Does the Context of MSPDM Analysis Relevant in Rural Tourism?: Case
Study of Pentingsari, Nglanggeran, and Penglipuran
Setiawan Priatmoko
1
, Yitno Purwoko
1
and Anwani
1
1
STIE Pariwisata API Yogyakarta
Keywords:
MSPDM, CBT, Pentingsari, Nglanggeran, Penglipuran.
Abstract:
This study aims to proof of the presence of variables in Marketing, Sustainability, Participation and Disaster
Mitigation (MSPDM) based on research conducted in three tourist destination villages namely Nglanggeran
in Gunung Kidul Regency, Pentingsari in Sleman Regency (both of them are located in Yogyakarta Special
Province), and Penglipuran in Bangli District, Bali Province, Indonesia. MSPDM analysis is a new method
as an alternative to SWOT analysis in community-based tourism planning and needs to be assesed before it
becomes commonly understandable method. The methods in the MSPDM analysis quantitatively measure
the variables of Marketing, Sustainability, Participation, and Disaster Mitigation from several locations. The
searching for these variables is carried out on tourist attractions, existing facilities and infrastructure, and
tourism potential that can be displayed in the development area.
1 INTRODUCTION
MSPDM analysis is the analysis used as alternative
for the SWOT analysis in facilitating decision making
on tourism development (Purbadi, 2016). MSPDM
analysis focuses on calculating elements of Mar-
ketibility (M), Sustainability (S), Participation (P) and
Disaster Mitigation (DM) (Priatmoko, 2018a). This
analysis aims to avoid elements of bias on SWOT.
SWOT depends on subjective views, avoids quantifi-
cation, and lacks predictive capabilities (Ayub et al.,
2013). This research was conducted to prove that
the elements of MSPDM are indeed real and be-
come a concern for tourism managers who are con-
sidered good. The first step to ensuring the rele-
vance of MSPDM analysis is to see the existence
of the MSPDM aspects in several community-based
tourism (CBT) locations. The selected tourist lo-
cations are community-based destinations sites that
are considered good by competent tourism institu-
tions. These locations are Nglanggeran tourism vil-
lage in Gunung Kidul and Pentingsari Tourism Vil-
lage in Sleman, Yogyakarta which received the 2017
CBT Award by the Indonesian Ministry of Tourism
(of Tourism, 2017). The third location is Penglipuran
village in Bali, which was awarded the cleanest vil-
lage in the world in 2016 (of Tourism, 2017). How-
ever, data from the third location will only be con-
ducted by literature studies and online sources. At
begining, the MSPDM analysis specifically designed
as an initial measurement instrument to determine the
initial conditions of the development area. MSPDM
is also used for long-term development strategies and
monitoring and evaluation of the implementation of
its development (Purbadi, 2016) (Priatmoko, 2019).
2 STUDY LOCATIONS
2.1 Pentingsari Village
Pentingsari hamlet located 22.5 km north of Yo-
gyakarta city, Indonesia at about 700 meters above
the sea level, at the sloop of Mt. Merapi, one of
the most active volcano on the planet. Pentingsari
officially became a tourist village on April 15, 2008
based on the Sleman Regency Tourism Office’s dec-
laration. The community start activities as a rural
tourism destination since May 15, 2008. Pentingsari
tourism village can be referred as a tourist destination
because there are components of accommodation and
activities associated with tourism activities. It brings
themes of agriculture life style, fresh nature, culture,
and friendly environment. Villagers still use conven-
tional tools from particular surrounding nature,which
should be very fascinating for those who are looking
for a recognition to the indigenous people of early
Priatmoko, S., Purwoko, Y. and Anwani, .
Does the Context of MSPDM Analysis Relevant in Rural Tourism?: Case Study of Pentingsari, Nglanggeran, and Penglipuran.
DOI: 10.5220/0009857400150021
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Creative Economics, Tourism and Information Management (ICCETIM 2019) - Creativity and Innovation Developments for Global
Competitiveness and Sustainability, pages 15-21
ISBN: 978-989-758-451-0
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
15
(of Tourism, 2016). The village offers a deeper in-
sight about local wisdom that’s solidly rooted within
the people. Known as Dewi Peri, Pentingsari Tourism
Village assesed as one of the best tourist village desti-
nation in the Province of Yogyakarta Special Region.
Until now, Pentingsari is still active as a tourist village
and receives visitors.
2.2 Nglanggeran Village
Nglanggeran Village is located at Patuk District, Gu-
nungkidul Regency, D.I.Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The
village starts their activities since 12th Mei 1999.
