Step 3 Reading and translation tourist promotion
There have been three aims of most tourist promotion in the last few years.
The first has been to retain the established market of people for whom travel is a normal form of recreation.
The second purpose of tourist promotion has been to increase the size of the market. In order for tourism to grow, it is necessary to attract people who would not have travelled much until the last years.
It is significant for tourism that trade unions now fight for fringe benefits for workers such as longer paid holidays and shorter work weeks. A three- day weekend would almost certainly cause an increase at least in domestic tourism.
The third goal of tourist promotion has been to overcome what might best be called its seasonal bias.
In many countries, summer is the traditional vacation time. In France, for instance, the summer vacation has extended even to the shutting down of many stores and small businesses. Hundreds of thousands of Frenchmen leave Paris in August for the south of France or for destinations outside the country. Winter vacations have been heavily promoted to spread tourism more evenly throughout the year. There has been a big increase in facilities for winter sports.
Ski resorts have sprung up which attract not only the wealthy to resorts in Switzerland, but also the office or factory workers who want to get out on the ski slopes for winter weekend.
Many different organisations are involved in tourism promotion. They include tourist bureaus, the transportation companies, tour operators, retail travel agents and individual hotels or hotel chains.
Through their tourist offices, governments do a great deal of travel promotion, both in the form of advertising and publicity. There are two major kinds of promotion - publicity and advertising.
Publicity might well be termed free advertising. It consists of stories placed in newspapers and magazines about travel, accommodations, restaurants, and other parts of the whole tourist industry. Many newspapers and magazines carry such stories regularly as features. Professional travel writers journey from resort area to resort area to report on facilities and amenities that are available.
Another kind of tourist-connected public relations comes under the heading of familiarization. People in the industry, especially those involved in sales-travel agents-are frequently provided with free trips to tourist destinations. They will be able to answer questions from their own experience.
Tourist advertising is a large business in itself. Most of the advertising is directed toward the large tourist-generating regions.
Media, the plural of medium, is a term that is used for the different means of spreading information in the form of news and advertising. Newspapers and magazines (the print media) and radio and television (the broadcast media) are usually included in the term.
Television reaches the largest market, one that generally cuts across different social and income groups. TV time is also very expensive, so it is used principally by transportation companies and government tourist agencies.
Radio serves a more limited audience since it can not transmit the beautiful pictures and colours of television. But it is unique because it can reach people driving their cars.
Another form of advertising is the brochure. Tour operators distribute
brochures in large numbers to travel agents in the market area they are trying to reach. In addition, many of them are sent out by direct mailing to selected lists of customers by tour operators and travel agents.
Perhaps the most effective kind of tourist promotion is the one that can not be manipulated by the industry.
This is ‘word of mouth,’ what one person says to another about his or her vacation. And this is indeed a major topic of conversation among people who travel.
Like news stories, the result of ‘word of mouth’ can be good or bad. A recommendation of a resort or hotel by one family to another can significantly influence the choice people are likely to make. On the other hand, a bad report spread around by dissatisfied tourists may sharply cut tourism.
Among other things, ‘word of mouth’ guarantees that the tourist industry will provide more or less what it promises. One might say that it is a powerful force in keeping the industry honest.
Task 1. Answer the questions.
What has been the first aim of most tourist promotion in the last few years? What has been the second purpose of tourist promotion?
In what way is the effort by unions to obtain more fringe benefits for workers significant to the tourist promotion?
What has been the third aim of recent tourist promotion?
What has been done to spread tourism more evenly during the year?
What kinds of organisations are involved in tourist promotion?
What are some types of publicity in tourist promotion?
How do professional travel writers provide publicity of tourism?
What is another kind of tourist-connected public relations?
What does this involve?
Where is tourist advertising directed?
What kind of market does television reach?
Why does radio serve a more limited audience?
How are brochures distributed?
What is an effective form of tourist promotion that can not be controlled by the industry?
What does word of mouth guarantee concerning the tourist industry?
