Company culture shapes every interaction your team has—with each other, with customers, and with your community. Yet most organizations struggle to define it in a way that’s actionable, sustainable, and aligned with their goals. Culture isn’t a poster on the wall or a clever tagline. It’s a system of shared behaviors, reinforced through intentional design.
For destinations, tourism organizations, and experience providers, culture becomes even more critical. It influences how visitors are welcomed, how stories are told, and how communities feel about tourism itself. So what does it actually take to define a meaningful company culture?
Leaders often start with values: integrity, collaboration, and innovation. That’s a good first step—but values alone don’t create culture.
Culture is defined by:
If your organization says “we value learning” but never invests in tourism training or professional development, your culture communicates something very different.
Research from Deloitte shows that organizations with a strong learning culture are 92% more likely to innovate and 52% more productive. That’s not coincidence—it’s design.
Many organizations jump straight to “what do we want to feel like?” without first answering “why do we exist?”
A strong culture starts with:
For tourism organizations, this often includes economic development, community pride, and visitor experience. When your team understands the why, they’re far more likely to align their behaviors with it.
Values are abstract. Behaviors are observable.
Instead of saying:
“We value hospitality”
Define it as:
This is where many organizations fail. Culture becomes real only when it’s measurable.
One learner from a destination training program shared:
“I feel more confident now about my ability to welcome visitors to our area.”
Confidence doesn’t come from values—it comes from clarity and practice.
Culture cannot scale without education.
Whether you’re onboarding new employees, engaging frontline staff, or building a tourism ambassador mindset across your community, learning must be continuous.
This is especially true in tourism, where:
Organizations that prioritize tourism training see stronger alignment, better guest experiences, and more engaged teams.
According to LinkedIn Learning, 94% of employees say they would stay longer at a company that invests in their learning. Culture and retention are deeply connected.
Top-down culture rarely sticks. People need ownership.
That means:
In tourism, this often shows up through local pride. When frontline staff feel empowered, they don’t just answer questions—they create experiences.
If you’re not measuring culture, you’re guessing.
Consider tracking:
Modern learning platforms make this easier than ever, offering real-time insights into how culture is being adopted across teams.
Leaders are culture amplifiers.
If leadership behavior doesn’t align with stated values, culture erodes quickly. But when leaders model the right behaviors—curiosity, empathy, accountability—those behaviors cascade throughout the organization.
Culture is not what leaders say. It’s what leaders consistently do.
Tourism is a human-centered industry. Every interaction shapes perception—not just of a business, but of an entire destination.
A well-defined culture leads to:
And perhaps most importantly, it creates consistency. Visitors don’t remember your strategy—they remember how they felt.
Defining company culture isn’t a one-time exercise. It’s an ongoing commitment to clarity, learning, and reinforcement.
Organizations that succeed don’t just define culture—they design it, teach it, and live it every day.
About Learn Tourism the nonprofit academy...
Learn Tourism is a 501c3 nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing the tourism industry through innovative educational practices and professional development initiatives. Our mission is to harness the power of science, business psychology, and adult education to build sustainable economies and enrich the tourism landscape. Visit us at https://learntourism.org.