Electronic Internal Marketing for Tourism
A New Tourism Marketing Approach
Shohei Suzuki
1
and Shoichi Morimoto
2
1
Graduate School of Business Administration, Senshu University,
2-1-1 Higashi-mita, Tama-ku, 214-8580, Kanagawa, Japan
2
School of Business Administration, Senshu University,
2-1-1 Higashi-mita, Tama-ku, 214-8580, Kanagawa, Japan
Keywords: Service Marketing, Tourism Information System, Destination Management Organization, Localized SNS.
Abstract: The tourism industry has been becoming the main business in Japan. In tourism industry, public relations
from tourist areas is important to attract tourists, however, it has not been sufficiently performed in Japanese
tourism industry. It is also common knowledge that tourism information systems with ICT (Information and
Communication Technologies) are effective for such the activities. Therefore, we have proposed a tourism
marketing technique utilizing ICT based on the concepts of service marketing. In the service marketing field,
it is said that internal marketing to employees will be possible to provide high-quality services. Thus our
tourism marketing technique electronically approaches local residents and local firms, which are the
employees in the case of tourism.
1 INTRODUCTION
The whole Japan country has been trying to liven up
the tourism industry, because even though Japan has
17 World Heritage sites and attractive culture such
as Japanese animation, Japanese idol and Samurai, it
was ranked 39th in the world based on the number
of foreign tourists accepted (Japan Tourism Agency,
2013). Japanese government has regarded not only
the domestic tourism but the international tourism as
important for the economic revival of Japan. The
Tourism Nation Promotion Basic Plan, which
Japanese government announced in 2012, describes
specific measures such the objective (Table 1). The
majority of these measures have aimed at the
international tourism. Figure 1 shows the result of
the satisfaction survey to foreign visitors in Japan.
The ratio of “Very satisfied” has hardly increased
from 2011, and the ratio of respondents who answer
“Definitely want to visit again” has decreased
slightly after 2011 year by year. In a word, Japanese
tourism industry has never improved the satisfaction
of foreign visitors to Japan, has never achieved the
measures shown in Table 1. Against this problem,
tourism organizations must implement appropriate
public relations after understanding genuine
requirements of the foreign visitors. However, the
current marketing activities of
Table 1: The tourism nation promotion basic plan.
Targets Details
Domestic travel
consumption
30 trillion yen by 2016.
Number of foreign
visitors to Japan
Increase to 25 million by the begging
of 2020.
Satisfaction of
foreign visitors to
Japan
Seek to increase, by 2016, the ratio of
respondents who answer “Very
satisfied” to 45% and the ratio of
respondents who answer “Definitely
want to visit again” to 60%.
Number of
international
conferences held
Target a 50% or higher increase, by
2016.
Number of Japanese
travellers going over
sea
Increase to 20 million by 2016.
Number of nights
per person spent for
domestic travels by
Japanese people
Increase to 2.5 nights per year by
2016.
Traveller
satisfaction of
tourist areas
Increase, by 2016, the ratio of
respondents who select “Very
satisfied” to 25% and the ratio of
respondents who select “Strongly
agree” to 25%.
Japanese tourism organizations have centered only
on the external promotion, neglected the internal
promotion to service providers.
Meanwhile, ICT (Information and
Communication Technology) has been usually
63
Suzuki S. and Morimoto S..
Electronic Internal Marketing for Tourism - A New Tourism Marketing Approach.
DOI: 10.5220/0005100900630067
In Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on e-Business (ICE-B-2014), pages 63-67
ISBN: 978-989-758-043-7
Copyright
c
2014 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)
Figure 1: Satisfaction of foreign visitors to Japan.
utilized in all scenes of tourism. Especially, the
spread of the Internet enable tourists to search
various kinds of tourism information and to simplify
reservation of the means of transportation and the
accommodations. Moreover, smart devices, such as
tablet computers or smartphones, enable tourists to
acquire the information which much further enjoys
and enhances their trip. Such the changes established
a new research area “Tourism Informatics.”
Although the majority of Tourism Informatics
studies have targeted the marketing activities
utilizing ICT for tourists, there are no studies which
target the marketing activities for tourism service
providers. Therefore, we have elucidated marketing
activities which tourism organizations should
implement for tourism service providers and have
proposed a technique for such the activities utilizing
ICT. The technique can help activities of tourism
organizations and contribute to development of the
tourism industry of Japan.
