(ARA) - Finding your way off the beaten path for the family summer
vacation has never been easier as the Internet levels the playing field
between quaint small towns and the destination resorts that frequently
overshadow many hidden gems.
Nearly 64 million travelers -- 30
percent of the U.S. adult population -- used the Internet in the past
year to get travel and destination information. Of that group, 44.6
million actually booked at least one travel service or product online
in the past year. "The Internet has put consumers in control of their
plans and they like it. They're able to gather all the facts they need
and compare prices and options to obtain what they feel are the best
deals possible," according to Dr. Suzanne Cook, senior vice president
of research for the Travel Industry Association of America.
It
used to be that resort destinations dominated the local travel scene
because they had the most money to market and advertise. Resort
dominance was and largely remains particularly acute in popular
destinations such as Florida, California and Colorado, the country's
top three vacation destinations according, to Yesawich, Pepperdine,
Brown & Russell's Leisure Travel Monitor.
For an example of
the power the Internet can wield in the hearts and minds of travelers,
Lee Hart, president of Brand Amp, a strategic communications firm that
works with several smaller destinations in Colorado, offers Chaffee
County as a case study. Just a 1- 1/2 hour drive from Vail, Copper
Mountain, Breckenridge and Crested Butte, Chaffee's two small historic
towns, Salida and Buena Vista, have struggled to be heard amidst the
marketing messages trumpeted by its internationally acclaimed neighbors.
Little
more than a year ago, Chaffee County launched an integrated image
campaign anchored by a new Web site optimized for key search terms that
would appeal to Colorado-bound visitors and bought Internet advertising
to actively direct visitors to the site. Today, Chaffee County is not
only easier for travelers to find but also for the travel industry
trade to discover, as well as travel editors hungry for new and unusual
destinations to write about. As proof, in the past few month's Chaffee
County has been named one of America's Top Dream Towns by Outside
magazine, won the Governor's Award for Outstanding Community Tourism
Initiative for its Adventure in Arts year-round series of monthly
countywide arts events, and received a Bronze medal from Hospitality
Sales and Marketing Association International for Chaffee's integrated
print and online advertising campaign touting its new marketing
campaign, Colorado's Headwaters of Adventure.
Hart said the
progressive-minded visitor's bureau board of this rural mountain
community is continuing its quest for greater visibility, moving still
more of their relatively small budget from print advertising into
Internet advertising, including pay per click keyword campaigns.
The
rise of importance of the Internet in the travel industry is good news,
Hart said, not just for smaller destinations eager to welcome more
tourists and their resulting positive economic impact, but also for the
travelers themselves who can now "more easily find destinations that
rekindle the spirit of adventure and discovery."
Hart offers these tips for finding fresh locales no matter which state you plan to visit.
*
Enter the state name and the terms "travel and tourism" and the
official visitor's bureau of that state will appear as one of the top
search results. Government supported and frequently tax funded, state
tourism bureaus are charged with providing information on all visitor
resources and destinations from the very small and unheralded to the
very famous so you can browse a broad gamut of options, usually
segregated by interest area and/or geographic location within the state
of your choice.
* Search by an interest area in the state you
want to visit such as "whitewater rafting in Colorado," one of the most
popular activities in Colorado. Other popular search terms for mountain
destinations could be "hiking" or "mountain biking." Similarly, search
by the types of activities you'd like at beaches, America's most
popular vacation target, by searching terms such as "beach volleyball
Florida" or "surfing California."
* For active outdoor
enthusiasts, whether traveling solo or packing a family, camping or
resort-bound, Hart suggests visiting online versions of your favorite
magazines such as Outsideonline.com, NationalGeographic.com and guide
book publishers such as Fodors.com or LonelyPlanet.com.
Courtesy of ARA Content |