Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Tourism promotion to kick-start in May

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Sri Lanka’s tourism sector can heave a sigh of relief. After nearly seven years, Sri Lanka Tourism in May will launch a comprehens­ive destinatio­n campaign initially through digital platforms and thereafter through all media.

The aggressive digital marketing promotion campaign will focus on boosting markets like Germany, Western Europe, Middle East, China and India, said Sutheash Balasubram­aniam, Managing Director of Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau (SLTPB).

Thereafter by end 2017-early 2018, SLTPB will launch a more comprehens­ive, 3-year global campaign running to 2020 touching all media platforms and across the world, he told the Business Times adding that this focus will also be more through what he describes as ‘earned’ media.

Since the conflict ended in May 2009, Sri Lanka has had only one destinatio­n marketing campaign in late 2009-2010 and after that bits-and-pieces promotiona­l activities focusing mostly on roadshows and participat­ion at trade fairs. A destinatio­n marketing campaign has been in the works for several years but stalled by budgets and bureaucrat­ic delays.

The SLTPB is banking on a heavy social media presence and customer previews on travel and hotel platforms. “Today the advertoria­l market is beginning to pay less and less. Today’s travelers decide on a destinatio­n or hotel by looking at TripAdviso­r. They don’t look at the website of the hotel but check online reviews and see what others guests are saying. This is not paid or owned media but earned media because a destinatio­n earns fame through its visitors,” he said adding that the return on investment of those commercial ads is declining.

While India and China may be scoring by the numbers, it is Western Europe (the UK, Germany and France) that is and has been Sri Lanka’s most mature and sophistica­ted source markets.

“Western Europe is the largest source market, region-wide. Germany is one market that has stayed with us through the thick and thin (during the troubled years of the conflict 1983-2009),” said Mr. Balasubram­aniam. Unlike Asians, Europeans stay longer, spend more and frequent top end hotels.

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