Their mascot and central attraction is Mount Api
Purba. Mt. Api Purba Nglanggeran is also recognized
by UNESCO as one of Mt. Sewu’s Global Geopark
sites. Nglanggeran’s uniqueness also comes with an
astonishing a 48-hectare mountain natural panorama
from Mt. Api Purba, or ’ancient volcano’ (of Tourism,
2016). The main tourism attractions in Nglanggeran
are ancient volcanic, pond and rural natural scenery
with numerous cocoa farms, rice field terraces and
forests, flora fauna such as rare plants, medicinal
plants and rare animals (ASEAN, 2018).
2.3 Penglipuran Village
Penglipuran is located in Bangli Regency, Bali
Province, Indonesia. Being one of the threecleanest
in the whole planet, Penglipuran also one of the most
placid, unpolluted, and peaceful area throughout the
whole country (of Tourism, 2017). Penglipuran Tra-
ditional Village has strong concern to the environ-
ment, or eco-based tourism. This traditional village
is located in Bangli Regency, with an area of approxi-
mately 112 ha (Sudiarta and Nurjaya, 2017). This tra-
ditional village is a village that still maintains beliefs
and cultural Bali elements (Rizfa and Amos, 2016).
The uniqueness and potential possessed by Penglipu-
ran Village have been recognized and made a part as
tourist attraction since 1993 (Sulistyawati, 2014).
3 LITERATURE REVIEW
Applying SWOT for tourism place strategic planning
could be a though assignment as there are many pos-
sible strategies derived from the assessment of envi-
ronmental elements (Oreski, 2012). Involving com-
munity members to make informed decisions about
tourism development is important and become use-
able, relevant and understandable (Deuchar, 2012).
SWOT and other modification of SWOT also need ex-
perts from related organizations to make an offering
strategies for development area (Arsi
´
c et al., 2017).
Because of these facts, MSPDM analysis offers some
easier tools for rural destinations’ stake holders.
MSPDM Analysis is establishing and choosing
the attractions that already exist and the potential at-
tractions as contents that will be examined and dis-
closed quantively (Priatmoko, 2018b). Content analy-
sis is the beginning action to specify the aspect and el-
ements of Marketibility, Sustainability, Participation
and Disaster Mitigation (MSPDM). Content analysis
is a research procedure which permits the qualitative
data collected in research to be examined systemati-
cally and reliably so that generalizations can be made
from them in connection to the classification of topic
to the researcher (Duran, 2013). The use of scores
based on the presence level of the MSPDM indicators
will also facilitate easily for stakeholders to establish
of the basis planning area (Priatmoko, 2018b). Rural
tourism links tourism products, regions of rural recre-
ation activities, based on the rural situations and can
be consolidated with the elements of cultural and live
tourism (Pakurar et al., 2008). In Indonesia, mostly
rural tourism activities formed as community-based
tourism (CBT). Russel in Rindrasih stated CBT needs
three aspects: (1) local community support and partic-
ipation; (2) community living at or near the destina-
tion advantage from the tourism activities; and (3) lo-
cal community’s cultural recognition and natural sur-
roundings are well-preserved throughout the tourism
activity (Rindrasih, 2018).
The community provide the visitor’s need. The
visitors who stay in the homestay usually ask to fol-
low daily activities conducted by villagers (Pramanik
et al., 2019). Pentingsari, Nglanggeran, and Penglipu-
ran villages are considered as rural tourism desti-
nations (Vitasurya, 2016)(Jemadu et al., 2016)(Pri-
atmoko, 2017)(Rindrasih, 2018). From the tourism
activities, poeple got some benefits. The society ad-
vantages may be distributed in cash money or more
frequently as investments in local community assets
(Goodwin et al., 2009). On the other hand, in-
volving community members to make informed deci-
sions about tourism development is important and be-
come useable, relevant and understandable (Deuchar,
2012). The activities objectives conducted by peo-
ple in rural area in modern nowadays need to care
about Marketibility, Sustainability, Participation and
Disaster Mitigation (MSPDM), because aside from
being part of the daily activities of rural communities,
tourist villages also become business products that are
sold to tourists ((Priatmoko, 2018a). For this reason,
a balance is needed for the perpetrators, namely the
village community and modern strategies as a busi-
ness activity. That things related to product problems
ICCETIM 2019 - International Conference on Creative Economics, Tourism Information Management
16
and marketing are the main concern of these activi-
ties (Priatmoko, 2019). Sustainability aspects are also
the main thing from tourism village activities (Okech
et al., 2015). Thus, in context of tourism industry
the natural environment, culture, and also in the busi-
ness aspect should be sustain and preserve (Zhu et al.,
2017). Another interesting fact is tourism activities
become a business activities that are considered as
common bussines and involve many local communi-
ties (Manaf et al., 2018). The trend of Community
Based Tourism (CBT / Community Base Tourism)
and its participation appeared in various regulatory
treasures ranging from UNWTO to the level of local
regulations even at the smallest level of community
groups (of Tourism, 2011). The absence of an element
of community participation will immediately be a dif-
ferentiator whether tourism activities in such a place
are considered to be a CBT or just an ordinary private
business (Gunawijaya et al., 2019). Another impor-
tant issue is the problem of disaster mitigation in the
tourist area (Priatmoko, 2018b). A related analysis
is needed so tourism activities can be more mitigated
from the start to reduce greater risks for tourists and
local managers (Susmayadi et al., 2014). Awareness
of the importance of disaster mitigation is nedeed in
the community of the villages (McNamara and Des
Combes, 2015). It can be said that the elements of
Marketing, Sustainability, Participation and Disaster
Mitigation are basically the necessary tools for man-
aging a tourism village (Priatmoko, 2018a).
