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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Cultural Characteristics in China's Official Online Tourism Advertisements

Bi, Chun January 2012 (has links)
Tourism advertising is an important approach in providing information about tourism destinations and in attracting potential customers, and in this process, particular cultural factors are usually conveyed. In this thesis, the main intention was to describe the cultural factors reflected in advertising and discover the role that Chinese cultural identity plays in China’s official Internet tourism advertisements to overseas markets using a theoretical framework of diverse cultural issues. The objects of this study are the official tourism advertisements from China National Tourist Office’s (CNTO) websites. The author researched Chinese cultural characteristics and tried to connect them with the expressional tendencies in tourism advertisements. Using a quantitative content analysis method, the most frequent cultural symbol in advertising was discovered as the basis and general image of the online tourism advertisements. Then the author discussed the external manifestations of cultural factors in tourism advertising in detail and analysed the internal cultural values behind them using the qualitative discourse analysis method. The main conclusions of this study indicated that the most representative cultural characteristic of Chinese culture in tourism advertising is a high-context cultural feature; in addition, at present traditional ideology in Chinese society, such as Confucianism and Taoism, was still being conveyed in tourism advertising. In general, Chinese cultural traditions influenced tourism advertising expressions, both in external manifestations and internal connotations.
2

A FACET-BASED TOURISM ADVERTISING RESPONSE MODEL: ASSESSING MODERATING EFFECT OF TRAVEL DECISION FLEXIBILITY

Park, Sangwon January 2013 (has links)
Advertising is regarded as one of the most important and effective communication methods in tourism (Kim, Hwang & Fesenmaier, 2005; Morgan & Pitchard, 2001). Researchers have extensively analyzed travelers' responses to advertising exposure based upon a variety of perspectives including the hierarchy-of-effects model, and more recently, the dual process advertising model (Lavidge & Steiner, 1961; Petty, Briñol, & Priester, 2009; Te'eni-Harari, Lampert, & Lehman-Wilzig. 2007). Fundamentally, these models focus attention on the factors effecting the destination decision. However, a number of tourism scholars have argued that travel decision making is a complex/multifaceted process whereby travelers are required to make many sub-decisions rather than a single independent choice of a travel destination (Decrop & Snelders, 2004; Jeng & Fesenmaier 2002). As such, these studies suggest that most tourism advertising response models have been over simplified and therefore, offer little insight into the factors affecting the travel decision-making process (Choi, Lehto, Morrison, & Jang, 2012; Hyde, 2004; 2008). Further, Belk (1974; 1975), among others (Aqueveque, 2006; Kim & Chintagunta, 2012; Kim & Moon, 2009; Wakefield & Inman, 2003), argued that situational variables explain considerably more variance in consumer response to advertising than individual-related variables. Within the context of travel, Jeng and Fesenmaier (2002) and more recently, Gretzel, Fesenmaier and O'Leary (2006) and Hwang and Fesenmaier (2011) examined the ordering and extent to which travelers are willing to change their travel decisions. Jeng and Fesenmaier (2006) found that, for example, decisions regarding travel party, destination and attractions to visit are not likely to be changed once made; this finding contrasts to travel decisions regarding restaurants and shopping which are less likely to be firmly planned in advance, and therefore travelers are more likely to change depending upon the situation. Following Jeng and Fesenmaier (2002), it is posited that travel planning is a multi-stage contingent process and because of these various decisions that comprise trip planning are situational whereby travelers may change their trip plan depending the trip decision as well as their involvement, prior knowledge, the number of alternatives considered, and the nature of the travel party. As a result, it is argued that the degree to which travelers are willing to adapt their plans will affect the nature and extent to which they process travel advertising. Based upon these two sets of arguments, this dissertation seeks to: (1) develop a destination advertising response model that incorporates the various facets comprising travel decisions (e.g., places/attractions, additional destinations, accommodations, restaurants and shopping stores); and, (2) examine the role of decision flexibility on the facet-based advertising model. A pilot study was first conducted to test if the theoretical constructs in the proposed tourism advertising response model are valid. The results of the pilot study indicate that most of proposed constructs that form the travel advertising response model and decision flexibility are valid and reliable; however, the analyses indicate that there are two forms of decision flexibility: 1. Pre-trip flexibility and 2. En-route flexibility. Pre-trip flexibility relates to travel decisions/plans regarding places/attractions, additional destinations and accommodations, while en-route flexibility involves decisions regarding restaurants and shopping visited during the trip. Based on the findings of the pilot study, the main study was conducted to test the proposed relationships within the core tourism advertising model. The results of these analyses indicated that many/most of the hypothesized relationships are supported. Additionally, the moderating effects of decision flexibility on traveler's responses to travel advertising were examined. The results of these analyses indicate that Pre-trip flexibility significantly moderates the relationship between attitudes toward advertising and travel products, whereby high and low flexible travelers tend to have a strong positive attitude toward destination advertising; this compares to middle flexible travelers who have a significantly lower attitude toward the travel advertisements. The results of these analyses also indicate that en-route flexibility has very limited moderating influence on the how travelers perceive travel advertising. The findings of this study suggest that destination marketing organizations need to consider the various sub-decisions that comprise the travel decision making process. Further, destination marketing organizations need to take into account the degree to which potential travelers are willing to change their trip plan in that it appears to substantially influence a crucial aspect of traveler's response to advertising; these findings are especially important as travelers have begun to use mobile technology to guide their travel decision which, in turn, should enable destination marketers to develop customized advertising strategies depending on the various travel products purchased. / Tourism and Sport
3

