Organizations spend millions attracting customers, developing products, redesigning websites, and launching marketing campaigns. Then they leave the most important part of the customer experience to chance: the human interaction.
That may be one of the most expensive mistakes in business today.
In tourism, hospitality, and destination marketing, costs are even higher. A visitor rarely remembers your organizational chart, strategic plan, or advertising budget. They remember the bartender who recommended a hidden local gem. The hotel front desk associate who welcomed them with empathy after a delayed flight. The retail worker who confidently answered a question instead of shrugging. The tour guide told a story instead of reciting facts.
Experiences are shaped by people.
And people need more than information. They need education designed to build confidence, foster empathy, promote behavior change, and support real-world application.
Many organizations still approach training as a checkbox exercise. A handbook. A PowerPoint. A login nobody finishes. A binder full of facts that employees are expected to memorize.
That approach is costly.
Research from the Learning Guild and adult education experts consistently shows that adults retain information more effectively when learning is interactive, emotionally relevant, and connected to practical application. Yet too many tourism training programs still prioritize memorization over meaningful engagement.
The result?
The irony is painful: organizations invest heavily in marketing their destination while underinvesting in the people delivering the experience.
The best tourism ambassador programs do not simply teach where attractions are located.
They teach people why their role matters.
They help participants understand:
That last point matters more than most organizations realize.
Visitors do not expect every frontline employee to memorize every restaurant, trail, event, and attraction. They expect authenticity, curiosity, and confidence in helping them find answers.
That is a completely different training philosophy.
Empathy is not “soft.” It is operationally valuable.
When someone feels welcomed, understood, and cared for, they stay longer, spend more, leave stronger reviews, and are more likely to return. They become advocates for your destination.
That kind of visitor experience rarely happens accidentally.
It happens when organizations intentionally build cultures of learning.
At Learn Tourism, we’ve seen firsthand how education rooted in empathy transforms destinations, organizations, and communities. Participants consistently report feeling more confident, informed, and connected after completing tourism ambassador and workforce development programs.
One participant in the Poconos Ambassador Program shared:
“I feel much more confident in my ability to create exciting experiences for visitors. The course was comprehensive, and I feel much more prepared to share my knowledge about the Poconos.”
Another participant in Lexington’s Destination LEXpert program noted:
“This course broadened my knowledge of local resources and how to promote them.”
Confidence creates action. Action creates better experiences.
The true cost of ineffective training rarely appears neatly on a balance sheet.
It shows up as:
Meanwhile, organizations that invest in meaningful learning often discover unexpected benefits:
Training is not overhead.
It is infrastructure.
Effective tourism education today requires strategy, psychology, technology, storytelling, and instructional expertise working together.
That’s why Learn Tourism’s scope of service extends far beyond simply “creating courses.”
Our work includes:
We combine tourism expertise with adult education science, behavioral psychology, and instructional design methodologies to create learning experiences that actually drive outcomes.
Because the goal is not completion rates.
The goal is transformation.
Destinations, attractions, and tourism businesses are competing in an experience economy. Technology can help. Marketing matters. Branding matters.
But human connection remains the differentiator.
Organizations that prioritize education, empathy, and professional development will create stronger cultures, stronger visitor experiences, and stronger communities.
The organizations that ignore learning?
They may save money in the short term.
But they often pay for it everywhere else.
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.