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Planetyze app helps foreign visitors explore undiscovered travel destinations in Japan

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See the original article in Japanese. Whenever I attend demo-day events at local incubators in Tokyo, I always find someone working on information services for foreign visitors to Japan. We have seen Tsunagu Japan at the recent Open Network Lab’s Demo Day as well as Odigo at Pioneers Festival’s qualifier event in Tokyo. There was also the March launch of a mobile app called Lifull TraveRing. In view of the increase in foreign tourists leading up to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics Games, travel-related web services and mobile apps are becoming hot commodities in Japan. A web service called Planetyze launched in April aims to help foreign visitors discover travel spots outside of the major tourist destinations of Tokyo and Kyoto. Planetyze is a sister website of Travelience, a search portal for international visitors coming to Japan. See also: Japan increasingly turning to Facebook to reach potential tourists Travelience CEO Naoki Hashimoto, who operates Planetyze, realized that most visitors are concentrated in the major destinations in Japan because travel information for rural areas has not become easily available to travelers. So the company appointed Kimiko Kasahara as the editor in chief for the new platform to focus on curating useful travel…

planetyze_featuredimage

See the original article in Japanese.

Whenever I attend demo-day events at local incubators in Tokyo, I always find someone working on information services for foreign visitors to Japan. We have seen Tsunagu Japan at the recent Open Network Lab’s Demo Day as well as Odigo at Pioneers Festival’s qualifier event in Tokyo. There was also the March launch of a mobile app called Lifull TraveRing. In view of the increase in foreign tourists leading up to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics Games, travel-related web services and mobile apps are becoming hot commodities in Japan.

A web service called Planetyze launched in April aims to help foreign visitors discover travel spots outside of the major tourist destinations of Tokyo and Kyoto. Planetyze is a sister website of Travelience, a search portal for international visitors coming to Japan.

See also:

Travelience CEO Naoki Hashimoto, who operates Planetyze, realized that most visitors are concentrated in the major destinations in Japan because travel information for rural areas has not become easily available to travelers. So the company appointed Kimiko Kasahara as the editor in chief for the new platform to focus on curating useful travel information from around Japan for international visitors. Kasahara is the former chief editor at The Japan Times.

Planetyze allows users to create a travel itinerary, add their travel plans to the app’s calendar menu from any of the articles introducing destinations, and to also ask licensed guides to suggest available travel plans. In contrast to Travelience, which the company has been providing that allows users to buy excursions only, Planetyze enables users to create a custom-made trip.

With the launch of Planetyze, Travelience now has three tourist-related web services, the other two being Travelience and TripleLights. Planetyze could be seen as a pivot for the previous two services. It will be interesting to see what synergy these three services will produce.

planetyze_Itinerary

Translated by Conyac crowdsourced translation service
Edited by Masaru Ikeda and Kurt Hanson

Japan’s Travelience connects visiting tourists with professional guides

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Tokyo-based tour company Travelience has announced that it has recently launched a search platform for international visitors coming to Japan. It’s called TripleLights, and it aims to connect travelers with licensed guides/interpreters. Licensed guides require certification by the Japan Tourism Agency, and they will be requested to send a photocopy of their certificate when signing up for TripleLights. The platform can show international visitors a list of interpreters who can guide you around sightseeing spots in 10 languages: English, French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Korean, and Thai. The company emphasizes that its platform can help avoid mismatching guides and travelers, since you can confirm what kind of person will guide you before booking your tour. They are planning to expand beyond Japan to cover travel destinations in Asian and European regions. Via CNET Japan

triplelights_featuredimage

Tokyo-based tour company Travelience has announced that it has recently launched a search platform for international visitors coming to Japan. It’s called TripleLights, and it aims to connect travelers with licensed guides/interpreters.

Licensed guides require certification by the Japan Tourism Agency, and they will be requested to send a photocopy of their certificate when signing up for TripleLights. The platform can show international visitors a list of interpreters who can guide you around sightseeing spots in 10 languages: English, French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Korean, and Thai.

