Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDwayne Harrell Modified over 9 years ago
1
1© 2009 by Nelson Education Limited.
2
2© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd. The Tourism Industry Chapter 1
3
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.3 Objectives Discuss the importance of the tourism industry to Canada and globally. Identify factors that influence the growth of the tourism industry. Explain the tourism industry’s impact on economics and culture
4
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.4 Objectives Discuss leisure as a concept that affects the tourism industry. Describe the building blocks of services. Discuss how geography influences the tourism industry. Name areas of knowledge that are important to the tourism professional.
5
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.5 A Definition of Tourism Traveller – a person on a trip anywhere Visitors – same day or tourist (overnight stay) Domestic travel – within 80 km of home for any purpose Domestic tourism – more than 80 km of home (not for remuneration)
6
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.6 The Forms of Tourism Domestic Inbound Outbound Internal National International
7
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.7 Reasons for the Growth of Travel Political Stability Economic Prosperity Technological Improvements Increase in Leisure Time More Senior Citizens More Two-income Families
8
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.8 Growth of Travel Impacts Economic Impact –Employment, corporate profits, tax revenue, and revival of depressed areas Cultural Impact –Eases tensions and promotes understanding Environmental Impact –Fosters values that support natural, social, and built environments Employment Impact –Employment, human resource development and employee retention
9
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.9 The Eight Sectors Transportation Accommodation Food and Beverage Meetings, Events, and Conferences Attractions Adventure tourism and Recreation, and Ecotourism Travel Trade Tourism Services
10
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.10 Tourism as a Product Tangible Products –Products that can be seen or touched –Food and beverages for example Intangible Products –Products that cannot be seen or touched –A flight on an airplane, a stay in a hotel room, relaxing on the beach, etc.
11
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.11 Tourism as a Service Employees serve customers Employees are professionals Special attitude between the employee and the customer – the host/guest relationship
12
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.12 An Explanation of Service Intangibility –Creating the impression of tangibility Inconsistency –Establishing industry wide standards Inseparability –Service is the product Inventory –Services not sold cannot be held in inventory
13
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.13 The Building Blocks of Service Consumer of Service Pre-Purchase Stage Consumption Stage Post-Purchase Stage
14
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.14 Post-Purchase Stage Guest Contact Personnel –Walt Disney –Service Failures –Reaction to Customers Staff Effectiveness –Human error –Training –Support of Employees
15
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.15 Managing the Service Enterprise Empowerment Enfranchisement Customer Loyalty Systems Service Quality
16
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.16 Leisure and Recreation A definition of leisure Who is attracted to leisure services Who provides leisure services A definition of recreation The benefits of recreation The relationship between recreation and leisure and tourism
17
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.17 Why Do People Engage in Leisure Activities Relaxation Active Enjoyment Passive Enjoyment Release Recuperation
18
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.18 Leisure Participation Repertoire Motivation Attitudes Satisfaction Constraints
19
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.19 The Ps of Marketing Product Price Place Promotion Packaging Partnerships Personnel Positioning Programming
20
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.20 The 4 Rs of Service Marketing Retention Referrals Relationships Recovery
21
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.21 The United Nations & Tourism UNWTO purpose Global Code of Ethics Tourism Enriches Campaign The WTO and the UN UNWTO climate change report Government Promotion Government Regulation
22
New US/Canada Border Rules WHTI – definition and purpose Phases of border rules changes NEXUS CANPASS © 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.22
23
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.23 Geography and Tourism DestinationGeography Location Cultural Physical SystemGeography Cultural Location
24
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.24 Realities of Tourism/Hospitality Positions Work weekends Evening shifts Pay rate low to begin with Employees begin at minimum wage Pace of work Perks
25
© 2009 by Nelson Education Ltd.25 Tourism Requires the Basics of Business Communications Information Management Accounting Financial Management Human Resource Management
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.