality.
Succesfull and well-known brand creates added value for the product.

Malmelin and Hakala (2008, 18) believe that a future brand and road to
success is radical brand. Radical brand consists of everything that the
organization does, how does it look like, how they communicate, how does
it sound like and how it is talked about. It is a mindset that guides the
organization, as well as unifying vision of activities and communication.
11

3.2 The formation of the brand

Everybody has to work on the awareness, attractiveness and success of


the brand. Although brand gets its final form in peoples’ minds and it can
be very different image when asking from different people. Behind the
attitude and image there are always each values, interest, the information
received and acquired, and possible experiences of the brand. (Von
Hertzen 2006, 91.)

Kapferer (2012, 8-9) defines a brand as a name with the power to


influence. A brand can have a name that is easily pronounceable and
spontaneously evokes desirable accociation but a name to become a
brand it needs to command trust, respect, engagement and passion.
Brands must convey trust, certitude and emotion as well as be a risk
reducer. The perceived risk could be experiental, economic (linked to
price), functional (linked to performance), psychological (linked to our self-
concept) or social (linked to our social image). This is why it takes so much
time to build a brand awareness, trust and emotional bonding. The product
or service, together with the people at points of contact with the market,
the places, the price, the communication makes a name acquire the power
of a brand. These are the sources of cumulative brand experience. (See
figure 1.)

Brand concept (remarkable value


proposition) tangible and intangible
values

Brand name and


Product or service
symbols, semiotic
experience at
invariants
contact points

Figure 3. The brand system. (Kapferer 2012, 10.)


12

3.3 Brand awareness

One of the fundamental dimensions of brand equity is brand awareness,


often seen as prerequistite of peoples’ buying decicion (Kotler & Keller
2016, 235). Generating and maintaining brand awareness has long been
held one of the main goals of marketing. The set of brands also defined as
consumer’s consideration set, to which a consumer gives a serious
attention when making a purchase decicion. The brands that enter
consumer’s consideration set, is strongly affected by the brand awareness.
(Mcdonald & Sharp 2000.)

Kotler and Keller (2016, 20) define brand awareness as fostering people’s
ability to recall or recognize the brand in sufficient detail to make a
purchase. Keller (2008, 54) sees brand recognition in a way that, are the
consumers, who have prior exposure to the brand, able to recognize the
brand when given it as a cue. Brand recall is defined as consumers’ ability
to seek the brand from memory when for example given a cue of a
purchase usage situation or product category. Brand recall is more
important for online brands when the consumer decicions are not made at
the point of purchase but settings away from the point of purchase. Recall
is not that easy to achieve than recognition since consumers more likely
recognize for example the color than the name of the brand. Top of mind
awareness (TOMA) is the brand that comes to mind when thinking of a
particular product class, without a cue. These levels of brand awareness
are presented on the figure 2. below.
13

Figure 4. Brand awareness pyramid (Aaker 1991, 62).

Brand awareness is not a mere cognitive measure in fact, it is correlated


with many valuable image dimensions. When a brand is known, every
individual knows it is known and this leads to spontaneous inferences.
Awareness is mostly correlated with aspects such as trust, reliability, high
quality, closeness to people, a good quality/price ratio, accessibility and
traditional styling. (Kapferer 2012, 21.)

The benefits of creating high level of brand awareness are consideration


advantages, learning advantages and choice advantages. Strength and
the formation of the associations that make up the brand image is
influenced by brand awareness. Marketers must first establish a brand
node in memory to create a brand image. The nature of which affects how
easily the consumer stores and learns additional brand associations.
Registering the brand in the minds of consumers is the first step in building
brand equity. Whenever consumers are making purchase decicions, they
must consider the brand or as mentioned earlier, be a member of the
consideration set. Consumers more likely have a handful of brands that
receive a consideration for purchase instead of having only one brand they
are loyal to. The third advantage of creating a high level of brand
14

awareness is that it can affect choices among brands in the consideration


set. This in turn is affected by consumers purchase motivation and
purchase ability. For many consumers choosing a brand is not a life-or-
death decision. If among brand category, there is a lack of perceived
differences it is likely to leave the consumer unmotivated about the choice
process. Many times consumers do not have the necessary knowledge or
experience to judge product quality even if they so desired. These are for
instance products with a high degree of technical sophistication. (Keller
2008, 54-55.)

