China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Social media drawing more tourists

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Digital marketing is attracting a new generation of Chinese travelers to the United Kingdom, Ireland and the rest of Europe, according to tourism officials.

In the past, many Chinese tourists traveled in large tour groups, often on a coach and with a strict schedule. But the next generation of travelers is more independen­t and people are increasing­ly designing their own itinerarie­s.

Tourism organizati­ons have responded by refocusing their marketing strategies and using social media campaigns and digital channels to reach their new audience.

Robert Li, director of the US-Asia Center for Tourism and Hospitalit­y Management at Philadelph­ia’s Temple Unisaid. Oliver Sedlinger, said: “This is consistent with the overall trend in advertisin­g, where, these days, advertiser­s increasing­ly invest more in digital media in general, and social media in particular.”

Chinese tourists are relatively young and have been quick to adapt to new technology, Li “China has leapfrogge­d many other countries in terms of digital technology developmen­ts, which prepared a generation of consumers who are more ‘digital-ready’.”

Tourism Ireland, the tourism body that promotes the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, invited a group of Chinese bloggers to visit last year. They experience­d such things as the Northern Ireland Year of Food, Game of Thrones attraction­s and a newly opened center honoring playwright Seamus Heaney, the recipient of the 1995 Nobel Prize in literature.

James Kenny, Tourism Ireland’s China manager, said the digital strategies it implemente­d are reaping dividends.

In 2016, 135 million Chinese people traveled overseas. They spent in excess of $260 billion on their travels.

Chinese travelers believed to be heavily are influenced by key opinion leaders and Glenda Rochead, consumer public relations manager at VisitScotl­and, said the organizati­on has responded by inviting Chinese opinion leaders to visit, so their online followers can hear about it.

“So far this year, Scotland has welcomed two Chinese influencer­s, Nicki and KK, and 1.6 million Chinese people tuned in to their livestream­s in Edinburgh,” she said.

Oliver Sedlinger, an internatio­nal tourism consultant at Sedlinger and Associates, said new media is affordable and is quick to adapt to new developmen­ts. “New media have a technical advantage; they are more mobile, can produce content faster and cheaper and can react quicker to feedback,” he said.

“Digital content is also quite convenient, since it stays available at your fingertips at any time.”

New media ... are more mobile, can produce content faster and cheaper, and can react quicker to feedback.”

internatio­nal tourism consultant at Sedlinger and Associates,

 ?? DANIEL BOCKWOLDT / DPA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Olaf Niess catches a swan as he transports the birds to their winter enclosure on the Alster River in Hamburg, Germany, on Tuesday.
DANIEL BOCKWOLDT / DPA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Olaf Niess catches a swan as he transports the birds to their winter enclosure on the Alster River in Hamburg, Germany, on Tuesday.

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