This year, we’ll see more convention and visitors bureau (CVB) and destination marketing organizations (DMO) looking inward to fully embrace the power of local tourism ambassadors and brand advocates that align stakeholders and build relevance. Therefore spreading their marketing messages across Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and whatever crazy next-gen augmented reality social network is being cooked up.
Here are a few thoughts from The Learn Tourism...
Bottom line, your fans and followers are less likely (organically) to see any of the content you oh-so-meticulously produced and published to your social channels.
When brands hear this, they instinctively start reaching for the “Boost Post” button. However, …
This includes Facebook and Instagram ads – and it’s only going to get more expensive as brands ramp up their spending to compete over the available ad inventory.
Plus, even if you have unlimited coffers to promote destination marketing posts, you need to keep in mind:
Even if you spend the money to promote your convention & visitors bureau or destination marketing organization and tourism content, it doesn’t mean your audience is going to see or, more importantly, engage with your paid messaging.
If your strategy was to post your content to your social channels and expect your fans to see it (with maybe a $5 boosted post here and there to bolster it), you’re in for a rough year. Enter advocacy marketing.
The Learn Tourism found the actual number of connections are on average over 600+ friends, families and colleagues. This means that for every tourism ambassador and visitor advocate you have sharing your content, that content has the potential to reach 600 individuals – not to mention the friends of those individuals.
10 positive visitor experiences and tourism ambassadors = A reach of 6,000
100 positive visitor experiences and tourism ambassadors = A reach of 60,000
1,000 positive visitor experiences and tourism ambassadors = A reach of 600,000
As your tourism ambassadors and visitors with positive experiences grow in number, so too does your potential organic reach.
Pro Tip: As you scale your tourism ambassador certificate program, you also scale the time and energy it takes to manage your destination advocacy program. That’s why many destinations choose to deliver their Tourism Ambassador Certificate through a reliable online learning platform like LearnTourism.org.
Whether your program has 100 or 10,000 tourism ambassadors, you can use an learning platform to share your content with all of them through a single online, on demand course, reaching your entire community. You can also automatically reward your newest tourism ambassadors for sharing your content to their social channels, advocating for your convention and visitors bureau, completing the online tourism ambassador course, and engaging with your brand.
Once your tourism ambassador spread positive experiences, visitors - leisure, business, convention, etc. - start sharing your content to their social networks, that’s where the real magic begins.
When your tourism advocates and satisfied visitors share your destination content to their social channels, they are giving your destination their personal endorsement. Even more important than trusting the messaging, content shared by your advocates are more likely to be seen.
If your marketing content mix includes user-generated content, tourism ambassador and advocate shared content provides even more of a lift in visibility.
All that earned trust and post engagement has a direct impact on sales and revenue. So that you can drive down the acquisition costs related to getting more visitors, more meetings, more conventions and longer stays.
It’s not just B2C consumer advocacy programs that see a lift in revenue either. Employee advocacy programs for B2B companies - including travel agencies, associations, tour operators, etc. - also generate a noticeable gain in performance.
Tourism Ambassador Certification and advocacy marketing are a powerful marketing channel, but when you combine it as part of macro strategy, it’s pure rocket fuel.
Which leads us to the number-one, grand-pappy stat of them all.
As organic social and paid advertising continue to lose effectiveness, brands need to look to other channels to communicate their marketing messages. That channel for a lot of CVB and DMO brands is going to be advocacy and tourism ambassador marketing.
Ready to start your tourism ambassador and advocacy marketing program? Schedule a demo with The Learn Tourism and learn how our platform, instructional designers and trade methodology can help you launch and maintain a successful, far-reaching tourism ambassador and brand advocacy program.
Contact us at +1 954 289 4585 or send us an email!
Productivity isn't just crucial to company bottom lines—it's vital for our economy as a whole. The higher it is, the more output that each person can generate using a given amount of input—something that ultimately drives higher living standards. If the product is software and the input is programmer time, then higher productivity would mean writing more software for a given amount of programmer time. IBM found that even though eLearning was costly, it led to substantial improvements in productivity. For every dollar spent, the company claims that it saw $30 in increased productivity [2]. It wasn't just a function of workers being able to return to their desks faster, either. IBM showed that productivity gains came from the ability of employees to apply their newly acquired skills straight away. It's important to be able to apply newly-learned skills quickly in any role.
RELATED: Tourism Ambassador Training & Certification
The notion that eLearning is a powerful learning tool is not widely contested. Most companies and educational establishments accept that it has a role to play. But what is less understood is just how powerful eLearning can be as an intervention. IBM is famous for its implementation of eLearning courses at its headquarters and across its global workforce. eLearning makes a lot of sense for a company like IBM that has to continually update and upskill its employees to deal with changes in the marketplace and technology. The company wanted to find out whether it was spending its money wisely or whether it should return to more traditional styles of training, such as face-to-face. To the shock of company execs, IBM found that those enrolled in eLearning courses learned more than five times as much material compared to traditional lessons, allowing the company to make significant cost savings [2]. The reason for the success of eLearning appears to stem from how it presents materials. eLearners consume information in smaller, more digestible chunks, making it easier to consign things to memory and understand how concepts interact with each other. IBM employees could get back to their work faster, saving the computing giant money.