3.4 Images and brand image

The preconditions of an organisation are positive images and meanings.


Nowadays, it is not only the material markets that companies are
competing in, but also intangible markets. The images of an organisation
in consumers’ minds are the ones that control the consumption. For
consumers, brands primarily occur as images and perceptions and these
are personal for every individual. (Malmelin & Hakala 2008, 124-126.)

Brand image is about consumers’ perceptions about a brand. Images are


multidimensional and they reflect characteristics of a product or service or
aspects independent of those. (Keller 2008, 51.) Marketing programs that
link strong, favourable, and unique accociations to the brand in memory, is
what it takes to create a positive brand image. (Keller 2008, 56)
15

4 EMPIRICAL RESEARCH

The empirical part of the study is based on a quatitative research to be


made for TravelBird’s current and potential customers with a self-
administered online questionnaire. The aim is to find out how well-known
TravelBird is among Finnish people and what kind of images people have
about TravelBird. The purpose is to figure out whether people see
TravelBird as an attractive online travel agency or not.

4.1 Research design and methodology

Research design is the framework or plan for a study which guides the
selection of sources and types of information. It outlines procedures for
every research activity. A research design ensures that the study will be
relevant to the research problem and will use economical procedures.
(Blumberg, Cooper & Schindler 2008, 195.) It is the general plan of how
you will go about answering the research questions. Research designs are
classified into three traditional categories: descriptive, exploratory or
explanatory. (Saunders, Lewis & Thornhill 2009, 136-140.) The choice of
the most appropriate design depends on the research problem and the
research objectives (Malhotra 2007, 78).

In this study, a descriptive research design is applied. Descriptive research


is a type of conclusive research that has its significant object the
description of something, usually market functions or characteristics. The
characteristics of descriptive research are that it makes a clear statement
of the problem, defines clearly the information needed and that the
research is pre-planned and structured. (Malhotra 2007, 82.) This study
applies descriptive research since it tries to describe an accurate profile of
persons, events or situations (Saunders et al. 2009, 140).

The research questions and objectives, the amount of time and resources
available, as well as the philosophical underpinnings are guiding the
choice of the research strategy. Research strategies should not be
considered as being mutually exclusive. (Saunders et al. 2009, 141.) In
16

this study the research strategy used is survey strategy.

The chosen research methodology for this study is quantitative research in


order to collect sufficient sample of relevant data. According to Keller
(2008) quantitative research gives more definitive assessment of the depth
and breadth of brand awareness. Quantitative research can be defined as
a method where the data is analysed numerically. It answers to questions
like how many, how much and how often. (Vilkka 2007, 14.) The most
common quantitative data analysis techniques are charts, graphs and
statistics and they help when exploring, presenting and examining
relationships and trends within our data. Quantitative data is something
that can be easily quantified to help answer the research questions and to
meet the objectives. (Saunders et al. 2009, 414.) I chose quantitative
research method since the research questions of this study are
corresponding to the ones used in quantitative research method.
Quantitative research gives a general picture from relations and
differentials of variables (Vilkka 2007, 13). In this study the variables are
for instance, how much consumers have generally purchased travel
products online and how much they have purchased from TravelBird.

4.2 Data collection

In this study, structured questionnaire as a research design is applied.


Questions are presented with exact same wording and in the same order
to all respondents. In this research, the reson for standardizing the
questions is to ensure that all respondents are replying to the same
questions and the replies are comparable. The questionnaire used in this
research is designed by defining the information needed to answer the
research objectives and questions. In addition, the questionnaire is
structured, designed, formed and modified basen on the theory about
measuring brand awareness and previous brand awareness researches.