4 METHODOLOGY
The research method that researchers use in this re-
search is descriptive qualitative research methods.
With this method researchers will make a systematic
description or picture of how the role, enabling factors
of tourism, and management of rural tourism in Mt.
Merapi area based on the facts. Researchers chose to
assesses the pressence of MSPDM focusing in Pent-
ingsari, Nglanggeran and Penglipuran village as the
three best of rural tourism destinations in Indone-
sia (ASEAN, 2018)(of Tourism, 2019). Data is ob-
tained through field observations, interviews, source
searches, online news, and literature studies.
The researchers interviewed the tourist village
manager, and the people who were appointed as co-
ordinators of the providers of destination elements
included attractions, accommodation, and commu-
nity leaders involved in village tourism activities.
The understanding of respondens (from Pentingsari
and Nglanggeran villages) on the topics asked by
researchers was also relatively similar because they
routinely coordinated in FORKOM Desa Wisata (the
organization of the Tourism Village Communication
Forum).
For the location of Penglipuran village which
only relies on literature studies and online informa-
tion sources (news, social media feeds, and youtube
contens), researchers also interviewed tour guides
from Yogyakarta who often visited and accompanied
guests to Penglipuran village. The data then collected
in a table to see in general the existence of MSPDM
aspects.
5 RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
From the aspects of marketing, Pentingsari, Nglang-
geran, and Penglipuran market determination target
is a group of students, cultural enthusiasts and free
individual traveller (FIT). From the aspect of prod-
uct, the villages consider uniqueness and originality
of the local village which is considered as tourist at-
tractions. Prices have been set firmly and the distribu-
tion of fees for third parties who bring business also
be given. In the case of the distribution of tourism
products is always available and spread to various par-
ties who are considered as potential markets. Promo-
tions on a range of tourism products also use a variety
of offline and online platforms even though there are
differences in the stage of skill to use it.
In sustainability aspects, all of three villages pay
attention to the carrying capacity of each tourism
product by determining the maximum visitor of each
service, place and attraction. Waste management is
also carried out independently or in collaboration with
other parties. Activity in environmental preserva-
tion is considered important because the natural atmo-
sphere is also part of the attractions in these villages.
They also made various efforts to make tourist visits
continue as repeated business. In the village, there
is also a division of tasks that encourages business
development for each actor and community group.
These actions are conducted through POKDARWIS
(local community tourism group enthusiast) and tra-
ditional background villager groups. In the Partici-
patory aspect, the three villages pay attention to the
following matters: 1. Mastery local resources in the
form of various property and intellectual property as-
sets 2. Local accountability in the form of routine
meetings to report and evaluate activities that have
been done as well as the results 3. local variety with
forms that match the uniqueness of each village.
In the aspect of disaster mitigation, Disaster Man-
agement, two types of disasters are grouped, namely:
1. Natural disasters in terms of the condition and
Does the Context of MSPDM Analysis Relevant in Rural Tourism?: Case Study of Pentingsari, Nglanggeran, and Penglipuran
17
history of regional disasters to be developed, for ex-
ample, earthquakes and/or tsunamis have occurred.
2. Non-natural disasters especially for handling risks
that may arise for tourism products in the region. Es-
pecially for Pentingsari tourism village which is un-
der the foot of active volcano, the government reg-
ularly disseminates information to remind the com-
munity about the risk and the actions to be taken in
an emergency (Rindrasih, 2018). In Nglanggeran, en-
forcement efforts were carried out with the addition of
embankment in some areas with sloping landscapes
to prevent landslide hazards (Hermawan, 2017). In
Penglipuran, the distribution of zones of spatial is car-
ried out, place for all villages and space for houses
owned are defined by residents to facilitate manage-
ment and mitigation (Priyoga and Sudarwani, 2018).
