Title: Tourism Marketing: Producing Places/Consuming Places
1Tourism Marketing Producing Places/Consuming
Places
2Lecture Outline
- Elements of Tourism Industry
- Historical Development of Tourism
- Theories for Understanding (Post)Modern Place
Marketing - Examples Tourism Marketing as Representation
3Concepts of Tourism
- A complex phenomenon
- A human experience
- A worldwide industry
-
4Characteristics of tourism
- Time
- Distance
- Travel
- Away from home
- Purpose in non-work related (leisure)
5Components of the tourism industry
- Transportation
- Accommodation
- Tourist attractions natural, built, created
- Travel agents
- Tour operators
- Travel-related services
- Government bodies national and international
6Experience Economy Tourism as consumption
- Tourism, like leisure, can also be thought of in
terms of CONSUMPTION! - The tourist product e.g., a package holiday
7Tourism and Leisure
- Tourism can be considered to be a form of leisure
- Tourism (as leisure activity) has developed as a
commercial activity - Is now a major earner, makes major contribution
to the economy
8Development of tourism
- Can trace its progressive development
- from INDIVIDUAL TRAVEL
- through groups and expeditions
- to MASS TOURISM
- to (INDIVIDUALIZED) MASS TOURISM (postmodern
tourism)
9Developmental factors
- Tourism requires people with
- ABILITY (money and time)
- MOBILITY (transport) and
- MOTIVATION (desire, determination)
- to travel
- A history of tourism is a history of the
- development of these three factors
10Travel in Ancient Societies(Egypt and Greece)
- Empires grew, and business travel increased
(administration of the regions) - Evidence also of pleasure trips - festivals,
and Olympic Games - Pyramids, tombs and temples were the wonders of
the ancient world - Prompted travel to see them gazed upon
11Travel in the Roman Empire
- Travel flourished
- Trade and military activity encouraged excellent
roads (some still in existence) - Common language and currency
- Romans sought to escape the cities in summer heat
- Moved to seaside and hillside villas
12Travel in the Middle Ages
- 500 AD - Fall of the Roman Empire - roads
fell into disrepair - Travel became dangerous and difficult
- Undertaken largely on foot
- Undertaken for purposes of trade or religion only
- e.g., pilgrimages - Endured rather than enjoyed - travail!
- Most ordinary people would spend their lives in
one fixed locality
1316th 17th Centuries
- Establishment of The Grand Tour - an
aristocratic concept - Taking a year out
- Aristocratic young men in the presence of their
tutors - Cultural and political education on a prescribed
route - France, Italy, Switzerland, Germany and the
Netherlands - Befitting men for life in politics at court
1417th 18th CenturiesMain focus Development of
Health Tourism
- Health resorts evolved across Europe
- Based on the supposed health-giving properties of
the sea and mineral waters - Led to the growth of seaside and spa resorts
still popular today - Spa towns - primarily for invalids
- e.g., Baden-Baden (Germany), Bath (England)
- Became fashionable resorts for those with
leisure, money and transport
1518th 19th CenturiesPeriod of Industrialisation
- Major effect of industry on leisure and tourism
- Prior to this period, only the upper classes had
ability, mobility and motivation to travel
(horses and carriages) - INDUSTRIALISATION created
- Working class with income
- Desire to escape from the city
- Steam transport for travel (trains, boats)
1618th 19th CenturiesMass Seaside Tourism
- Began due to
- Development of steam boats and trains (1832)
linking urban and coastal areas - First for freight, later, passengers
- Introduction of holidays (intended to improve
productivity) - Public holidays - when whole communities would
travel en masse to the coast
17Portugal
18South-East England
19East-German Seaside Resort
20Mass Seaside Tourism
- Development of a tourism infrastructure
- Small fishing villages developed into resorts
- Blackpool, Ruegen, Biarritz
- Promenades
- Accommodation
21Mass Seaside TourismPackage Trips
- Development of package trips
- 1841 - Thomas Cooks first package trip
22Mass Seaside Tourism in England Social
differentiation
- Social differentiation of resorts depended on
transport links - Resorts linked to the northern industrial base
were mainly working-class - Blackpool - Southern resorts mainly middle-class -
Bournemouth, Torquay - Middle classes also discovered Europe - the
Alps, the Riviera
23Early 20th Century
- 1920s and 30s saw legal holidays acts all over
Europe - ensured week-long holidays, stimulated
mass tourism - Also, development of holiday camps
- Development of countryside holidays
- In 1939
- 30000 weekly campers on English camp grounds.