The questionnaire type chosen for this quatitative research is a self-


administered questionnaire. Self-administered questionnaires are normally
administered electronically using internet or intranet and completed by the
17

respondents themselves. In this type of questionnaire, it is important to


design it the way that it is easy for everybody to answer with all devices.
(Saunders et al. 2009, 362-364.) I am using the online programme,
Webropol, to create this questionnaire. This way I only need to share the
link of the questionnaire to the respondents and the program automatically
collects all the data and creates the basic statistics, tables, charts and
perceptual maps. The respondents are given multiple-choice options, list
questions, one open question and likert-style rating questions with options
from 1 to 4. Rating questions are often used when collecting opinion data.
In these type of questions, the respondent is asked how strongly he or she
agrees or disagrees with the presented statement. (Saunders et al. 2009,
375-378.) I used the same adjectives through the whole questionnaire to
make it easier for the respondent to answer.

At the same time I advertise the survey on tourism-related forum called


Suomi24, where the aim is to reach out the people who are not familiar
with the case company but are interested in travelling. I chose that forum
since it is very well known in Finland and lots of people who have aim to
travel somewhere goes through that forum. However, if after all, I do not
have enough respondents, I will advertise the survey on my personal
Facebook page. I believe there I have enough contacts to reach the aimed
number of respondents. However, this is not desirable way to get
respondents since there people know me personally and that can distort
the results. The questionnaire can be found on the appendices (appendix
1).

4.3 Target population and sample

The objective of the research is to obtain information of the characteristics


of a population. A population consists of all the elements that share a
common set of characteristics and that comprise the universe for the
purposes of the research problem (Malhotra 2007, 335). According to
Saunders (2009, 212) population is the full set of cases from which a
sample is taken. For all research questions and objectives, where it would
18

be impracticable to collect data from the entire population, need to be


selected a sample. A sample is a subgroup of the population selected for
the participation in the study. (Malhotra 2007, 335.) Sampling saves time
and therefore it is an important consideration when there are tight
deadlines (Saunders et al. 2009, 212).

Sampling design starts by specifying the target population. The target


population is the collection of objectives and elements that possess the
information sought by the researcher and about which inferences are to be
made. It should be defined in terms of sampling units, elements, extent
and time. An element is the object from which or about which the
information is desired. Usually, in survey research, the respondent is the
element. An element or a unit containing the element is called sampling
unit. (Malhotra 2007, 335.) Target population must be accurately
determined before the presentable sample can be chosen from it (Heikkilä
2008,34). The research can be ineffective and misleading if the definition
of the target population is imprecise (Malhotra 2007,336).

The primary intention is to receive information from the potential target


audience of the case company, meaning people over 18-year-old who
travel or are interested in travelling. In this research the whole population
is the case company’s target audience and the target population consist of
Finnish over 18-year-old male or female, head of household who is mostly
responsible of making travel bookings. Target population is divided into
two smaller groups, people who knows the case company and people who
are not familiar with it.

After the target group of the study has been determined, a sample frame
has to be constructed. A sample frame is a representation of the elements
of the target group. It consists of a list or set of direction for identifying the
target group. (Malhotra 2007,337). In this study the sample frame is
difficult to determine from the target population since there do not exist a
list of the company’s potential customers.
19

It would be impractical and time consuming to survey the entire population


and that is why a sampling technique was applied. Sampling techniques
offers a range of methods that enable you to reduce the amount of data
that needs to be collected. Instead of collecting data from all the possible
cases or elements, in this case, only the data from a sub-group is
considered. Sampling techniques can be divided into two groups:
probability sampling and non-probability sampling. When using probability
sampling, each case being selected from the population is known and is
normally equal for all cases. Survey and experimental research startegies
are often associated with probability sampling. (Saunders et al. 2009, 210-
212.) In contrast, non-probability sampling is subjective and arbitrary. Each
member does not have a known non-zero chance of being included.
(Blumberg et al. 2008, 235.) In this study probability sampling is applied
because the respondents will be chosen randomly.

4.4 Research Implementation

In this study, self-administered survey was implemented to survey the


online purchase behaviour when buying travel services online as well as
the attractiveness and the level of brand awareness of the case company.
The information about the purpose of the research was provided in the
questionnaire together with the information of the lottery of 50euro gift
voucher for TravelBird. If the respondents were willing to take part of the
lottery, they were asked to leave their personal information at the end of
the questionnaire.

