Sun.Star Cebu

CONVINCING TOURISTS TO STAY LONGER

Cebu Alliance of Tour Operators president Alice Queblatin said the aim is to extend the average foreign visitor’s stay beyond three nights by the time Terminal 2 of the Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport becomes operationa­l

- KATLENE O. CACHO / Editor @katCacho

The challenge for Cebu’s tourism stakeholde­rs is to make guests extend their stay beyond three nights. “Cebu will now become a jump-off point to other parts of the Visayas once the Terminal 2 opens. We are now faced with a bigger challenge to upgrade our activities so guests will stay longer here before going to other destinatio­ns,” said Alice Queblatin, president of The Cebu Alliance of Tour Operations Specialist­s (Catos). Terminal 2 of the Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport is scheduled to open next month. It will serve internatio­nal flights. Catos members have prepared two-week tour packages that include, among others, canyoneeri­ng, whale shark watching in Oslob and other-beach related activities.

As Cebu prepares for more guests with the opening of the expanded airport, tourism insiders are working on packages they hope will encourage guests to stay in the province longer.

Alice Queblatin, president of the Cebu Alliance of Tour Operations Specialist­s (Catos), pointed out that Cebu’s challenge is to make guests extend their stay beyond three nights.

“Cebu will now become a jump-off point to other parts of the Visayas once Terminal 2 opens. We are now faced with a bigger challenge to upgrade our activities so guests will stay longer here before going to other destinatio­ns,” said Queblatin.

Terminal 2 of the Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport is sched- uled to open next month. It will serve internatio­nal flights.

Queblatin said they will push for the promotion of Camotes, Bantayan and Malapascua islands. Other interestin­g destinatio­ns have also emerged in the Carnaza and Kinatarcan islands.

While Cebu’s tourism industry is also promoting other products to become a more attractive destinatio­n for tourists, the Catos official said they cannot reinvent Cebu’s image, which is mainly that of a beach destinatio­n.

“We will continue to market Cebu as a beach destinatio­n because that is the province’s strength. But when guests arrive here and have stayed enough on the beach, we will introduce other equally interestin­g activities like heritage, eco-tourism, adventure, and culinary tourism,” she said.

“The goal is to make them stay longer here,” she added.

Queblatin said Catos members have prepared two-week tour packages, featuring varied activities.

Among the popular options are canyoneeri­ng, whale shark watching in Oslob, countrysid­e tours and other beach-related interests.

Some members are also crafting new activities, especially for the new breed of travelers who are into “experienti­al tourism.”

“Millennial­s, for instance, want more. They now place greater importance on personal experience­s rather than acquiring material things,” she said, adding that the “fear of missing out” helps drive younger travelers’ choices.

According to the Department of Tourism (DOT) 7, a foreign tourist spent at least P4,000 on average last year.

Central Visayas generated P28.5 billion in tourist receipts in 2017. Estimated visitor receipts for February totaled P41.17 billion, the highest recorded for a single month, according to the DOT.

The agency credited the high numbers to higher visitor arrivals and higher average daily expenditur­es.

Average daily spending during the period stood at P6,575.79 while average tourist stay was at 9.39 nights. Average per capita expenditur­e is pegged at P61,746.63.

The top spending market was Korea at P10.88 billion followed closely by China at P10.11 billion. Tourism receipts generated from the US and Japan stood at P4.64 billion and P4.19 billion, respective­ly.

The DOT said the country welcomed 631,831 arrivals in February, up by 3.09 percent from February 2017.

Majority came from Asia, with a 68.30 percent market share.

China posted the highest growth in arrivals at 85.99 percent or 145,536 tourists.

The DOT said that 57.2 percent of the tourists came to the country for pleasure and vacation, followed by business or profession­al work at 21.2 percent, while 17.9 percent came to the country to visit their friends and families.

Total arrivals during the first two months of year stood at 1.4 million.

We will continue to market Cebu as a beach destinatio­n because that is the province’s strength. ALICE QUEBLATIN

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