The Cairns Post

Write way to get tourists arriving

- PIP CLOSE Pip Close is Tourism Tropical North Queensland’s chief executive officer

TOURISM IS A DYNAMIC AND INNOVATIVE INDUSTRY IN A RAPIDLY CHANGING WORLD AND WE MUST BE NIMBLE ENOUGH TO MOVE WITH IT

TOURISM Tropical North Queensland will invest in bringing travel writers and influencer­s to our region to replace the mega-familiaris­ation visit for domestic and New Zealand travel agents.

Several factors influenced the decision to move resources from trade to public relations where we believe we will get a better return on investment.

The mega-famil was successful last year in growing trade knowledge of our destinatio­n. However, the pressure on domestic seat capacity caused by 80 per cent of internatio­nal travellers flying to Cairns via domestic routes means we are unlikely to be able to grow the domestic market for a few years.

An embargo on Flight Centre travel for agents and date clashes with the Australian Tourism Exchange (ATE) also made the famil increasing­ly difficult to organise.

Many of our members raised concerns about the investment in trade. Port Douglas, for example, has in-market representa­tion and did not want this duplicated, so we will partner with them by assisting with opportunit­ies like business nights to educate the trade.

We will continue to nurture our trade relationsh­ips by flying the flag for Tropical North Queensland and servicing our key accounts. Once airline seats become available again we will work with the airlines to promote those routes.

Giving weight to our decision is the confirmati­on of a large conference group in November which will bring 300 agents to our destinatio­n.

This will be a great opportunit­y, allowing us to invest in educating these agents instead of throwing all our resources into bringing 60 agents here.

We believe we can get a better return on investment by using the $100,000 allocated to the trade famil elsewhere and will measure the outcomes of this work to ensure we are getting the best return.

We started working in the public relations space this month and it is already starting to gain momentum. TTNQ was represente­d at the Internatio­nal Media Marketplac­e in New York, securing 24 appointmen­ts with travel writers, influencer­s and broadcaste­rs.

There was enormous interest in the Great Barrier Reef and our indigenous brand Timeless Experience­s.

The media were not aware of our dual World Heritage areas and the diversity of experience­s in the one Australian destinatio­n.

A radio travel program with a high-value audience of more than a million listeners offered to do monthly updates on our destinatio­n as they believe we have so many stories of interest to their target audience of embassy officials, staff and their families.

Follow-up negotiatio­ns are underway with the media including National Geographic Traveler, San Francisco Chronicle, Canadian Geographic, BBC Travel, Samantha Brown Media, Los Angeles Times, Conde Nast Traveler, Edge Media Network and a host of freelancer­s.

Next month we will be represente­d at Internatio­nal Media Marketplac­e in Sydney where we will have appointmen­ts with the Australian travel media. Also we will train Sydney-based public relations firm Klick Communicat­ions to represent Tropical North Queensland in the southern domestic markets.

This shift in focus will ensure we have campaign funds ready for potential flights between Cairns and New Zealand.

Tourism is a dynamic and innovative industry in a rapidly changing world and we must be nimble enough to move with it so we can compete with marketing organisati­ons whose funds are far greater than ours.

 ??  ?? SPREADING WORD: TTNQ is investing in travel writers and influencer­s to bolster tourism here.
SPREADING WORD: TTNQ is investing in travel writers and influencer­s to bolster tourism here.
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