A draft of the questionnaire was sent to TravelBird to the country manager


of Finland and to the team leader of web editors. Changes and additions
were made according to their comments. Option “value for money” was
added to the questions that figures out the most important factors when
buying travel services. In addition, in the question “From where have you
heard about TravelBird?” the option “advertisement” was added. After this
the questionnaire was piloted among six people before sending it to the
real respondents. The aim of the testing was to make sure that the
20

questionnaire is as functional and smooth as possible and that all the


questions are easy to understand and answer. The feedback from the test
respondents was mostly positive and only a few typos were fixed.

The research was implemented by collecting data in three different ways.


First it was sent twice through TravelBird’s newletter to reach out the
people who are familiar with the brand and possibly have made a booking
previously. After this I advertised it on the internet on travel related forum
called Suomi24. From there I hope to reach as many as possible of the
people who are interested on travelling and online booking. I chose this
specific forum since it is quite known and popular in Finland. There people
can share their travelling experiences anonymously and at the same time
gain information from others. Since after this I did not have enough
respondents, I advertised it on my personal Facebook page.

The data was collected between 18.9.2016 - 23.9.2016 in the ways


described above. The background variables were determined to be
gender, age and living status of the respondent. Two main focus parts
were general purchase behaviour and the brand awareness and
attractiveness of TravelBird. The structured questionnaire functioned as a
data collection method. The questionnaire form is included in appendixes
(appendix 1).

The aimed number of respondents were 150 but the actual number of
respondents were 133. As mentioned, I collected data in three different
ways on 18.-23.9.2016. After the questionnaire had been sent twice,
18.9.2016 and 21.9.2016, through TravelBird’s newletter I had 37
respondents. After advertising at Suomi24 forum 21.9.2016, I had 57
respondents and eventually after putting it to my personal Facebook page
22.9.2016, I had 133. It was not the targeted amount but it was enough
since 100 was minimum.
21

4.5 Research results

The research results are presented by subjects which are general


purchase behaviour, the brand awareness of TravelBird and the
attractiveness of TravelBird. To visualize the results, I have created
illustrative figures and tables. All the data was collected using Webropol
tool but the tables and figures are created using Microsoft Word. All the
questions did not have the same number of respondents since not every
question were mandatory to all of the respondents.

In the questionnaire, there was one totally open question but many of the
questions included an open question depending on the answer of the
respondent. The majority of these answers are left out from the analysis of
the study. There was a lot of material so it would have needed qualitative
analysing for which I did not have time. However, the material is very
valuable for the case company and that is why the material will be sent to
the case company separately later on.

4.5.1 Online purchase behaviour

When asked about the frequency of buying travel products online, most of
the respondents answered affirmative (91%, n=121) and only 9 % (n=12)
answered negative.

One third (31%, n=38) of the respondents have previously bought travel
products from a foreign company. In this context, it was also asked “from
where” the respondent have bought travel products previously and those
were for instance Ebookers, Booking and Supersaver. Half of the
respondents (48 %, n=58) have never bought travel products from a
foreign company and surprisingly one fifth (21 %, n=25) do not know if
they have made a purchase from a foreign company. (figure 3.)
22

21 %
31 %
Yes

No

I don't know

48 %

Figure 5. Buying travel products from a foreign company. (n=121)

The purchase frequency of travel products was also investigated. A little


bit over half (56 %, n=67) of the respondents said occasionally and 41 %
(n=49) said continually.

Table 1. The Frequency of purchase. (n=120)

Continually

Occasionally

Once

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

Part of the general online purchase behaviour was to figure out what type
of services the respondents are used to buying online. Since TravelBird
offers mostly travel packages, the aim was to find out how much interest
the respondents have towards travel packages. The respondents were
able to choose more than one option. The most typical travel services
were hotel (78%, n=95) and package trip (64%, n=78). Third of the
respondents have bought some kind of excursion or concert tickets online.
One third (27%, n=33) answered “other” and most of the answers were
flights, bus or train tickets. (Table 2.)
23

Table 2. The type of travel product. (n=121)

90
78
80
70 64
60
50 40
40
27
30
20
10
0
Hotel Package trip Excursion/concert Other

The respondents who had previously bought travel products online, were
asked about the type of product they have bought. This was a likert-style-
rating question with options 1-4 so the numbers on the table (tab 5.) are
averages of the answers. There were many factors that seemed to be
more important than the others for the respondents, especially good
quality-price ratio, easy purchase, clear web page and cheap prices. On
the other hand, the factors Finnish company, well-known brand and
opening hours were also seen as important with the average of at least
two.

