Adirondack Base Camp header image

Entries Tagged as 'Destination Marketing'

People Powered Travel Marketing

September 19th, 2006 · 3 Comments · Destination Marketing

Like many industries struggling to adapt, travel is ideally positioned to leverage the emerging Web 2.0 trends to maximize what are typically tight budgets. The beauty of social media is the ability to harness the power of the community. What better marketers for a destination could be found than satisfied and converted visitors? I would say none. There is no more powerful recommendation than a referral from a trusted source. When you aggregate these individuals, what you have is a credible community. Steve Rubel, among others, notes the launch of yet another Travel 2.0 style website. Right now I’m seeing the creation of plenty of these kind of sites and likely there will be some consolidation and attrition as time goes on. What should travel marketers do?

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags:

DMO Dollars to Fund Travel 2.0

September 12th, 2006 · No Comments · Destination Marketing

The big non-news here is the terminal condition of the analog advertising paradigm. What I find most telling is the suggestion that “consumer-generated” content will be the magnet that draws these dollars in.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags:

.travel Debacle Desparately Seeking Sponsorships

August 22nd, 2006 · No Comments · Destination Marketing, News

Hello! All you travelers and tourism people did you know that there is a new “top level domain” called .travel? Ha ha, what a joke. Back sometime last year we began getting communication through one of our trade memberships (American Bus Association) about pre-qualifying for the upcoming registration of the soon to be available .travel domain. The whole affair has been one big f*^&*%*$ joke. First you have to jump through lame hoops with some lady at the Bus assoc who vets your potential domain names to see if you are eligible. Criteria? I won’t even begin to bore you with the lameness that is ABA and their so-called pre-qualification criteria.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: