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Photography Bans as Marketing Gold

Date

Jun 5, 2017

Category

The State of the American Traveler

It’s brilliant and all in good fun.  A bit of good-spirited (and quite effective) publicity grabbing.

But here’s the rub.  According to the story, the local DMO says it “has removed photos of the village from its Facebook and Twitter accounts, and has declared its intention to remove them from the Bergün website too.” We don’t believe they’re serious, for as a long-term strategy this would be disastrous. We’ve studied DMO marketing campaigns for decades and from every point of view possible, and can say definitely and with no hesitation, that in terms of what motivates destination choice, photography is paramount. Humans are highly visual creatures, and nothing excites interest in a place like beautiful, authentic imagery. We hope Bergün enjoys the fruits of this smart PR work, but would gently suggest that they don’t ride this wave too long.

Bratton explained that a similar story can be seen in the percent of travelers expecting to cut back on their travels. As the chart below shows, prior to the recessionary period fewer than one in ten (9.6%) of American leisure travelers said they would cut back on travel. In the most recent "Why?".  Word-of-mouth via social media has become extremely important to travelers. Social channels are one of the most important places from which leisure travelers draw destination inspiration. If you don’t believe us, check out page six in our latest The State of the American TravelerTM study. You’ll see that word-of-mouth (via social media) is one of the more widely relied upon methods for getting inspiration for travel destinations. If Bergün is really smart, they’ll use their clever new positioning as a way to get visitors to actually post their beauty shots of the town to social channels.

In a social climate where the words like “troll” and “hater” have quickly become ubiquitous parts of the American vernacular, it might be easy to believe the myth that people don’t want to see their friends and relatives’ travel pictures—that, in some way, this does make other people unhappy. Don’t believe it. Negative voices are often the loudest, but our research strongly shows that most people enjoy seeing and hearing about their friends and relatives’ trip adventures on social media.  Not only do they use social media for trip inspiration, they enjoy it. The next time anyone tells you that people don’t want to see travel posts on social media, just refer them to the chart below.

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