Table 3. The important factors when buying travel products. (n=121)

Cheap prices
Opening hours
Easy purchase
Versatile selection
Finnish company
Recommendations
Well known brand
Clear website
Good customer service
Good quality-price-ratio
Other, what?

0 0,5 1 1,5 2 2,5 3 3,5 4


24

The background variables were determined to be gender, age and living


status of the respondent. Majority (80%, n=106) of the respondents were
women, one fifth (20%, n=26) were men. There were respondents from all
age groups as presented on the table below. This was desired on
sampling since TravelBird has customers from all age groups. One third of
the respondents (36%, n=48) were under 25-year-old, another third (28%,
n=37) were 26-40-year-old, one fifth (22%, n=29) were 41-60-year-old and
14 % were over 60-year-old. (Table 4.)

Table 4. Age of the respondents. (n=133)

40
36

35

30
27

25
22

20

14
15

10

1
0
UNDER 25 26 - 40 41 - 60 OVER 60 I DO NOT WANT
TO SAY

A bit more of the backround was figured out by asking the living status of
the respondent since usually it is related to who they travel with. Large
group of the respondents live with a partner (40 %, n=53) or alone (34 %,
n=45). All the other options were under 20 % which can be seen on the
table below (tab 4). It can be concluded that most the respondents travel
in the groups of two.
25

Table 5. Living status of the respondents. (n=133)

45

40
40

34
35

30

25

20

15

12
10

8
4
5

2
0
I LIVE ALONE I LIVE WITH A I LIVE WITH I LIVE WITH OTHER I DO NOT
PARTNER KIDS AND KIDS WANT TO
PARTNER TELL

4.5.2 Brand awareness of TravelBird

The brand awareness of TravelBird was studied by asking if the


respondent recognizes the logo by showing first only the picture of the
logo. Only third (28%, n=37) of the respondents recognized the logo and
the rest did not recognize it (65%, n=86) or they were not sure (7%, n=10).
When asked about, if the respondents have heard about TravelBird by its
name, over half (56%, n=75) answered affirmative and 2% (n=3) were still
not sure. The awareness level of the logo and the name of the case
company are illustrated on a comparing table below (tab 7).
26

Table 6. The awareness levels of the logo and the name of TravelBird
(n=133)
70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0
Yes No I'm not sure

Recognizing the logo Recognizing the name TravelBird

The awareness level of the case company’s website was investigated by


asking if they have visited the website previously or not. Clearly over half
of the respondents (66%, n=50) had visited on the website and third of the
respondents (29%, n=22) have not. Respondents who were not sure if
they have visited the website were 5% (n=4).

Images of the case company’s website were investigated by asking about


the images that come to their mind when visiting the website. If the
respondent had not visited the website previously, there was a straight link
to the website. This was a likert-style-rating question where the option
scale is 1-4 so the numbers on the table (tab 5.) are averages of the
answers. There were options “clear” and “good quality” that got an
average over 3. Two lowest avarages were options “suprising” and
“reliable” (tab 8.). There was also option “Other, what?” and spurisingly
there were 15 responses to that. Far above half of those responses were
negatively related to the pop-up advertisement of TravelBird’s website.
One of these answers was:

“Very annoying. When you go to the website the pop-up


advertisement comes up and it is not possible to close it
and it makes it impossible to browse through the website.
My nerves lasted four seconds.”
27

Table 7. Images that comes to the respondents’ mind of the website.


(n=133)

Clear

Realiable

Easy

Inspiring

High-quality

Suprising
Value for
money
Other, what?

0 0,5 1 1,5 2 2,5 3 3,5

The respondents who had bought service or services from TravelBird were
asked about their purchase experience. This was also a likert-style-rating
question with options 1-4 so the respondent was asked to evaluate how
strongly those specific factors describes purchase experience. The
numbers on the table below (tab 5.) are averages of the answers. The
adjectives of the purchase experience which had the highest average of
over 3,5 were “easy” and “good quality-price ratio”. The average of the rest
of the adjectives were also over 3 but there no significant differences seen
between them. (tab 9.)

