Influx Insights Tag Feed: Japanese http://www.influxinsights.com/blog/ 2008-12-04T03:38:04Z yotel http://www.influxinsights.com/blog/article/1450/yotel.html <a target="_blank" href="http://www.yotel.com/" target="_blank">YOTEL</a>, the revolutionary cross between luxury airline travel and Japanese capsule hotels, has finally made its much-anticipated arrival in Gatwick Airport, London.&nbsp; Founder Simon Woodroffe named it after his other successful venture, YO! Sushi and made it his aim to provide travelers with a taste of the future, described by him as &#8220;luxury that is available to everybody at the right cost.&#8221; <br><br>The &#8220;pod&#8221; hotel style has before now only been prevalent in Japan, but it makes so much sense to let the rest of the world have a try. <br><br>First it plays off the unfortunate state of the airline industry being at an all-time high of cancelled and/or delayed flights and lowered customer satisfaction. People can book a Yotel cabin while they find themselves waiting (expectedly or otherwise) and relax in quarters other than the stiff, sticky chairs available at the gate.<br><br>More importantly, if marks the official arrival of the low cost luxury era. Whether it&#8217;s the airlines themselves (Song, Jet Blue) or online travel sites enabling us to book 4-star hotels at 2-star prices, or Target, HEMA (Holland), Muji (Japan) and Costco and Trader Joe&#8217;s in the supermarket sector, it&#8217;s certain that luxury for cheap is here in full effect.<br><br>The trend doesn&#8217;t stop at offering top quality products for lower prices. It also encompasses an appreciation for design and/or superior customer service, which is exactly what the Yotel is &#8211; rooms range from 55 to 80 pounds overnight and everything (and more than what) you&#8217;d expect from a first class hotel experience.<br><br>What does this mean for the U.S.? Expansion plans so far do not include us.&nbsp; Was it a strategic decision?&nbsp; There are surely barriers to entry like our strict airport security, as well as competition from the well-known hotels that have populated airport areas since the beginning of time. <br><br>But the U.S. now more than ever is abandoning traditional status symbols and embracing the new cheap-chic. Furthermore, other cultures are spreading like wildfire in our d&#65533;cor, cuisine, and fashion. If the country of chicken nuggets and grilled cheese grew obsessed with slabs of raw fish and balls of sticky rice, why wouldn&#8217;t it embrace other elements of Japanese culture too?<br><br>Obviously the minds behind the brand new <a target="_blank" href="http://www.pickwickarms.com/" target="_blank">Pod Hotel</a> in Midtown Manhattan could think of no good reason. <br><br>Hurry, Woodroffe!<br>&nbsp;<br><br>Posted by katie facada Influx Insights 2007-07-05T14:04:48Z 51.507460346127864 -0.1215362548828125