Deloitte, a professional services and research company, estimates that the average employee needs to dedicate around 1% of their time per week to training. Doing this, according to Deloitte, enables the worker to stay up to date with best practices and developments in their industry. 1% of the working week isn't much time at all. It translates to 24 minutes per week or 4.8 minutes per day, assuming a 5-day working week [14]. Arranging 4.8 minutes of training per day face-to-face would be impractical. But thanks to "microlearning"— a popular buzzword in the eLearning industry—companies can now take this approach. What's more, microlearning may be even more effective than regular learning because people are better at absorbing lots of small chunks of information than they are a few larger ones. You can imagine a worker sitting down at their desk in the morning, taking a five-minute eLearning class, and then carrying on with the rest of their work for the day.
It should come as no surprise that eLearning is a far greener and more efficient method of training than face-to-face. Figures from an Open University study suggest that eLearning cuts energy consumption by 90% and slashes CO2 by more than 85% [1]. eLearning courses are, therefore, an essential pillar in the global fight against climate change. The world needs a new generation of people with the intellectual and educational capacities to take on the challenges of tomorrow. Building that capacity takes energy, but it could be a lot less if there's greater use of eLearning courses, especially among educational institutions and companies. Cutting carbon dioxide emissions is a priority for companies and educational institutions. Companies, in particular, need to protect the environment to make sure that they have a functioning, wealthy customer base to buy their products in decades to come. Climate change puts that at risk.
RELATED: Online Course - Developing Sustainable Travel
The notion that a training program could lead to a threefold increase in the revenue per employee seems a little far-fetched. But this is no idle finding, it's the conclusion of the American Society for Training and Development after a study of more than 2,500 firms [1]. It was a serious study. Companies that offered comprehensive training across a range of subjects experienced dramatically improved revenues compared to those that didn't. And it wasn't just revenues that were higher either. Data suggests that when employers spend $1,500 per employee per year on training, they achieve improvements in profit margins of around 24% [8]. Furthermore, for every additional $680 a company spends, shareholder return rises by 6%. Investing in the knowledge capital of a company, therefore, is just as important as investing in the physical capital [8]. Traditionally, companies have been reluctant to train their employees. Most managers know that investing in people yields positive returns, but few are aware of the fact that eLearning affects both the numerator and the denominator of the calculation of the performance. eLearning is more effective than most managers believe at boosting the revenue or profit per employee (the numerator) and it's also less costly than commonly perceived (the denominator), increasing the total return per unit spent.
RELATED: INFOGRAPHIC: Top Online Learning Statistics For Tourism Development
Bring destination stakeholders into alignment to support tourism:
Tourism Ambassadors from all possible market sectors come together to create a full visitor experience. Destinations, both big and small, can align these sectors successfully because each benefits from a positive visitor experience! Here are just a few of those who are positively impacted by your credentialed tourism ambassadors (CTA).
Need help aligning your community, finding tourism ambassadors or designing your tourism ambassador program? Contact us today and our expert team will be happy to help you get the results you’re looking for. Cheers!
References:
1: https://www.cnbc.com/2017/03/20/digital-ads-more-expensive-but-reaching-fewer-consumers.html
2: https://www.businessinsider.com/pagefair-2017-ad-blocking-report-2017-1
3: https://www.marketingtechnews.net/news/2016/aug/16/how-combat-banner-blindness-digital-advertising/
4: https://www.brandwatch.com/blog/amazing-social-media-statistics-and-facts/
5: https://www.nielsen.com/us/en/insights/article/2012/consumer-trust-in-online-social-and-mobile-advertising-grows/
6: http://www.adweek.com/brand-marketing/infographic-how-millennials-and-baby-boomers-consume-user-generated-content-175307/
7: http://resources.bazaarvoice.com/rs/bazaarvoice/images/201202_Millennials_whitepaper.pdf
8: https://www.comscore.com/Insights/Press-Releases/2012/3/comScore-Study-Finds-Professionally-Produced-Video-Content-And-User-Generated-Product-Videos-Exhibit-Strong-Synergy-in-Driving-Sales-Effectiveness
9: https://www.referralcandy.com/blog/referral-marketing-awesome-infographic/
10a: https://www.comscore.com/Insights/Press-Releases/2012/3/comScore-Study-Finds-Professionally-Produced-Video-Content-And-User-Generated-Product-Videos-Exhibit-Strong-Synergy-in-Driving-Sales-Effectiveness
10b: http://www.adweek.com/digital/why-consumers-share-user-generated-content-infographic/
11: https://www.business2community.com/marketing/numbers-dont-lie-2016-nielsen-study-revealed-referrals-01477256#TRrVqUTL4gqFCJqb.97
12: https://www.bigcommerce.com/blog/word-of-mouth-marketing/#word-of-mouth-marketing-statistics
13: https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/marketing-and-sales/our-insights/a-new-way-to-measure-word-of-mouth-marketing
14: https://www.extole.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Extole_Fact_vs_Fiction_ePaper.pdf
15: https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/marketing-and-sales/our-insights/a-new-way-to-measure-word-of-mouth-marketing
16: https://www.business2community.com/marketing/numbers-dont-lie-2016-nielsen-study-revealed-referrals-01477256
17: https://www.tambourine.com/blog/20-surprising-digital-marketing-stats-every-hotel-marketer-should-know/
18: https://www.inc.com/travis-wright/how-great-companies-engage-in-employee-advocacy-beyond-simply-sharing-content.html
19: https://www.forbes.com/sites/pauljankowski/2013/02/27/quick-what-are-they-saying-about-your-brand/#701d9230209a
20: https://www.tomoson.com/blog/influencer-marketing-study/
PHEW!