Table 8. Purchase experience. (n=9)

Easy
Inspiring
Positive
Good quality-price ratio
Fast
Value for money
Other, what?

0 0,5 1 1,5 2 2,5 3 3,5 4


28

4.5.3 The attractiveness of TravelBird

Those who had made a purchase from TravelBird where asked if they
would recommend it to their friends and family or not. The survey showed
that majority (83%, n=10) would recommend TravelBird.

The attractiveness of TravelBird was studied by figuring out if the


respondents could imagine buying their products in the future. This
question was mandatory for all the respondents and therefore it includes
respondents who had made a purchase before and respondents who had
not. Most of of the respondents (88%, n=117) could imagine using
TravelBird’s services in the future. Only 12% (n=16) could not imagine
making a purchase from TravelBird and they were asked “why?”. The most
common answer was “I don’t like or buy travel packages, I create it by
myself.”

To find out the most affective advertisement ways and places, the
respondents were asked, “Where have they heard about TravelBird?”.
Third of the respondents (31%, n=23) had heard about the company for
the first time through advertisement. (table 9.)

Table 9. The place where the respondent heard about TravelBird for the
first time. (n=75)

Family/friends 21,33
Facebook 17,33
Instagram 1,33
Forum 1,33
Advertisement 30,67
Blog 0
Search engine (Google) 13,33
Other, where? 14,67

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
29

5 ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION

In this part I will analyse and discuss about the results using theoretical
framework. There is not any earlier study made for TravelBird of this
subject in Finland so there is not a basis of comparison for the results.

5.1 Finnish peoples’ behaviour when buying travel services

People are becoming more and more reliant to internet since it includes a
huge amount of information and essentially represents the “external
memory” of people (Xiang, Magnini & Fasenmaier 2014). The study
revealed that as mentioned, buying travel services online is extremely
common since almost all the respondents of this research have done so.

When I was a customer advisor intern at TravelBird, I noticed how


sceptical the customers were about the company when mentioned it is not
Finnish and that is why I wanted to figure out does it really have a big
affect on consumers purchase decicions. Suprisingly, in my study the
option “domestic company” had the lowest average when the respondents
gave their ratings of the most important factors affecting when buying
travel services. However, it could be concluded that part of the consumers
are not always sure if the company is domestic or not. According to the
results, where fifth of the respondents was not sure if they have made a
purchase from a foreign company.

The study showed that Finnish consumers have bought separate hotel
packages the most and second came the whole travel package. As stated
by Buhalis (2003, 313) consumers can access information on everything
on 24-hours/365-days-a-year basis and hence they are becoming more
experienced and sophisticated travellers. It can be generally concluded
that since the consumers now have more information, they are more
confident on buying all the elements of the trip separately.

According to Kapferer (2012, 21) awareness is mostly correlated with


aspects such as trust, reliability, high quality, closeness to people, a good
quality/price ratio, accessibility and traditional styling. In this study the
30

most affecting factors considered were quality-price ratio, easy purchase


and cheap prices. So it can be concluded that these results support the
theory.

One interesting thing that was not part of my survey instead it came up
from the open questions. Over half of the respondents, who answered to
the open questions, commented about the pop-up advertisement that
comes to the screen when you open TravelBird’s website. It is about
subscribing for the daily newsletter of TravelBird and it can be closed by
clicking “I have already subscribed”. However, this was something that
many of the respondents did not realize and they were clearly annoyed
about it. This kind of pop-up advertisements are quite common these days
but normally there is a clear “x-button” where the advertisement is possible
to close and in this specific advertisement there is not. This can be quite
crucial for some people when they are about to choose online travel
agency on the internet. There are so many options to choose from
nowadays and the first impression of the website is crucial so it should be
as positive as possible.

5.2 The level of brand awareness

There were 8 respondents who had previously made a purchase from


TravelBird so it can be concluded that most of the respondents gave their
answers only by the images and accociations they have about TravelBird
and their website, Hence, most of the respondents belong to the potential
target group of TravelBird. It can be mentioned that the respondents who
had made a purchase before, experienced TravelBird as a “easy
purchase” which is very positive thing for the company. Easy purchase is
also one of the main objectives that TravelBird itself is aiming to be.