- Even more in Germany (although numbers difficult
to decipher)
24Post Word War IIFurther growth in Tourism
Activity
- Social change
- War experience widened perspectives
- Stimulated desire to travel
- Increased leisure time and income
- Growth in car ownership
- Spread of five-day week
- Invention of the weekend
- new unit of free time
25Post Word War IIFurther growth in Tourism
Activity
- Development of hotel chains
- 1960s and 70s in Europe
- Tourism Acts
- Created national tourist boards for domestic and
overseas tourism promotion - The Canadian Tourism Commission was founded in
1992
26Post Word War IIFurther growth in Tourism
Activity
- Increased foreign travel
- 1950s - 2 million Europeans took holidays
abroad - 1970s - 10 million abroad
- France and Spain (Costas) made up 1/3 of the
market - Product - sun, sea and sand
27Trends in the 1980s and 1990s
- Move towards more flexible holiday formats
- Villas, timeshares, self-catering
- Diverse Travel Formats
- Specialised Interest Areas
- Further technological improvements in
Transportation
28Trends in the 1980s and 1990s
- Personalised packages
- Long-haul destinations for mass package holidays
(e.g., Florida) - Eco-tourism - environmentally aware tourism
- Growth in cultural and activity tourism
- Growth in short-break tourism
- demise of the two-week summer holiday
- postmodern lifestyles
29Late 90s and 21st Century
- Novelty and specialist tourism
- New destinations, man-made resorts
- Greater segmentation of the market
- ABILITY has increased - many have more free
time, greater disposable income - MOBILITY has increased - improved and cheaper
travel technology - MOTIVATION has increased
30Late 90s and 21st CenturyTourist Motivation
- MOTIVATION to participate in tourism has
- increased due to
- Substantial media exposure - has greatly raised
consumer awareness - Perceived need to escape the stress of
postmodern urban lifestyles - Recognition of frequent holidays as a necessity,
rather than a luxury
31Postmodern Tourism
- Postmodern culture, leisure and lifestyles new
forms of consumer-orientated, commodified leisure
- Leisure users are defined by their consumption
patterns
32Characteristics of Postmodernismand Postmodern
Leisure and Lifestyles
- Simulation and hyperreality
- Fragmentation
- Individualisation
- Commodification
- Consumer sovereignty
- Time compression
- Style replaces substance
33Characteristics of Postmodernismwith leisure
examples
- INDIVIDUALISATION
- Central leisure institutions disappear
- Postmodern leisure focuses increasingly on
individual consumption at the expense of
traditional social group and community activity - Relationships fluid. Networks instead of
community. Socialities void of emotional
dependence
- Leisure example
- Individualistic sports
- Independent and single travelling
- Electronic leisure games (Playstation, Nintendo,
GameBoy, X-Box) - Videos and interactive DVDs
- Home computing
- Much home-based leisure home is compartmented
into individual leisure spaces
34Characteristics of Postmodernismwith leisure
examples
- Lifestyle advisers
- Solitary consumption of fast food replacing
traditional communal family meal-times - Relationships until further notice
- INDIVIDUALISATION
- Leisure examples (cont)
- Children having their own rooms, TVs and PCs
- Leisure shopping as personal consumption
- Personal trainers and individualised fitness
workouts
35Characteristics of Postmodernismwith leisure
examples
- FRAGMENTATION
- The inability to maintain established boundaries,
categories and relationships - Consumption and production
- Work and home
- Private and public
- Vast amounts of leisure choice (20-screen
multiplex cinemas numerous TV,satellite and
cable channels) - Built-in obsolescence (fast cars, designer
clothes, consumer electronics and software) - Ever more specialized consumer products
- Leisure examples
- Shopping as leisure
- Homeworking, housework, DIY and leisure
- Arts/entertainment continuum
- Leisure spaces in the home
- High, low and popular culture blurring of
boundaries
36Characteristics of Postmodernismwith leisure
examples
- Leisure examples
- Virtual reality in leisure
- Man-made tourist attractions and resorts (Center
Parcs, Sun City) - Modern theme parks
- Disneyland
- Paintball
- Gladiators
- SIMULATION AND HYPERREALITY
- In postmodern leisure, simulated, man-made,
contrived and inauthentic experiences predominate
over the traditional and authentic
37Characteristics of Postmodernismwith leisure
examples
- COMMODIFICATION
- The transformation, packaging and marketing of a
leisure-related service into a saleable product - Arts products, leisure products, sports products,
tourism products, etc.
