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How we service Your Essential Interests. If you cannot find it here—or HOW TO FIND IT---Don’t fire us. Just send an email to This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

A Publishing Resource Center is always a work in progress, focused at launch principally on Content matters followed by Market Research Access, Dynamic market sizing sector by sector; Consumer Research Results, and Content Archives starting Day One.

To us as publishers who cut our teeth in print long before there was an Internet, the need to create a content template long before we are prepared to label the buckets in which special interest material will reside, the process is a bit of a challenge., even though we have been doing for a dozen years. ( Yes, we were there at the beginning of online publishing, and still struggling to find our digital balance, it seems)

As we grow into our Luxury Travel 360 niche, you will find all of our Essence Journalism deliverables under Essence labels like Issues and Insights, Who Is Doing What That Works, Voices & Views, From the Media, Notes from the Editor, Mighty Math of Luxury, the Feedback Loop, and more. Those labels will travel from newsletter to web site to archives and back to editors charged with bringing you Living Content—updating, enlarging, and always prioritizing. 

 
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From the Editor

Melissa Bradley’s On My Mind message in the Sept-Oct issue of Indagare—family focused travel--just happened to be what was on my mind as I reviewed some of the most recent surveys on consumer travel behavior in a struggling economy.

In the November 3rd issue, covering the Latest Quarterly Survey from American Express Publishing/Harrison Group on Affluence and Wealth in America, is a most informative visit to spending in a troubled economy.

One thing that struck us, as we listened to the October 2 presentation, was how the term affluent covered so much territory - There is “ Bedrocks” Affluent,  “Upper Middle Class” Affluent, “Pinnacle” Affluent, “Super” Affluent and finally, just plain Wealthy – all together, some 20 million households. 

 

Voices & Views

But Lux 360 Found a Brighter -and we think, Sensible Side-

 

From Harvey Chipkin’s report in the British online Hotel Report-a paid service from William Reed Business Media- http://www.wr-bi.co.uk/ - Reproduced here with publisher permission

At the first industry wide meeting following the fall financial meltdown and the recent presidential election, the consensus seemed to be that, yes, the industry faces a historically challenging situation that will last for awhile. But there was also a feeling that lodging is in a better position than other industries – and, happily, a few silver linings were perceived as well.
   

We’ve all heard the bad news over and over: global liquidity drought, drops in rate and occupancy, a dismal outlook for employment, and a possibly extended recession. But some leaders managed to find ways to take – if not a positive view -- at least a more nuanced one. Following are a few comments about why weeping and gnashing may not be the only appropriate attitudes.
   
Steve Joyce, who recently became CEO of Choice Hotels International, said he has been “the only optimistic person in the room at a number of events over the last few weeks.”  I strongly believe,” said Joyce, “that there is a paralysis factor and that you can’t base projections on two weeks of hysteria.”
   

“Forecasts in this environment,” he continued, “are entertaining but not much use.”

Other ‘smart marketer’ insights from Joyce, Mark Lomanno of Smith Travel Research; Peter Yesawich, CEO of The Y Partnership; Michael Kaufman, Chairman of National Restaurant Association; Patrick Ford, CEO of Lodging Econometrics; and Roger Thomas, Steve Wynn’s design guru for many years.

Market Research

Nat Ives, in Ad Age Online Sept 6, cites new data from Ipsos MMR which assures that well-off readers read print publications just as much now as they did 5 years ago.
Also, survey respondents making more than $100,000 annually said their average hours online had grown to 22.1 each week from 10.7, while the time they said they spent watching TV sunk to 18.6 hours from 23.7 in the 2003 survey.  Read the full Ives story at http://adage.com/mediaworks/article?article_id=130685. Lux 360 attended the client briefing this week and will provide additional perspective in our Sept. 30 issue, interviewing Ipsos MMR President Bob Shullman.

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