Only a few people recognized the logo of TravelBird but surprisingly a bit
over half of the respondents recognized the brand by its name. I would say
that TravelBird brand still has a low level of recognition. Based on my own
experience when I did my internship at TravelBird, I did not expect even
this high brand awareness among Finnish people. This can be partly
31

explained by their low-budget marketing which is mostly social media


marketing and search engine optimization.

It can be concluded that TravelBird should bring out their logo more since
according to Kotler and Keller (2016, 20) consumers more likely recognize
for example the color than the name of the brand. Although for the future
they should aim for brand recall since Kotler and Keller (2016, 20) states it
is more important for online brands than recognition when the consumer
decicions are not made at the point of purchase but settings away from the
point of purchase.

When an organisation wants to make their marketing activity more


successful, an understanding of consumer behaviour is crucial (Horner &
Swarbrooke 2016, 3). Since part of the study was to research consumer
behaviour when buying travel services online, that is very valuable
information for TravelBird Finland if they are going to invest more into
marketing.

Even though the brand was recognized by over half of the respondents, it
is still not in the consideration set of most of the respondents. According to
Keller (2008, 55) one of the advantages of creating a high level of brand
awareness is that it can affect choices among brands in the consideration
set. This in turn is affected by consumers purchase motivation and
purchase ability. It can be concluded that the images of TravelBird are
positive mostly based on respondents visit on the website. I believe that
TravelBird could enter to many consumer’s consideration set if they only
put some effort into the marketing and that way raise their awareness in
consumer’s minds.

The study showed that the respondents really have interest towards
TravelBird’s services. The interesting thing was that when was asked
“why”, many of the respondents answered “unknown services but I will
definitely check their offerings”. Also from this, it can be concluded that
TravelBird’s services are considered attractive. As stated by Buhalis & Jun
(2011) travel planning, including travel information search and booking,
32

are one of the main reasons people use the internet. Nowadays the scope
of offerings is enormous. It is a quite big deal if the company is seen as
attractive only by their website.

TravelBird can be seen as an attractive online travel agency. Most of the


respondents could imagine buying products from them in the future. It can
be concluded that most of the respondents gave their answers based on
accociations of the website since only 6% had bought services from
TravelBird. It can also be concluded that the website of TravelBird is seen
interesting according to those earlier shown research results.

In recent years, word-of-mouth effect is considered extremely influential


what comes to people’s travel planning (Lai, Huang, Lu & Chang 2013).
As the research showed, one fifth of the respondents have heard about
TravelBird from a friend or family. It is very low number if considered how
big impact word-of-mouth can have nowadays when choosing travel
services.

5.3 Validity and reliability

Validity and reliability need to be taken into account in order to ensure the
quality of research. The internal reliability and validity of the data you
collect and the achieved response rate depend on the structure of your
questions, the design of your questions and the rigour of your pilot testing.
A valid questionnaire enables to collect accurate data and one that is
reliable will mean that the data is collected consistently. Validity and
realiability are discussed in terms of questions and answers making sense.
(Saunders, Lewis & Thornhill 2009, 371.) Reliability means the ability of
the study to give non-random results (Vilkka 2007).

There were 133 respondents in this research which is quite small sample
for a quantitative research. This research can be considered moderately
reliable. In the theoretical part the topic was precisely defined using
reliable references diversely. The questionnaire was coherent and the
questions were formulated so that they were easy to understand. This was
33

made sure by pilot testing in the beginning of the survey. The thing that
undermines the realiability is that large group of the sample was collected
from the researchers personal Facebook and hence there can be falsify
responses. The sample of this research was not determined clear enough
and it can be considered too wide. The response rate can not be
calculated since there was not a specific target population amount. This
research would have been more reliable if the target population would
have been targeted more narrowly. Another thing that undermines the
reliability is that there were only 8 respondents who have previously
bought TravelBirds services. This is why the purchase experiences of the
respondents can not be generalized.

