NEW ORLEANS -- A new public relations effort and the creation of "broader and deeper" curriculum are two areas of focus for the Institute of Certified Travel Agents (ICTA) in the coming year.

The aim is to lay the foundation for a doubling of ICTA members and holders of the Certified Travel Counselor (CTC) designation in the next five years.

Today, there are 7,000 ICTA members. The public relations drive, by newly hired firm of Yesawich, Pepperdine & Brown, is designed to increase awareness of travel agents holding CTC designations as "expert" professionals that are the "cream of the crop" of the trade, said Jack Mannix, ICTA president.

"We've never really had an effectively focused PR campaign on the consumer side," he said during an interview at the ICTA National Forum. "The consumer press is looking for travel experts as sources so there is a lot of opportunity out there for us."

The PR effort will be led by YPB's account executive Gary Sain, former senior vice president at Premier Cruise Line.

ICTA also unveiled at its annual forum a redesigned ICTA Web site that is more interactive than in the past, allowing consumers to search for agents based on geography and specialty.

The site's address, at www.icta.com, remains the same, but has a new look, with members' features that are easier to use, Mannix said told the 350 conference delegates.

The member directory now allows members to update their own profiles and provides a news page with media coverage of CTCs and CTAs, a member message board and ICTA course program information.

Mannix said the redesign will be further enhanced in the coming weeks through the addition of a Web-based service that will allow ICTA to host conference call seminars on the telephone while members simultaneously watch a Power Point-style presentation on their personal computers while linked on the ICTA Web site.

The service will allow ICTA to conduct some educational programs by conference call more frequently and begin other types of programs, such as sales seminars by industry executives such as Carnival Corp.'s Bob Dickinson, Mannix said.

In the next weeks, ICTA will start assessing how much of its curriculum should be installed on line, which would enable members to complete their CTC and CTA coursework using the Internet rather than through hard-copy textbooks.

The complete transition to on-line curriculum is an expensive undertaking, said Mannix, and it has not been proven whether students will prefer that method over old-fashioned textbooks, so ICTA will proceed cautiously before moving forward with a comprehensive program.

However, ICTA has begun work on a much larger effort to broaden its curriculum, said Mannix, who joined ICTA in January, after six years as managing director of AAA Travel Related Services.

ICTA is restructuring its course modules, offering greater choice and flexibility of topics. In the next few months, three new modules are being offered: Selling All-Inclusive Vacations, Selling Escorted Tours and Preventing Credit Card Fraud.

ICTA also is looking at making its Destination Specialist courses more detailed and specific, Mannix said.

For example, the Western European program, may be divided into countries, so that an agent may become a France specialist after taking a course with "broad and deep" information on that destination.

As consumers become more educated and sophisticated about travel there is "more pressure" for agents to become better trained in destination information, he said.

ICTA 'testing waters' of on-line sales

NEW ORLEANS -- ICTA is testing the waters of the on-line selling world.

Through an agreement with NetgenShopper.com of Fairfax, Va., ICTA members can join the on-line service and receive sales leads from on-line shoppers.

NetgenShopper.com is a "reverse auction" site that allows consumers to request services anonymously from a select group of sellers in a number of areas, such as travel.

Through e-mail, ICTA members who sign up to participate will receive requests for vacation plans from consumers using the travel area of NetgenShopper.com, which is linked to 85% of on-line Yellow Page directory searches for travel services.

ICTA president Jack Mannix said the nonprofit educational institute is "testing the waters" with the agreement with the on-line company.

Like brick-and-mortar travel agencies and agency consortia, ICTA is receiving many requests for alliances with on-line companies that want to add travel services to their mix of offerings, Mannix said.

ICTA decided to enter an agreement with NetgenShopper.com as a test and because the company seemed to be in a position to help ICTA increase awareness of CTCs in the on-line travel arena.

But he said ICTA agents who participate should do so with "the right expectations."

Consumers using NetgenShopper.com will be using the service for shopping, so not all of the leads to result in a sale, he said.

Mannix likened participation in the service to an agency advertising in a Sunday travel section and then receiving phone calls from consumers asking for more information, but perhaps not serious buyers.

ICTA members can join the service through a free 90-day trial membership. After that, the price is $10 a month and 50 cents per lead pursued.

For more information, ICTA members can access www.icta.com and click on the members page.

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