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Marketing Tourism

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Marketing Tourism Hillary Jenkins, Otago Polytechnic
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Marketing Tourism

Hillary Jenkins, Otago Polytechnic

Marketing Concept

‘Marketing is the management process

responsible for identifying, anticipating and

satisfying customer requirements profitably.’

(Chartered Institute of Marketing, UK)

The Traditional Marketing Mix

• Set of controllable variables blended by organisations for selected market segments

• The Price

• Place (distribution)

• Product

• PromotionQueenstown

4P’s of Marketing

Product• Design• Quality• Range• Brand name• Features

Price• List price• Discounts• Commissions• Surcharges• Extras

Place• Distribution channels• Methods of distribution• Coverage• Location

Promotion• Advertising• Sales promotion• Salesmanship• Publicity

The Marketing Mix

Product

Tourism products and services are designed for and

continuously adapted to match changing needs,

expectations and budget of the target market

Place

Not only the location of the tourist attraction or

facility but the location of points of sale that

provide customers with access to tourist products

eg. I-site, accommodation, cafe

Price

• Used to achieve predetermined sales volume and

revenue objectives

• Price gives a product or service a perceived value

in the eyes of the consumer

– How would you use price to counteract demand

exceeding supply?

Promotion

• The most visible of the 4p’s

• Promotional techniques aim to increase awareness and demand for products

• http://nz.youtube.com/watch?v=gwTpijLCfrc&feature=related

Marketing Services

• Tourism is a service.

• Services differ from physical products,

– This needs to be taken into account when marketing them

Characteristics of Services

• Intangibility

• Heterogeneity

• Temporary ownership

• Perishability

• Inseparability

Intangibility

• Not the physical portion (tangible) of the product

– Performance or experience rendered by the

service provider to the service consumer

• Most tourism products are a mixture of tangible

and intangible

Inseparability

• Services are usually produced and consumed at

the same time

– Think of a restaurant meal

• This can make it difficult to separate the provider of

the service from the service itself.

Perishability

• Services cannot be saved or stored as they expire

during the simultaneous production and

consumption process

– Aircraft seat

– Restaurant meal

– Amusement park ride

Heterogeneity

• Standardisation

– Difficult to achieve in a people based service industry

• Quality control plays an important part

– What forms of standardization can you think of?

Ownership

• Service customers usually only have access to or

use a facility where a service is performed

– Use of a hotel room for a holiday – you occupy

the space only and have temporary use of the

facilities

How Tourism Differs

• Tourism is more supply-led than other services

All ready have the product then research which market might be interested in purchasing it.

– Dunedin the destination is already here who wants to visit.

• Tourism product might involve the co-operation of several suppliers.

e.g. Package holiday

How Tourism Differs

• Tourism is a complex, extended product experience with no predictable critical evaluation point.

Pre trip anticipation and post trip reflection

While trips to the same destination may be the same different variables can make the trip different – and hard to evaluate against

How Tourism Differs

• Tourism is a high-involvement, high-risk product to its consumers

– Involves committing large sums of money to something reasonably unknown

• Tourism is a product partly constituted by the dreams and fantasies of its customers.

– Unlike banking and car repair, tourism is not consumed for rational, functional purposes.

How Tourism Differs

• Tourism is a fragile industry susceptible to

external forces beyond the control of its

suppliers

– Tourism organisations sometimes have to make

rapid responses to crises in the form of product

redesign, price reductions or promotional

damage limitation.

7 P’s of Tourism Marketing

• Price

• Place

• Product

• Promotion

• People

• Process

• Physical Evidence

People

• Know who your target market is

– traveller or

– tourist?

– what do they expect?

http://flickr.com/photos/wolfgangstaudt/2242014640

People - Employees

• A tourism organisations most valuable resource

– Physical appearance, behaviour, knowledge and

attitude has a powerful impact on customers

perception of the tourism product

– Ensure uniform, grooming etc. conform to

branding and target market

People - Employees

• Ensure staff are trained to ensure the product is

delivered in accordance with the marketing

strategic plan.

• Employees physically embody the product and

are walking billboards from a promotional point

of view – Zeithaml & Bitner (1996)

Process

• Process is inseparable product

– If any part of the process is found to be

unsuitable by the consumer, it could result in a

negative evaluation of the whole product.

Physical Evidence

• Defined as the built environment owned and

controlled by a tourism organisation

• The tangible aspect of the tourism product

• May be used to facilitate the service delivery

process e.g. layout and signage

• Communicates messages about quality, positioning

and differentiation

Think about the layout, colours , furnishings, sound systems at an airport

http://flickr.com/photos/jamespaullong/940934988/

Physical Evidence

Marketing Tourism

• Product and service• Tangible and intangible• People led and operated• Market orientated


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