The company emphasizes that its platform can help avoid mismatching guides and travelers, since you can confirm what kind of person will guide you before booking your tour. They are planning to expand beyond Japan to cover travel destinations in Asian and European regions.

Via CNET Japan

Japan increasingly turning to Facebook to reach potential tourists

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Last month Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) surpassed the 18 million user mark in Japan, pushing it well past domestic social network rival Mixi as perhaps the preferred SNS in Japan [1]. In addition to consumers jumping on the bandwagon, businesses are getting in on the action as well. The travel industry is no exception, and there are a number of initiatives that try to leverage Facebook to promote tourism among domestic and international audiences. One such service just launched this past week. It’s called ’fb Japan Kankou Annai (or simply fb Japan), and it is essentially a website that collects Facebook pages relating to the tourism industry (currently a total of 324), including those of hotels and ins, as well as airlines and railways. The page was created by Tokyo-based social network consulting company Ainapal, which has runs a few other Facebook pages, including Beautiful Ryokan in Japan. If any tourism-related companies out there wish to add their Facebook page to the list, they can do so using a submission form. Reaching beyond Japan’s borders Similarly, the recently launched Travelience service (I’m not a fan of the name!) offers guided tours of Tokyo, and is making use of Facebook by engaging potential…

facebook-in-Japan
Photo: clutch.ne.jp

Last month Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) surpassed the 18 million user mark in Japan, pushing it well past domestic social network rival Mixi as perhaps the preferred SNS in Japan [1]. In addition to consumers jumping on the bandwagon, businesses are getting in on the action as well.

The travel industry is no exception, and there are a number of initiatives that try to leverage Facebook to promote tourism among domestic and international audiences. One such service just launched this past week.

fbjapan.com
fbjapan.com

It’s called ’fb Japan Kankou Annai (or simply fb Japan), and it is essentially a website that collects Facebook pages relating to the tourism industry (currently a total of 324), including those of hotels and ins, as well as airlines and railways. The page was created by Tokyo-based social network consulting company Ainapal, which has runs a few other Facebook pages, including Beautiful Ryokan in Japan. If any tourism-related companies out there wish to add their Facebook page to the list, they can do so using a submission form.

Reaching beyond Japan’s borders

Similarly, the recently launched Travelience service (I’m not a fan of the name!) offers guided tours of Tokyo, and is making use of Facebook by engaging potential tourists, posting photos from around Japan, and conducting quizzes. The company boasts cheaper tours than its competitors, and its Facebook presence (now with about 21,000 fans) is a place potential tour participants can comment and have discussions.

As for Japan’s official tourism arm, the JNTO, it has also been pretty active in reaching out on the social network. The organization operates a number of regional pages targeting a variety of countries, including the USA (153,000 fans), Singapore (141,000), and Thailand (92,000).

travelience

Of course, the efforts of these companies to promote Japan abroad via Facebook pales in comparison to startup Tokyo Otaku Mode, which has racked up more than 11 million Facebook fans with its page about Japanese otaku subculture [2]. Likewise, another young startup under the KDDI Mugen Labo incubator program, Kawaii Museum JPN, is doing something similar, and currently has more than 3 million Facebook fans.

In addition to capitalizing on the power of Facebook, companies and organizations are using the afore-mentioned Line chat app to reach audiences and customers. This past week we featured the apparel brand Lip Service which has been using Line to connect with customers via smartphones, and the end result was a 50% boost in in sales over the previous week. Even the Prime Minister’s Office has a Line account, promising to push updates to citizens who want to stay in the loop using their smartphones [3].


  1. I say ‘perhaps’ because many would say that recently the social network of choise is Line, although as a chat app many others would say it isn’t strictly a social network.  ↩

  2. To learn more about Tokyo Otaku Mode, see our feature on the young up-and-coming startup from last month.  ↩

  3. And as of this week, the Prime Minister’s Office also has its own smartphone apps!  ↩