- Leisure examples
- Tourist package holidays
- Gym fitness packages
- Celebrity signings of CDs at concerts
- The sale of sports packages by cable, satellite
and internet - Shopping as leisure
38Characteristics of Postmodernismwith leisure
examples
- COMMODIFICATION OF TIME
- Time in postmodern life is always in short supply
- Time can be exchanged for money through the
purchase of labour-saving devices, employing home
helps, buying convenience foods, etc - This frees up time for use for leisure
- Time can be bought
- So time itself becomes a commodity
39BREAK!
40Postmodern Tourism Staging Authenticity
- Catering to the postmodern tourist who
- Seeks rapidly changing art/enter-/edutainment
- Seeks extraordinary and individualistic
experiences - Who expects experiences to be produced but
presented as real - Has not always time to cross the globe to visit.
- Who has been socialized into consuming by gazing
- the tourist gaze is demanding
41The development of the tourist gaze
- Tourist landscapes are consumed by the tourist
who gazes upon them - The idea is of
- seeing as discovering
- interpreting the seen as aesthetically
significant - and determine its difference to the mundane.
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44The tourist gaze
- The gaze is defined in terms of difference
- Perceived strangeness (but only to tourist)
- Exotic, pleasurable
- Distinguished by semiotics - signifiers and
symbolic icons e.g., Eiffel Tower, the
Pyramids, Taj Mahal - rational work and seeks efficiency
45Authenticity
- The gaze is a construct
- How authentic are the images consumed?
- Tourism as pilgrimage a quest for the authentic
- Authenticity versus staged authenticity
- Staged authenticity protects hosts from
intrusion, yet allows commercial benefits of
tourism - Can any form of tourism be totally inauthentic?
46Caves at Lascaux
47Caves at Lascaux
48Caves at Lascaux
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51Romeo and Juliet in Verona
52Still there
- Capello and Montecchi, the families that
Shakespeare turned into the Capulets and
Montagues
53Evidence is overwhelming
- Shakespeares characters are fictitious.
- Most scholars believe that Shakespeare simply
reworked an old drama by an Italian playwright. - Lack of factual basis offset by imagination to
fill in the gaps left by documentation. - Entire package tours of tourists insist to see
the site of the most romantic episodes in all of
literature the immortal balcony scene.
54Casa di Guilietta, situated at No. 27 Via Cappello
55Authenticity?
56Authenticity?
57Staged Authenticity?
58Hawaii
591920
60Today
61Also Today Hula Contest
62Staged Authenticity and Pseudo-EventsTourism as
the Production and Consumption of Simulation
63Producing the Lake District
- Nothing natural about it says beautiful tourist
site - So how come it is?
- Answer symbolic construction of difference
though signs and images and cultural production
in general.
64The place myth in three stages
- Discovery
- Interpretation (capacity of being in, seeing, and
experiencing the site) - Management of the discourse
- What activities are allowed or appropriate
- Physical and perceptual capacity
- Aesthetic dimensions
- Cultural hegemony (of taste, of language,
mobility) - Create attractions
65Established place myths
66Place myth under construction
67Summary
- History of tourism as the formation of the
tourist gaze - The patterns of tourism consumption TODAY are
indebted to the forces socializing the tourist
gaze. - The production of place requires symbolic and
cultural work! - Authenticity is a historical and cultural
construct. - Authenticity as attraction superseded by staged
authenticity as the attraction. - Authenticity is a floating (ie., non-essential)
concept