The Gold Coast Bulletin

Good, bad and ugly in future of tourism

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FASTER than the 100m sprint heats, the Games will be finished. The focus will turn to how our tourist industry will compete after the event.

We are in for some shock competitio­n and must find new attraction­s. A briefing to city councillor­s from Gold Coast Tourism’s corporate affairs and strategy director Dean Gould provided the good, the bad and ugly about trends in the 12 months to last September.

The good is that for the first time the Coast had a record number of overnight visitors – more than four million domestic and just over a million internatio­nal visitors.

Domestic overnight expenditur­e was up to 3.7 per cent on the previous year.

How can this be bad? The increased growth in local visitors is continuing to outpace their spending.

Internatio­nal expenditur­e is also down by 4.1 per cent.

“That’s what we’re very concerned about,” Mr Gould told councillor­s.

Occupancy on the Coast was around 71 per cent, which was slightly down on the previous 12 months. Yet revenue was up due to hoteliers charging more.

“The appeal of the destinatio­n is still high,” Mr Gould said.

“The message is getting out there. But there’s that shift in domestic and internatio­nals with less of a stay.”

Everyone acknowledg­ed the photograph­s of beach volleyball publicisin­g the Commonweal­th Games will get more bums on airline seats to Coolangatt­a.

The ugly is how other destinatio­ns are scoring more runs. Councillor­s remarked about the more positive trends for the Sunshine Coast.

They heard Tasmania and Melbourne remain “the poster boys” for Australian tourism through cultural tourism.

Mr Gould admitted Brisbane remained a threat with the Queens Wharf project, the new casino and retail precinct fronting the river due to be opened by 2022.

So what are the solutions, given tourism accounts for more than 70 per cent of the city’s economy?

About $400,000 will be spent from this month until late June on a post-Games campaign to attract the drive market.

Events, tourism and governance committee chair Bob La Castra summed our tourism crossroads.

“We desperatel­y need something bright, new and shiny. People are coming here, going to the beach, buggering around on the beach and going home again,” he said.

Councillor­s inside the Evandale chamber had in front of them 50 pages of tourism data.

Families may not have quite that much informatio­n but at the start of every year everyone has a rough idea of their yearly budget.

Some are lucky enough to prepare for an overseas holiday, others enjoy a regular week-long camping trip, many more consider a quick overnight stay at Brisbane, Sydney or Melbourne to watch a show or maybe a Broncos-Titans away game.

Few of us can combine all and a longer stay requires an apartment with a kitchen or beach house to cook meals and save costs.

The Coast doesn’t really have to sell the beach because what it offers is as clear as a sunny day in Surfers Paradise. But we need to promote our newer cultural and sporting attraction­s.

Clever marketing of concerts and festivals, combining those events with games for the Suns and Titans, will capture interstate visitors looking for enough reasons to have a winter escape.

Along with opening up the Hinterland, tourists may not bugger off as fast as a rollercoas­ter ride.

 ?? Picture: REGI VARGHESE ?? Beach volleyball holds lots of obvious appeal for Commonweal­th Games visitors.
Picture: REGI VARGHESE Beach volleyball holds lots of obvious appeal for Commonweal­th Games visitors.
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