This research can be seen as quite valid. The theoretical part addresses
diversely subjects that supports the research and also a lot of things the
case company can get some advantage in the future. However, theoretical
framework could have gone deeper in to the subjects since now it includes
too much of only basic information. The research answers to the research
questions and it makes it enable to give some development ideas for the
future. The thing that makes the validity a bit lower is that the theoretical
framework was not totally completed before doing the brand awareness
research. That is why the empirical part is not always bindable with the
presented theory.

5.4 Own process

This thesis process was longer than it was planned to be in the beginning
and it took about five months in total. The beginning was quite slow since
the subject of the thesis was not totally sure yet and the formation of it took
some time. One of the biggest challenges during this process was that the
subject I ended up researching, was not so familiar for me since I have not
studied tourism management. It took a long time to get deeper insight of
that industry and hence made the start a bit harder. Another challenge
was the English language since it is not my native language. I have lived
34

abroad for a year but obviously the glossary of the theme was not familiar
for me.

This thesis was a major learning process for myself and it really felt like I
learned something new of myself every week when working with the
thesis. I learned how big impact groundwork has in every phase of the
thesis. Especially those 3 weeks I put into creating and formatting the
questionnaire was all worth it. Overall I think the thesis was quite
succesfull and the subject was suitably delimited. I believe TravelBird can
gain some valuable information from it and it allows them to develop their
services in the future.

The tourism industry is a large and multi-dimensional industry it grows and


develops all the time. This thesis only scratched the surface of consumer
behaviour in the tourism industry. It would be interesting to go much
deeper to consumers’ thoughts by using qualitative research method to
get the deeper insight. As this study showed, TravelBird’s brand
awareness is relatively low among Finnish consumers so it would be
useful to create a comprehensive and specific marketing plan. This way
new and appropriate marketing ways could be found.
35

6 CONCLUSIONS

The aim of the research was to study people’s behaviour when buying
travel services online as well as figure out how well-known TravelBird is in
Finland. The objective was to find out what kind of images consumers
have about the company. The subject was formatted partly during my
internship at TravelBird on spring 2016 when I got an insight of the
customers’ thoughts when working as a customer advisor for five months.
This subject was pleasing and it was very interesting to study.

The thesis starts by handling online tourism intermediaries generally in


order to make the basic information and elements clear to the reader. In
the same section, I discuss about consumer behaviour in the tourism
sector. The other part of the theoretical framework discusses brand and
brand awareness as well as the formation of brand awareness. The
empirical part of this thesis is concentrated on the case company,
TravelBird, through a quantitative brand awareness study. The research
was implemented with a self-administered online questionnaire using
Webropol. In the last part of the thesis, I concentrated on analysing the
results based on the theory.

The first objective I set was to study Finnish consumers’ behaviour when
buying travel services and also find out the things that affect strongest on
consumers purchase decisions. The factors that stood out from the
research were easy purchase, quality-price ratio and cheap prices. As
stated on the theoretical part consumers can access information on
everything on a 24-hours/365-days-a-year basis and hence they are
becoming more experienced and sophisticated travellers. The study
showed that Finnish consumers have bought separate hotel packages the
most and second came the whole travel package. It can be concluded that
since the consumers now have more information available they are more
confident in buying all the elements of the trip separately.

The second objective was to figure out the level of brand awareness of
TravelBird among Finnish consumers and the images they have about the
36

company and whether they see it as an attractive online travel agency or


not. At the same time, the purpose was to examine the attractivess of
TravelBird as a brand. The study showed that, surprisingly, cleary over
half of the respondents recognized the name of the case company but
only a small group recognized the logo. According to the validity of the
survey results, I would say that brand awareness of TravelBird is quite low.
The most positive thing was that most of the respondents could imagine
buying from TravelBird in the future and also most of the ones that had
already done so, would recommend TravelBird for their friends and family.
So according to the results, TravelBird can be seen as an attractive online
travel agency among Finnish consumers.

I believe this thesis is benefitical for the case company since it shows that
they have a lot of potential to raise their status on the markets. Generally,
this study provides broad information about Finnish consumers’ behaviour
when buying travel services. As this study showed, people are very
interested in their services but they have too little knowledge about the
company, and hence they are sceptical about it. By investing little by little
more into marketing, TravelBird could achieve a better status on the
Finnish markets.
37

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APPENDICES

Appendix 1. Online questionnaire

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