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Understanding Marketing Marketing is the process of communicating the value of a product or service to customers, for the purpose of selling the service Marketing is not sales maximization Marketing is not advertising and promotion. Marketing is part of the management plan, but implements the mission and capacity identified in the management plan. Marketing should achieve goals of the management plan and Develop facilities and services as tourism products Identify potential travelers and their needs and wants Price their products Communicate their appeal to target markets Deliver them to their customers’ satisfaction Supply and Demand in Marketing Demand: Increased interest in culture, particularly as a source of identity and differentiation in the face of globalization. Growing levels of cultural capital, stimulated by rising education levels. Aging populations in developed regions. Postmodern consumption styles, emphasizing personal development rather than materialism. Supply: Development of cultural tourism to stimulate jobs and income. Cultural tourism was seen as a growth market and “quality” tourism. An increasing supply of culture as a result of regional development. The growing accessibility of information on culture and tourism through new technologies. De-marketing assets Marketing can be used to promote or discourage who visits and hone the message about what visitors should expect. Help maintain sustainability of assets Many people given marketing responsibility have little real knowledge of marketing Few cultural tourism attractions have formalized marketing plans with clearly-stated goals and objectives Most attractions respond to consumer and travel trade demand, rather than leading it. The numbers are not the message Often assessment is 1. Number of visitors 2. Economic impact 3. Visitor satisfaction What is unique about heritage tourism marketing? Non-financial objectives have equal or stronger roles in the overall set of objectives than financial goals. Conservation, education, awareness building, creating pride in one's past, or even religious contemplation Tourists and local residents share the asset Failure to recognize asset must be managed, at least in part for tourism use.
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