When you hear the term ‘target audience’ immediately the potential consumer comes to mind. However, as reminded by Ylva French, author of Public Relations for Leisure and Tourism, there are a wide range of other stakeholders to consider including investors, competitors, the local community, pressure groups, existing and potential sponsors, the media and local government officials. (French, 1994, p. 6) So let’s not say anything that will ‘get their knickers in a bunch.’
It is important to thoroughly understand your destination and what it has to offer. This will enable you to determine who would be interested in visiting your city/ country and selectively choose media that attracts the largest portion of your target. It’s a sad fact that not everyone wants to visit your destination as people travel for a range of reasons. (French, 1994, p. 40)
According to author Bonita Kolb, ‘developing tourism requires segmenting potential visitors into different groups and then deciding which segments could be most easily persuaded to visit.’ A tourist board may decide to target more than one group, which creates a need for developing different messages. (Kolb, 2006, p. 16)
In tourism, the two main target groups include visitors and travel intermediaries. Visitors can be segmented in four ways: demographically, according to age, gender, income, ethnicity; geographically, including local, regional and international areas; in terms of psychographics such as nightlife, adventure, romance and finally by usage, differentiating business travellers from day visitors and traditional tourists. (Kolb, 2006, p. 17)
South Beach, for example, targets art deco lovers during its annual Art Deco Weekend while Tourism Australia (2007) develops campaigns aimed at backpackers. Apparently when you get together a bunch and I mean a big bunch of poor, struggling backpackers, we make a difference in boosting tourism revenue. Touche Australia, touche!
Finally, tourism marketers and PR officials make their lives easier by giving their work to someone else! Tourism authorities partner with recognized tour operators, trade associations and corporate travel divisions, which in turn, directly promote the destination to individuals and companies. (Kolb, 2006, p. 17-18)
Next post: getting the media to care about you
References
French, Y., (1994). Public Relations for Leisure and Tourism. Essex: Longman Group Limited.
Kolb, B., (2006). Tourism Marketing for Cities and Towns: Using Branding and Events to Attract Tourists. Burlington: Butterworth-Heinemann.