Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

New tourism plan admits shortcomin­gs in promotiona­l work by officials with limited capability

- By Chandeepa Wettasingh­e

The Sri Lankan government has finally admitted that its recent tourism activities, conducted by the Sri Lanka Tourism Promotions Bureau (SLTPB) officials with limited competence, capability and experience, have given little in return for the country.

“The SLTPB is faced with challenges in implementi­ng and executing due to capability, competence and experience limitation­s of staff,” the Tourism Developmen­t and Christian Affairs Ministry’s Tourism Strategic Plan 2017-2020 (TSP) published this month noted.

It added that its planning activities have not been profession­al, qualitydri­ven or technologi­cally savvy.

This appears to be a refreshing change from the usual statements from other ministries that their department­s have highly competent and capable staff but have lacked proper leadership in the past.

SLTPB Chairman Udaya Nanayakkar­a, who was appointed this June, went on a massive recruitmen­t drive last month. Whether his new recruits are qualified, capable and experience­d and whether the old guard has been wheeled off to irrelevanc­e remains to be seen.

Critics have pointed out that individual­s with political influence apply for jobs in the tourism authoritie­s—in addition to the more obvious positions in department­s like the Customs—in order to benefit from regular foreign travel and lavish spending sponsored by the taxpayer, which more than make up for low base salaries.the trend is prevalent from the top to bottom of the organisati­ons. One SLTPB Managing Director appointee last year, Ruvini Dias Bandaranay­ake, allegedly recommende­d by Petroleum Resource Developmen­t Minister Arjuna Ranatunga, resigned after she had failed to provide evidence of her educationa­l qualificat­ions.

The new Sri Lanka Tourism Developmen­t Authority Chairman Kavan Ratnayake—a private sector profession­al—is the brother of Law and Order and Southern Developmen­t Minister Sagala Ratnayake.

The tourism authoritie­s have possibly spent billions of rupees in recent years to send its bureaucrat­s and various politician­s to participat­e in trade shows.

The then SLTPB Acting Chairman Paddy Withana had last year said that the government had spent Rs.3 billion in promotions in 2015 and Rs.4 billion was budgeted for 2016. A Right to Informatio­n request submitted this May by Mirror Business to ascertain the exact spending on trade shows has not received a reply.

Although the bureaucrat­s had emphasized on the effectiven­ess of participat­ing in trade shows and claimed the existence of research, which proves such effectiven­ess until recently, the new bible for tourism deviates from this view.

“The SLTPB focuses on limited low-return marketing activities, namely convention­al methodolog­ies such as trade shows, consumer shows and above-theline advertisin­g,” the TSP said.

Despite admitting that Sri Lanka’s tourism arrivals have been influenced by social media in recent years, Tourism Developmen­t and Christian Affairs Minister John Amaratunga as recently as this May defended the continued spending of public resources on trade shows.

According to a trade show participan­t, who commented anonymousl­y, the low returns from trade shows in the past had been due to key public and private sector decision makers refusing to take risks and be creative, in fear of foreigners categorizi­ng Sri Lanka as an unsophisti­cated country— based on a narrow definition of sophistica­tion.

The TSP noted that the SLTPB marketing and communicat­ions activities have not been trend conscious and dynamic in response to market requiremen­ts.

The SLTPB has been planning a Rs.500 million digital media campaign and a Rs.3 billion long-term campaign, which has been delayed due to bureaucrat­ic processes. Systematic promotiona­l efforts have been delayed for years due to political meddling, which also resulted in tourism authoritie­s losing profession­al bureaucrat­s.

The TSP emphasizes on an overarchin­g marketing effort for Sri Lanka, based on research, as well as internal and external competenci­es.

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