Human brains are wonderfully creative, pattern-seeking machines. They’re also stubborn. One of the most persistent mental shortcuts we fall into—especially in tourism organizations, nonprofits, and destination teams—is something economists call the sunk cost fallacy.
The idea is simple and sneaky:
When we’ve already invested time, money, political capital, or emotional energy into something, we feel pressure to keep going… even when the results aren’t there.
In tourism training, workforce development, marketing platforms, and community programs, this issue appears more frequently than we’d like to admit.
A sunk cost is an investment that cannot be recovered. The money has been spent. The time is gone. The contracts are signed. The emails were sent. The logo is on the slide deck.
The fallacy occurs when past investments start driving future decisions.
Instead of asking, “What will help us most going forward?”
We quietly ask, “How do we justify what we’ve already spent?”
That’s not a strategy. That’s emotional bookkeeping.
Tourism leaders tend to be relationship-driven, community-minded, and deeply loyal. Those are strengths. They also make it harder to walk away from things that no longer serve the mission.
Common examples include:
None of these is a failure. They’re signals.
READ ALSO: 9 Questions You Should Be Asking When Considering Your Tourism Training Program Partner
The most expensive part of staying with an underperforming program isn’t the original investment.
It’s the opportunity cost—what you’re not doing instead.
When a program isn’t keeping up, the hidden costs start stacking:
At that point, staying the course isn’t “being fiscally responsible.”
It’s quietly draining momentum.
This is where nonprofit and public-sector leaders deserve more understanding and compassion.
Changing direction doesn’t mean the original idea was bad. It means the environment changed—and you noticed.
Adult learning research consistently shows that relevance, autonomy, and feedback are the key factors that keep learners engaged. Programs that don’t evolve with those principles lose effectiveness, no matter how well-intentioned they were at launch.
Strong leaders don’t cling to systems.
They stay loyal to outcomes.
Instead of asking, “Have we invested too much to stop now?”
Try asking:
If those answers feel uncomfortable, that’s not a warning sign. That’s clarity arriving.
Switching things up doesn’t have to mean burning everything down.
Sometimes it means:
At Learn Tourism, we often work with partners who didn’t need more training—they needed better alignment between learning, outcomes, and reality on the ground.
And yes, many of them had already invested heavily elsewhere.
The sunk cost fallacy thrives on guilt.
Effective leadership is built on evidence, curiosity, and adaptability.
Tourism is dynamic. Communities change. Learners evolve. Technology advances. Training programs should do the same.
The smartest move isn’t sticking with what you’ve already paid for.
It’s investing in what actually moves your mission forward—now.
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 learntourism.org