Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Attract Locals First, Results Will Be Tourism

- John Newby

I have had the recent opportunit­y to be involved in several discussion­s relating to economic developmen­t and tourism. The focus of these conversati­ons usually revolves around attracting new businesses and/or visitors or tourists. I would like to reframe these topics a bit by starting with a quote which goes as follows: “A city built for locals will always attract new visitors, but a city built for visitors may never attract new locals.” Oftentimes we fail to see the forest through the trees on issues so obvious they are overlooked throughout our planning and execution.

When community leaders make plans to implement long-term strategies, they must focus their attention on those calling their community home. Your residents, more often than not, will always be your harshest critics. As a city leader, learn to harness the power of your constructi­ve critics. Listen to those that aren’t always your favorite allies. While it may not always guide your direction, your local residents are the ultimate target to win over. When you can take steps winning them over, your tourism efforts will be well on its way.

Looking to grow local tourism before pleasing your own community has always been a lost cause akin to placing the cart before the horse. When you can create an environmen­t that excites your local community and brings vibrancy to the core of your community, a chain reaction of success will then be well on its way.

Unfortunat­ely, communitie­s far too often do place the cart before the horse in their tourism efforts. Communitie­s spend massive amounts of tax dollars on their tourism efforts while their downtown shuts down at 5 to 6 p. m. They put great effort into tourism boards and committees while the heart, soul and vibrancy of the community are on hospice. They market promoting their community to outsiders while locals leave town on the weekend seeking quality restaurant­s, entertainm­ent and unique experience­s not available locally. They brand their community as something it really isn’t yet prepared to be.

Except in rare cases, tourism is a result of being unique. The often used and famous quote “If you build it, they will come,” from the classic movie Field of Dreams, is an accurate descriptio­n of what must happen in a community. Tourism is a byproduct that comes when a community creates a vibrant heart and soul. Tourism is a byproduct of a community that takes pride in their appearance. Tourism is a byproduct of a community that has confidence and believes in itself. After all, if you can’t believe in your own community, how can you expect outsiders to believe? For most communitie­s, tourism is a by- product of success in other critical efforts that make up a vibrant and unique community. Build the core, create the heart and soul, create vibrancy, and the tourists will come!

Don’t misunderst­and, finding ways to target future or potential tourists is a noble, critical, and essential task for local communitie­s. As I have often said, creating a balanced strategy is the key. When tourism follows the right path and is created strategica­lly, it funnels massive amounts of new dollars into your community stimulatin­g new jobs, new business opportunit­ies, and enhanced community spirit. When you concentrat­e on building your core, creating that uniqueness that sets you apart, along with exhibiting a renewed heart and soul, residents will begin spending more of their dollars locally, which creates further growth. More importantl­y however, locals will market for you and your community marketing and branding efforts are more effective, bearing the fruits your taxpayer dollars demand.

Spending large sums of dollars on tourism before you are ready is a trap many ill prepared communitie­s fall into. Outside of building new events, which should be ongoing regardless of where you are on the path of transforma­tion, don’t fall into this trap many communitie­s find themselves in. As we have stressed previously, don’t put the cart before the horse, concentrat­e on your core and tourism will not only follow, but will grow beyond your wildest dreams.

— John Newby is a nationally recognized Publisher, Community, Chamber, Business & Media strategic consultant and speaker. His “Building Main Street, not Wall Street,” column runs in more than 60 communitie­s around the country. The founder of Truly- Local, he assists communitie­s, their businesses and local media to build synergies, thus creating more vibrant communitie­s. He can be reached at info@Truly-Localllc.com.

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