Australian Regional Tourism (ART) and Economic Development Australia (EDA) have partnered on a national economic development and tourism benchmarking survey of local governments.
Responses to the survey which was open from December 2020 to January 2021 reveal a variety of approaches and resources dedicated to economic development and tourism departments within local government across Australia: in metro areas, suburban, regional cities and rural areas.
The survey’s report covers
• Local government’s priorities for economic development and tourism
• Resources allocated by local governments to economic development and tourism
• The structure of economic development and tourism departments
It is interesting to see that regional and rural councils spend more on tourism than other forms of economic development, as compared to the opposite being the case in metro councils. It would be great to know how much of the tourism budget is spent on events (see further down)!
This information is not available as a per capita (resident or visitor) figure.
Whilst metro councils may have more to spend their money on, it is great to see that regional and rural councils are understanding the value of tourism and economic development and investing accordingly.
Not a surprise, but still a factor that needs close attention.
Could these funds be spent in a different way to get a better ROI in terms of increased visitation and visitor expenditure, length of stay and dispersal?
In the last few years Tilma Group have undertaken a number of consultancies looking at alternative models for visitor servicing, so the shift is starting to take place.
Good news!
The discussion now needs to move to Return on Investment.
Who is that lucky regional city Council with 15 tourism staff?!
Our industry is a human industry and requires skilled workers to strategically manage a destination. Whilst these figures are good, we need to ensure that we have the necessary skills and capacity amongst our teams.
The challenge with having tourism, events and economic development responsibilities within the same position/s is that it becomes a struggle for the staff to do everything and to do anything well. It would be great to see Councils critically analysing their strengths and where they are set to gain the best ROI, and developing positions to support this…and don’t expect one person to be able to do many different skilled roles.
Regional City Councils pair up tourism staff with
Rural Councils pair up tourism staff with
This needs to change!
It would be great for regional and rural councils to invest time and resources into Tourism Industry Support and Tourism Product Attraction as the priorities. If this is done well, marketing success will be a natural fall out. Without this, what are you marketing to ensure you are competitive?
Regional and rural Councils see their primary tourism roles as
1. Marketing
2. Visitor information services
3. Enhancing experiences
4. / 5. Industry support / Investment attractions
6. Advocacy
Regional city Councils also run
Rural Councils also run
(Which is what they see as their #1 role or priority)
Product and experience development and Main Street activation are the next priorities
In our work with rural and regional Councils we find everyone wants to do more marketing, but few consider how they can get more of the most effective and cost-effective form of marketing – word of mouth recommendations.
Destination development includes
These pillars are like legs of a table – if one isn’t strong, the table wobbles. Destinations should be careful about heavily investing in marketing until they are confident they are providing visitors with exceptional experiences.
Tilma Group’s regional destination development strategic planning always addresses all of these pillars.
This is great to hear, however going back to the point earlier about investing in Destination Marketing. Those councils that invest in industry support/development via mentoring and training will create a competitive edge in regional and rural communities. Do we dare say customer service training?!
Tilma Group helps regional communities grow with
This might require development of bookable products or making existing products bookable.
The report’s findings were presented by Urban Enterprise and included a Q&A session:
In October 2016, Australian Regional Tourism undertook research into regional local government spend on tourism. 46% of councils in regional Australia contributed.
The research quantifies the important role local government plays in supporting Australia’s tourism industry through events and services such as visitor information centres, festivals, promotion, marketing and tourism development.
Regional local governments themselves realise the important role they play, with 90% recognising tourism offers economic development opportunities.READ THE REPORTLEARN ABOUT TILMA GROUP’S TOURISM DEVELOPMENT SERVICES
What do you think? We’d love to hear your thoughts!