Here, there and everywhere: travel giant CVC uses discounting and volume to rule Brazil's domestic tourism industry.Thirty-three years in business, Brazil's biggest travel agent, CVC See CSC. , has sent no less than 8.2 million Brazilians on vacation. Last year alone, the company put 1.3 million people on charter flights, bus excursions, and sea cruises, making the three-letter name synonymous with synonymous with adjective equivalent to, the same as, identical to, similar to, identified with, equal to, tantamount to, interchangeable with, one and the same as package travel in the country. Out of every five packages sold to Brazilians, three are offered by the company. "Our goals are bold, because the potential for tourism in the country is enormous," says Guilherme Paulus, president and owner of the company. Paulus says be discovered during the 1980s the marketing power of selling travel packages--travel plans that include ticket, lodging, one or two meals daily, transfers, and city tours--on a wide array of destinations and budgets, and the company has not stopped growing since. This year, executives foresee another 25% growth and the company is aiming to triple its own sales offices to 500 and to start selling abroad, where its presence is still limited--it has just two offices in Argentina and one in Uruguay--by opening up sales offices in Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. and in Europe. The company also is preparing to go public, executives say, by 2008. Such ambitious plans include diversifying the business. The company already leases 184 airplanes per week during high season; it's about time It's About Time may refer to:
Ballroom dance of Brazilian origin, popularized in the U.S. and Europe in the 1940s. Danced to music in ⁴⁄₄ time with a syncopated rhythm, the dance is characterized by simple forward and backward steps and tilting, rocking body movements. . The company also has made inroads inroads Noun, pl make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings inroads npl to make inroads into [+ into the hotel industry: It owns a hotel and resort in Gramado, in southern Brazil, and expects soon to open the first Tahitian-style resort in Brazil--270 apartments and 50 bungalows on the water at Mosquero Beach, in the northeastern state of Aracaju. "In Brazil, there are 80 million people who are employed full-time; they all have to use their vacation time, plus they receive a third of what they earn on top of their salary for traveling purposes," says Paulus. "Today, only 5 million travel as tourists. There is more than enough potential, it's just a matter of creating the offer for travel." Coming up with itineraries that fit the budgets of Brazilian consumers is the company's specialty. It now offers packages to more than 150 destinations. Trips range from a three-day bus excursion excursion /ex·cur·sion/ (eks-kur´zhun) a range of movement regularly repeated in performance of a function, e.g., excursion of the jaws in mastication. from Sao Paulo to Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r for US$135 to a 21-night cruise from
Brazil to Argentina for $4,400. A week in Paris doesn't cost more
than $1,800. Everything is payable in installments of up to 10 payments
and are interest-free. Paulus started off by planning bus excursions for
steel workers in Santo Andre San·to An·dré A city of southern Brazil, an industrial suburb of São Paulo. Population: 682,000. , his hometown home·town n. The town or city of one's birth, rearing, or main residence. Noun 1. hometown - the town (or city) where you grew up or where you have your principal residence; "he never went back to his hometown again" and CVC headquarters. He says the secret is negotiating. He bargains down the price of hotel suites, restaurants and plane seats just like retailers bargain with suppliers on the price of a home appliance. "I try to buy services in the same way televisions, stoves and washing machines (storage) washing machine - An old-style 14-inch hard disk in a floor-standing cabinet. So called because of the size of the cabinet and the "top-loading" access to the media packs - and, of course, they were always set on "spin cycle". are sold, in great quantities," Paulus says. "When you buy and sell in bulk, then it's possible to offer good prices." The company's strategy is a perfect fit for Brazilians. CVC can offer such low prices because, analysts note, its size dictates it and volume of purchasing tends to set prices in the sector overall. Paulus himself says that his company pressures suppliers and gets discounts of up to 50%, depending on contract conditions. "But we don't kill our business partners," he says. Otherwise, Paulus says, he wouldn't have been able to keep the same suppliers for so long, such as the Gloria Hotel in Rio de Janeiro, which has done business with the travel agency for three decades. "The advantage for the hotel is the amount of room nights CVC guarantees during low-occupancy periods," says Viviane Cardoso, sales assistant sales assistant n (BRIT) → dependiente/a m/f sales assistant (US), sales clerk sale n → vendeur/euse at Gloria Hotel, which has 610 rooms. Meb Viagens, a travel agent in Sao Paulo, reports 90% of its activity is generated by CVC's travel-package sales--it sold 2,000 of them in 2005. Meb Viagens executives say it's quite natural for a company of such heft to set prices. "CVC is the absolute leader, but it's also creative and bold," says Vania Melo, supervisor at Meb. The company declines to reveal earnings, but some numbers suggest its dimensions. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Paulus, CVC is responsible for $660 million of the $3.80 billion turnover in the Brazilian tourism sector in 2005. The company's investment in publicity is proportional to its power in the business. Last year it spent $112 million on advertising, placing it among the top 12 advertisers in the country. "CVC is one-of-a-kind because its moves in the national tourism scene are amazing a·maze v. a·mazed, a·maz·ing, a·maz·es v.tr. 1. To affect with great wonder; astonish. See Synonyms at surprise. 2. Obsolete To bewilder; perplex. v.intr. ," says Leonel Rossi Jr., director of international affairs Noun 1. international affairs - affairs between nations; "you can't really keep up with world affairs by watching television" world affairs affairs - transactions of professional or public interest; "news of current affairs"; "great affairs of state" for Abav, which represents travel companies and agencies throughout Brazil. Distribution. The company's blue-and-yellow logo running in newspapers and magazines also benefits its business partners, such as Brazilian airline TAM, whose planes carry more than 95% of the travel agent's tourists. "The partnership with CVC is very attractive to TAM. We are mentioned in their advertisements and we make money just by making our planes available during otherwise idle time The duration of time a device is in an idle state, which means that it is operational, but not being used. ," says Wagner Ferreira, marketing and commercial vice president for TAM. "The contracts are full-risk for CVC. That is to say, it buys all the seats on the plane and takes on the risk." The number of leased flights goes a long way to profiling a typical customer. The cheapest bus excursions, which two decades ago represented 60% of the company's business, now make up just 17%. The change of the traveling public allowed the company to strengthen its position in the cruising industry during the last few years. Nowadays, CVC leases four ships--including the Blue Dream and the Grand Voyage, at 800 passengers each--and keeps two of them near the Brazilian coast year-round. It is negotiating a fifth vessel to begin sailing this year. Since consumer travel in Brazil is financially concentrated in the middle class, CVC has looked for these clients in strategic places. It has opened sales counters in shopping malls and supermarket chains, including France's Carrefour and Extra, as well as department stores This is a list of department stores. In the case of department store groups the location of the flagship store is given. This list does not include large specialist stores, which sometimes resemble department stores. , such as C&A. "There is always someone close to buyers who is selling our packages," says Valter Patriani, commercial vice president and Guilherme Paulus' right-hand man for 29 years. "Our secret is distribution." ALL INCLUSIVE CVC has grown by adapting travel to the pocketbooks of ordinary Brazilians. Customers in 2005 1.3 million Goal, customers 2006 1.6 million Travel-package sales, annual US$660 million Weekly charter flights in high season 184 Owned sales points 154 Goal, owned sales points 2007 500 Accredited travel agencies 2,700 Employees 820 Domestic and international suppliers 7,000 SOURCE: CVC |
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