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Middle East travelers wants to stay connected

A new research by Linksys, suggests the trend isn’t gaining traction; conversely, tourists now consider internet access an integral part of their holidays.

“Most Middle East travelers want to be connected all the time, wherever they are, just like at home,” said Amanulla Khan, Managing Director of Linksys Middle East, Turkey & Africa. “This insightful research shows that we have become more dependent on Wi-Fi even when we travel and consider it a basic need.”

With the summer in full swing, school is out and everyone is in full holiday mode. This means a lot of extra time to spend on social media, streaming movies, shopping, video gaming and – for the conscientious – checking work emails.

Linksys commissioned a consumer study of 8,000 people living in several countries. They found Middle East-based participants valued internet access even more highly than those in Western Europe, demanding the same level of connectivity while on trips as they did when at home and declaring it an absolute must. 

No signal, no stay
Only a tiny percentage of people surveyed said they would be prepared to ‘switch off’ completely by going offline for the duration of their break.

Lack of internet access was a no-deal for Arab travelers’ choice of accommodation, 95.2% of whom said they would refuse to book anywhere where the web was unavailable. This sentiment was most marked amongst UAE residents, 96% of whom ranked this a top priority, compared with 94.4% of Saudi Arabian residents. More remarkably, around half of Middle East respondents questioned would definitely choose alternative accommodation due to lack of Wi-Fi connectivity and a third would strongly consider staying elsewhere.

The survey found 92.9% of Middle East-based respondents rated Wi-Fi availability as a deciding factor when planning a holiday. Just 1.5% of Middle East participants didn’t consider Wi-Fi important at all, and 3.3% rated it ‘not very important’. UAE residents valued it slightly higher than their counterparts from Saudi Arabia – 94% versus 91.8%, respectively.

Conversely, participants from Western Europe placed less of an emphasis on connectivity. The British residents valued it most highly – 82% considered it essential – in contrast with 75.3% of German residents. 

Amanulla Khan, Managing Director of Linksys Middle East, Turkey & Africa

Family values
Families with children have a greater need for Wi-Fi connectivity than those traveling with their adult offspring – 77% versus 62%, respectively. It also appears that the under-18s’ preferences had a greater influence on their parents’ choice of hotel, campsite, or privately rented accommodation than those of grown-up kids.

Home from home
When travelers from the Arabian Gulf vacation in their home countries, access to Wi-Fi is a huge factor – 94.8% of these respondents considered the presence of Wi-Fi to be important. In contrast, only 77.3% Western Europeans rated this important. The situation was similar for those traveling to other countries: 82.3% of Middle Eastern travelers versus 67.5% of Europeans said Wi-Fi was a necessity. Some 84.4% of Saudi Arabians demanded it, followed by the UAE in the second spot with 80.2%.

Khan said the results were clear – lack of Wi-Fi really could be a deal-breaker. He advised owners of holiday lets, Airbnb landlords, and hotel managers to ensure they could offer strong, fast, and secure Wi-Fi connections to their guests, or risk losing their custom.

Fortunately, he added, setting up a guest network is a simple way to provide strong connectivity to customers while restricting their access to the staff’s internal home network or any Internet of Things devices connected to it.

He added: “When we are home, we take it for granted that we have Wi-Fi to stream on our 4K TVs, smart speakers playing our favorite music, laptops, PCs, and tablets to work from home and do homework as we connect more and more smart IoT devices to our networks.”

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