Determining the relationship between destination brand image and its components with intention to visit

Gras, Megan K. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.B.A.)--University of North Carolina Wilmington, 2008. / Title from PDF title page (viewed May 27, 2009) Includes bibliographical references (p. 74-83)
4

Multiple stakeholder perspectives and discourse analysis investigating marketing and local realities of disaster tourism: Christchurch earthquakes

Cadano, Rachelle 21 September 2016 (has links)
Beginning in September 2010, seismic events shook the city of Christchurch, New Zealand, resulting in significant losses for the tourism sector, most notably the devastated Central Business District. Tourism had to adjust especially following two major earthquakes, with visitors able to partake in disaster-themed tourist attractions or viewing the destruction as part of a self-guided tour of the city. Such activities fall into the realm of ‘dark tourism’, or travel to sites of death, disaster or destruction. Following a major disaster with significant media coverage, tourism organizations often scramble to alter the outsider’s perception of the disaster-struck destination. Using a qualitative case study, this thesis explores two dominant themes associated with post-disaster tourism. First, it gathers perspectives of disaster tourism experiences and tourism industry recovery from multiple stakeholders to explore how tourism following a major disaster is a complex and multi-dimensional phenomenon. Second, it investigates how tourism advertising campaigns represented Christchurch, New Zealand and its inhabitants following the earthquakes. / Graduate / 0366
5

Att kommersialisera och sälja en plats : en analys av resereklam, representationer och geografiska föreställningar

Andersson, Erika January 2014 (has links)
Pictures are often used when marketing a tourist destination. Photographs of a place, a destination, are used to convince customers and stimulate daydreaming in order to turn a potential customer into a real customer. For some people the photographic representations of a place is the only one they experience. With this in mind, it is reasonable to question how representations of places and geographical imaginations are being (re)produced when marketing a destination by using photographs. This paper aims to study how representations of place and people are used when marketing a tourist destination via travel commercial. The study was conducted by analysing images used for marketing tourist destinations located outside Europe, with a focus on photographs portraying people. The pictures included in this study were found in five travel catalogues for the Swedish market. The sample was narrowed down and reduced to three pictures, which were analysed by using a semiotic image analysis. The study aim to answer the following questions: When marketing a tourist destination how are people in the tourism advertising being presented? In what way can the images that are being used for tourism advertising generate stereotypes about places/people? The study indicates that, according to the included sample, the people portrayed in tourism advertising are being presented in a stereotypical manner.

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