2 TOURISM MARKETING IN
JAPAN
There are two actors in the tourism marketing.
Service providers, e.g., accommodations, restaurants
or transportation companies in tourist areas, have
implemented marketing activities for their own
profits. The other actor, a tourism organization, has
implemented marketing activities to attract tourists
at the tourist area. Our research focuses on the
promotion of the whole tourist area, thus, we have
researched on the marketing technique for the latter.
Tourism has the characteristics of a service unlike
a product, which are inseparability, intangibility,
heterogeneity and perishability. They are basic or
generic characteristics common to all services. In
addition to them, the services in tourism have at
least three further characteristics as follows
(Middleton et al., 2009).
Seasonality: peaks and troughs in demand.
High fixed costs of service operations.
Interdependence of tourism products.
In the service industry, it is essential that the three
marketing activities among Company, Employee
and Customer in Figure 2 should be implemented. In
order to implement effective tourism marketing, the
marketer should carefully consider the foregoing
characteristics.
However, Japanese tourism has serious problems in
the marketing. Generally, tourism marketing is
implemented by DMO (Destination Management
Organization). DMO also implement the following
activities (UNWTO, 2007).
Planning and infrastructure;
Human resources development;
Product development;
Technology and systems development;
Related industries and procurement;
Destination coordination and management for
visitor ‘quality of experience’, especially the
public realm;
Product “start-ups”;
Events development and management;
Attractions development and management;
Training and education;
Business advice;
Strategy, research and development.
Figure 2: The marketing triangle.
35,6%
43,5%
40,7%
43,8%
49,7%
58,2%
57,8%
56,8%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
2010 2011 2012 2013
Very satisfied
Definitery want to visit again
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Table 2: Sources that foreign visitors felt were helpful.
Sources Number of responses
Internet (smartphone) 7,385
Internet (PC) 7,120
Family/friends
in Japan
3,924
None in particular 3,733
Tourist info desk
(not in airport)
3,098
Accommodation
facilities
2,755
Airport information
desk
2,731
Travel guide books
(non-free)
1,704
Free papers 1,363
Other 892
In the case of Japan, national, regional or local
tourism organizations in the national or a local
government correspond to the DMO, however, they
have not sufficiently played the role. This problem is
caused by lack of funds, human resources, and
know-hows.
3 TOURISM INFORMATION
SYSTEMS IN JAPAN
In this chapter, we will describe crucial relevance
between ICT and tourism and the problem in this
field. Tourists need many kinds of tourism
information in tourism activities. Therefore, in order
to facilitate tourist behaviour, tourism information
systems can be helpful. Table 2 is the result of the
questionnaire survey by Japan Tourism Agency,
about information sources that foreign visitors felt
were helpful to acquire tourism information during
their stay in Japan. In the result, the most used
source is the Internet. This result supports the fact
that ICT and tourism are related closely. In fact,
various tourism information systems utilizing ICT
have been developed in Japan. In order to propose
marketing activities which tourism organizations
should implement with ICT, we have surveyed
problems of the existing systems. The follows are
the examples of the actual tourism information
systems in Japan.
Arukumachi KYOTO is an application of the
smartphone which provides the information about
means of transportation. In the Kyoto area, the bus is
the most popular means of transportation, but
tourists cannot make a tour round only by bus
caused of traffic congestion. Additionally, the traffic
network of Kyoto is very complex; hence the
tourists who are not the Kyoto residents have a hard
time to arrive at their destination. Thus, Arukumachi
KYOTO has been developed by the advanced
scientific technology and management research
institute of Kyoto (Figure 3). The users can search
the route, fare, and required time from their present
location to destination. Moreover, the application
provides various information; how to buy tickets of
the buses or railways, how to get on the vehicles,
information of the tourist facilities, and information
of the events.
Secondly, “TOTTRIP” in Figure 4 displays not
only the map and the traffic information but also
recommended model courses for a tour round the
Tottori area. In addition, TOTTRIP provides the
information of hospitals with English-speaking staff
on duty, foreign money exchange counters and
banks, essential phrases and conversation flashcards.
Figure 3: Arukumachi KYOTO.
Figure 4: TOTTRIP.
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65
Figure 5: Sapporo Info.
Figure 6: Enoshima kikitabi.
The third example is “Sapporo Info,” which
provides video contents in addition to the same
information of the other tourism information
systems (Figure 5). The users can view the
introduction videos of each tourist spot in the
Sapporo area. The users can also use discount
coupons and tickets via the application.
