What steps are China’s hotels and travel destinations taking to kick-start tourism post-coronavirus? Think virtual reality, pre-sale deals and robots

Post-Covid-19 travel deals include ‘no worry’ packages, virtual reality tours and cleaning robots to ensure proper hygiene in hotels
At the start of spring each year, millions of Chinese travellers return home to pay their respects to ancestors in an extended holiday known as Ching Ming Festival Festival. This year’s travel numbers are stark. Despite a relaxation of travel restriction across much of China, numbers have dropped by more than 60 per cent year-on-year with subsequent spending falling by 80 per cent.
Against this backdrop, Alarice, a China-focused social media agency, delivered a webinar outlining the state of disruption, potential trends for tourism recovery and strategies to attract Chinese tourists in the coming year. Here are four key takeaways.
Pre-sale travel packages
From online travel service providers to hotel chains and major tourist destinations, China’s tourism industry is embracing pre-sale products with money-back guarantees.
The travel section of China’s largest group-deal platform, Meituan-Dianping, has worked with 20,000 hotels and more than 3,200 travel destinations to create “No-Worry Living” packages. In these uncertain and health-centric times, such deals encourage travel suppliers to be transparent about adopted hygiene measures and offer financial security to Chinese travellers.
Although digitally enacted, successful initiatives harness the social side of China’s media landscape. Group buying and purchases made through private traffic – content that users discover within their friend circle – continue to grow in popularity with upscale chain New Century Hotel Group revealing 30 per cent of sales were generated through user shares. Despite the appeal of generating short-term revenue and tying up future business, Alarice’s Sylvie Xie offered caution: “You need to realise that the reason customers are willing to buy [pre-sale packages] is because they are able to unsubscribe and get refunds at any time”.
Live streams and virtual reality
On March 23, Ctrip’s executive chairman, Liang Jianzhang, live streamed from inside Atlantis Hotel in Sanya, Hainan province. Backgrounded by schools of passing fish, his underwater hotel room stands as one of China’s most expensive and well beyond the reach of most watching. The travel deals he was tuning in to announce, however, were not. Within an hour Ctrip had sold 10 million travel products. The initiative was achieved in partnership with short-video platform Douyin, which has also supported similar efforts by cultural destinations such as Beijing’s Forbidden City and Hangzhou’s Zhejiang Museum.

Online travel agent eLong has also started to use video content to engage potential travellers. The province of Ningxia, in north central China, has been an early partner in eLong’s “City Alliance” programme which uses virtual reality and high-definition videos to offer users at home “a rich and colourful audio and video browsing experience from home”, as Xie described.
The booking habits of Chinese travellers may be shifting, but when it comes to stepping out into the world, the trend of daka (打卡), whereby people announce their presence at popular destinations with social media posts, endures. Indeed, making light of the preceding months of quarantine by “checking-in” to unspectacular local restaurants has become something of a trend.