Task 2. Say what you have learned from the texts about
the major aims of most tourist promotion;
the major kinds of promotion;
various means of tourist promotion; their advantages and
disadvantages;
the effect of word of mouth for tourist promotion.
- Федеральное агентство по образованию
- Unit I the tourist industry step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation the tourist industry
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- The Domestic Visitor
- The International Visitor
- Classification of International Visitors
- The International Tourist
- The Excursionist or the Same-Day Visitor
- Travel Motivation
- Climate
- Personal Motives
- International Tourism Trends
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit II working in tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation careers in tourism
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit III travel agents step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation the retail travel agent
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice Two-Part Verbs
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Travel agents try not to miss internet boat Online Booking Threatens Traditional High Street Outlets
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit IV tour operators step I Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation tour operators
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Hotel contracting
- When the welcome is frosty
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Tour guides
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit V tourist promotion step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation tourist promotion
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Promotional tools
- Brochures
- Main Target Markets
- Making Brochure Work
- Copywriting
- Grab Attention by Direct Addressing
- Some Copywriting Hints
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit VI tourist attractions and entertainment
- Step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation
- Tourist attractions and entertainment
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Compound Nouns
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- How disney does it
- Unit VII tourism and transporattion
- Step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation
- Tourism and transportation
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Sail away
- Imagine that you recently accompanied a group
- 4.1 Put the words in the right order to make correct sentences.
- 4.2. Put the underlined words into the correct order.
- 4.3. Join the verbs and prepositions and make phrasal verbs to replace the words underlined in the sentences below.
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Air transport and tourism
- Cost Structures of Airline Companies
- Direct Operating Costs
- Indirect Operating Cost
- General and Administration Costs
- Labour Costs
- International tourism development: problems of equipment and infrastructure
- Ground and Station Equipment and Hospitality Services
- Air Fare Tariffs
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit VIII accommodations and catering
- Step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation
- Accommodations and catering
- Step 4 Foodservice
- Step 5 Vocabulary practice
- Adjectives and Word Order
- Step 6 Developing reading skills the hotel trade in the world
- Hotel Consortia
- Integrated Hotel Chains
- Hotel Franchising
- Tourism lodgings
- Second Homes Wholly Owned by Tourists
- Second Homes with Shared Collective Services
- Timeshare
- Furnished Rented Accommodation
- Seasonally Rented Furnished Accommodation
- Cottages and Farmhouse Accommodation
- Guest Lodgings
- Social Accommodation
- Restaurant Chains
- Step 7 Test tasks
- Unit IX regulation, research and development in tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation regulation, research and development in tourism
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice british and american usage
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- When the heat is on
- Overseas markets
- External Influences on International Travel to Britain
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit X environmental tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introduction
- Step 3 Reading and translation the environmental tourist How to Be an Ecofriendly Tourist in the Alps
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice - Reporting verbs
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Does tourism ruin everything that it touches?
- A Brief History of Tourism
- Tourism Today
- The Future of Tourism
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit XI business travel step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation business travel
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- 4.1. Match the verbs in a with the noun phrases in в to make expressions which are often used in meetings.
- 4.2. Match the adjectives in a with the nouns in b. Use a dictionary, if necessary.
- 4.3. Use the expressions from 4.2 (above) in the sentences.
- 4.4. This is an extract from a meeting about tourism in Goa. Fill in the gaps with expressions from 4.1.
- 5.1. Match the words on the left to the words on the right to make noun collocations and use the collocations in the sentences.
- 5.2. Link the adjectives with the nouns to complete the definitions below
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Travellers’ tips
- 4.1. Choose a title for the article:
- 4.2. Sentences a-e have been removed from the text. Match them to the correct boxes:
- Step 6 Test tasks
- The international executive lounge club
- Unit XII customer relations in tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation customer relations in tourism
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- An unfortunate incident at ridgeway tours
- Step 5 Developing reading skills handling a complaint
- 5.1. When It Pays to Complain
- 5.2. Dear Travel Agent, Please Stop the Cows Staring at me...
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Турфирма с грязными руками
- Ленивого «кинуть» легко
- Готовьте компромат
- Contents