The fourth example “Enoshima kikitabi” is a
portable device with GPS (Global Positioning
System) only for sightseeing. When the users visit
tourist spots, they can hear the appropriate sound
guides automatically detecting the location
information by GPS. Thus, tourists can walk while
watching tourist spots with their hands free.
Moreover, all ages can be fair in using Enoshima
kikitabi without complex operations (cf. Figure 6).
As described above, various tourism information
systems utilizing ICT have been developed in Japan,
but the systems produce services only for tourists.
Tourism information systems for service providers,
the important role in tourism that is a local firm or a
local resident, have never been developed and
studied. For the public relations of tourism, internal
marketing toward the service providers that are local
firms or local residents is essential to liven up tourist
areas from the viewpoint of service marketing.
4 INTERNAL MARKETING IN
TOURISM
In the current situation, Japanese tourism industry
has implemented only the marketing activities
toward tourists, i.e., external marketing. Therefore,
we argue that a tourist area have to implement the
internal marketing toward local residents or firms as
service providers.
Internal marketing give motivation to employees
and achieve customer satisfaction by implementing
effective education to employees. Internal marketing
should be implemented before external marketing,
because internal marketing can produce employee
satisfaction, and consequently the employee
satisfaction can produce customer satisfaction.
Figure 7 shows the service profit chain, which is the
circulation of the satisfaction in a service.
Internal marketing is the activities which is
workplace design, training, reword and recognition
from company for employees (Kotler et al., 2002).
We have applied this concept to tourism. In the
marketing triangle in Figure 2, company corresponds
to tourism organization and employees correspond
to local firms and local residents, that is, service
providers. Therefore, we have instantiated internal
marketing from tourism organization to local firms
and local residents (Figure 8).
Kotler described the following steps for the
internal marketing (Kotler et al., 2002).
1. Establishment of service culture
2. Development of a marketing approach to
human resource management
3. Dissemination of marketing information to
employees
4. Implementation of a reward and recognition
system
In the steps, there are two essential activities to
success in the internal marketing. First, service
provider’s opinion collecting system for the
organization is required. Secondly, the system must
sufficiently communicate the information from the
organization to service providers, such as economic
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Figure 7: The Service Profit Chain.
Figure 8: The marketing triangle in tourism.
effect by tourism, aim as the destination and tourism
policies. That is, in the case of tourism, the system
must collect the opinions of the local firms and local
residents and communicate the information from the
tourism organization to them. Such the circulation of
the information can be lubricated by ICT. However,
conventional web sites can distribute information in
one direction only, from a tourism organization to
local firms and local residents. For instance, SNS
(Social Networking Service), which can transceive
such information easily, is one of the solutions
against the problem.
The service called “Local SNS” has already been
developed in some area of Japan, but its purpose is
promoting exchange or cooperation among local
residents. It cannot connect tourism organization,
local firms and local residents. Moreover, because it
is tricky and its functions are very poor; local SNS
can be easily replaced by the excellent substitute
services such as Facebook and Twitter. If the
problems are solved and usable local SNS is
developed, it will be a new means of the internal
marketing of tourism.
5 CONCLUDING REMARKS
In this paper, we have proposed introduction of the
internal marketing utilizing ICT from the viewpoint
of service marketing. First, we have surveyed the
problems in Japanese tourism industry. As a result,
we have found out the absence of DMO and the
indifference to the marketing toward the tourism
service providers.
Therefore, because a tourism industry is one of
the service industries, we have applied the concepts
of service marketing to tourism marketing. In
Japanese tourism industry, hitherto external
marketing has been valued and internal marketing
has been unvalued. Hence, we have discussed a
concrete measure of internal marketing for tourism.
This paper has shown an idea of electronic internal
marketing; utilizing local SNS which can facilitate
the information circulation among tourism
organization, local firms, and local residents.
We are now defining and developing processes
and activities of the electronic internal marketing.
We will elicit and discuss the requirements and the
user interface for all generations by interview.
Finally, we will evaluate effectiveness of the
electronic internal marketing system in cooperation
with the tourism organizations.
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World Tourism Organization, 2007. A Practical Guide to
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Kotler, P., Boewn, J., Makens, J., 2002. Marketing for
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Japan Tourism Agency, 2013: Japan Tourism Agency
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