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Effective communication in developing rail tourism in Cape Town, South AfricaKayster, Daphine Dawn January 2014 (has links)
Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree
Magister Technologiae: Public Relations Management
in the Faculty of Informatics and Design
at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology / Introduction
This research explores effective communication within tourism to answer the research
question “What are the communication needs of the same day rail visitor in Cape Town?”
The research sub-questions are namely:
Who is the same day rail visitor in Cape Town?
What are the same day rail visitors’ communication needs?
What are the same day rail visitors’ information search preferences?
How does the same day rail visitor perceive rail tourism communication?
What are the same day rail visitors’ product attributes?
Literature review
Using a theoretical framework anchored by Lumsdon and Page’s (2004) tourist-transport
interface, Fodness’s (1994) tourism motivation theory, as well as information search
(Fodness & Murray, 1997), this quantitative research considers how the same day rail visitor
obtains tourist destination information and the influence of that information on their transport
decisions to reach the tourist destination. Destination image (Beerli & Martin, 2004a) plays a
key role in influencing the purchase behaviour of tourists as those destinations with a strong
positive image, have a better chance of being selected by tourists in their travel decision
process. Furthermore the literature explores effective communication and its ability to link
the tourist with the destination (Hall, 1999), and the role of public relations in establishing rail
tourism in Cape Town (Stacks, 1992; Grunig & Hunt, 1984: Van Ruler, 2004).
Design and methodology
A quantitative empirical, research design was selected for this limited scope thesis. The
study used a single, structured, self-administered and pre-tested questionnaire. This
questionnaire was distributed to convenience samples of same day rail visitors on board the
tourism train to either Simon’s Town or Stellenbosch. While the non-probabilistic sample
cannot be generalised into a broad overview of the same day rail visitor; it can offer insights
into the communication needs of the rail tourist.
Key findings
The key findings to this research were: The same day rail visitor in Cape Town is mainly local South African, travelling
in a family or friend group and using rail for the first time.
• Understanding ‘information search’ behaviour is the key to meeting the
communication needs of the same day rail visitor as while both men and women
seek information, but they seek information differently and use different information
sources, with the message and channel being important.
• The same day rail visitor uses a variety of communication channels to find
information.
• The same day rail visitor was disappointed in some of the promotional
communication as it over promised on the destination image (trip).
• Cape Town rail service is doing an ‘average’ but not a good job in
communicating rail tourism information.
• Effective communication channels for trip experience and feedback were
email and social media (Facebook and Twitter).
• The same day rail visitor uses a variety of communication channels to
communicate with, and to receive communication from, Cape Town rail service.
• The same day rail visitor requires relevant information that enables them to
make a purchase decision.
• The majority of same day rail visitors obtained knowledge about the tourist
service via promotions on Groupon and thereafter from family, friends and the
internet.
• Personal safety and security are very important product attributes (88 %).
• Cross-transport inter-connections, preferably at railway station, were essential
to 90% of the respondents.
• The same day rail visitors’ product needs are matched by their experiences.
Recommendations
Future study is recommended to consider whether improved communication on the trains
and stations to the ‘to work’ commuters and ‘anything but work’ commuters, would extend
their patronage to include same day rail visitor.
It is recommended that further studies explore whether a causal relationship exists between
the prices of the Groupon same day rail visitor package and purchase decisions of rail
tourists in Cape Town.
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La Nation entre les lignes. Médias invisibles, discours implicites et invention de tradition chez les Saxons de Transylvanie. / The nation between the lines. Invisible medias, implicit meanings and invention of tradition by Transylvanian saxonsRoth, Catherine 04 December 2013 (has links)
Les communautés s’imaginent (Anderson, Hobsbawm, Gellner), mais comment l’invention est-elle diffusée et transformée en identité collective ? Cette théorie communicationnelle de la nation clarifie le concept flou d’invention de tradition en distinguant invention, transmission par un média (F. d’Almeida, J. Assmann), et transformation de l’invention en tradition, du présent en passé. L’hypothèse est que le plus important n’est pas dit : le message est implicite, et le média est invisible en tant que tel. L’implicite permet une naturalisation qui s’adresse en partie à l’inconscient, garant de l’intangibilité de la nation (C. Kerbrat-Orecchioni, M. Douglas). Les Saxons de Transylvanie, minorité allemande de Roumanie, ont choisi en 1990 l’émigration collective en Allemagne ; avec un début au XIIe siècle, une fin au XXIe, et des mutations identitaires dans un monde multiculturel, puis tendant vers la monoculturalité, et aujourd’hui la transculturalité, ils sont un terrain d’observation particulièrement pertinent. L’étude de leur historiographie, musée, Eglise, et club de montagne montre qu’ils ont entre les lignes réinventé le temps, l’espace public et le territoire, pendant que l’implicite figeait le temps, sacralisait la société et géologisait le territoire. Selon Karl W. Deutsch, un peuple est une communauté de communication, qui échange plus intensivement vers l’intérieur que vers l’extérieur. Un pont est ainsi créé entre théories des nations et nationalismes et Sciences de l’information et de la communication. Les différents implicites président à la fois à la construction nationale, au maintien des Etats-nations et à celui des dictatures, avec des similitudes troublantes entre les nations et les époques. / Communities imagine themselves (Anderson, Hobsbawm, Gellner), but how is the invention spread and transformed into collective identity? This communication theory of nation clarifies the blurred concept of invention of tradition by distinguishing invention, transmission by a media (F. d’Almedia, J. Assmann), and transformation of invention into tradition, of present into past. The hypothesis is that the most important is not being said: the message is implicit and the media is invisible as such. Implicit meaning allows a naturalization that appeals in part to the unconscious – the guarantor of the nation’s intangibility (C. Kerbrat-Orecchioni, M. Douglas). Transylvanian Saxons, a German minority in Romania, chose collective emigration to Germany in 1990. With a beginning in the 12th century, an end in the 21st century, and identity transformations in a world first multicultural, then tending to monoculturality, and today to transculturality, they are a particularly relevant field observation. Studies of their historiography, museum, church and mountain club show that they have between the lines reinvented time, public space and territory, while the implicit froze time, sanctified society and ‘‘geologyzed’’ the territory. According to Karl W. Deutsch, a population is a community of communication who exchanges intensively more to the inside than the outside. Thus, a bridge is being built between the theories of nations and nationalism and communication studies. The different forms of implicit steer invisibly the national construction, the maintain of Nation-states and also of dictatorships with disturbing similarities between nations and eras.
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