The details of the MSPDM aspects of the three vil-
lages above can be illustrated in the following table:
Table 1: Aspect and activities in rural destinations(Source:
researcher analysis)
Village
As-
pects
Penting
sari
Nglang
geran
Penglipuran
Marketi
bility
-Group
visitors
-Firmly
pricing
and
various
attrac-
tions
packages
-Use of
social
media -
Collabor
ation
with
other
business
body
-Group
visitors
-Firmly
pricing
and
various
attrac-
tions
packages
-Use of
social
media -
Collabor
ation
with
other
business
body
-F.I.T,
family
and small
group
visitor
(Asteya
and Pa-
mungkas,
2017)
-Firmly
pric-
ing and
various
attractions
packages
-Collabor
ation with
other busi-
ness body
-The use
of offline
media
is more
dominant
(Asteya
and Pa-
mungkas,
2017)
Sustain
ibility
-Tree
planting
program
-Waste
man-
agement
Inde-
pendent
clean
water
treat-
ment -
Cooperate
with
state-
owned
com-
panies
and large
compa-
nies for
long-
term
MOUs
bussines
-
Cooperate
with
state-
owned
com-
panies
and large
compa-
nies for
long-
term
MOUs
bussines
-
Chocolate
planting
program
-Waste
man-
agement
Inde-
pendent
clean
water
treat-
ment
-Waste
manage-
ment and
preser-
vation of
bamboo
forests
(Muli-
awan,
2018) -
Customary
rules that
become
agree-
ments
(Andayani
et al.,
2017) -
Restricted
access
for large
vehicles
in certain
areas -
Customary
rules Re-
garding
Archi-
tectural
design
(Rizfa and
Amos,
2016)
ICCETIM 2019 - International Conference on Creative Economics, Tourism Information Management
18
Particip
atory
-Using
products
from
local
agri-
culture
farmer
-Local
archi-
tectural
Design
(Joglo
style)
-Workers
from
local res-
idents -
decoration
made
from
young
coconut
leaf
-
Chocolate
ingre-
dient
products
from
local
farmer
-Local
archi-
tectural
Design
-Workers
from
local
residents
-Specific
culinary
products
and local
recipes
(loloh
cem-cem)
-specific
visitor
activities
(rock
climbing
and
home
made
choco-
late
show)
-Local ar-
chitectural
design
and
spatial
patterns
(Priyoga
and Su-
darwani,
2018)
Disaster
Miti-
gation
-Volcano
eruption
evac-
uation
warn-
ing &
routes -
Hygienic
stan-
dards for
toilets
-
Hygienic
stan-
dards
for food
products
-Build
landslide
retaining
embank-
ment -
Evacuation
route
-
Determining
zones ac-
cording
to area
functions
(Rizfa and
Amos,
2016)
-Provide
health
clinics
(Andayani
et al.,
2017)
From the table above it appears that the elements
of MSPDM always appear in the locations of ad-
vanced tourist villages. This shows that the attention
of the local community to the aspects of MSPDM
has brought progress to the activities of tourism vil-
lages. The local people’s attention and actions are
very planned and measurable and can be seen in these
aspects. In the marketing aspect, they do things based
on the marketing mix theory. Product, price, place,
promotion, people, process, and physical evidence are
relatively considered and packaged in tourism busi-
ness standards. In sustainability aspects, the elements
carrying capacity of tourism products, waste treat-
ment, conservation of the environment, the continu-
ity of tourist visits, and business development actors
and local related groups appear from their concern
in maintaining the environment and bussines sustain-
ability of their villages. They even want to use the hy-
giene standards for existing facilities. The local com-
muntiies also conducted long-term business relation-
ship by making of the MOU. In the Participatory as-
pect, there are elements of the main role by local com-
munities, responsible for local accountability, focus
in local variety manifested in the use of resources and
various forms of architecture, performances, and typ-
ical foods. For the Disaster Mitigation aspect they fo-
cus on natural disasters (e.g.:volcano eruption, land-
slide), and non-natural disasters. They pay attention
to food safety, health and safety standards also pro-
vide evacuation routes.
6 CONCLUSIONS
Tourism villages who get the best predicate as rural
destination pay attention to the MSPD aspects even
though in the form of different activities according to
the characteristics of the village. The use of MSPDM
analysis is easily seen by its existence and can reduce
subjectivity in assessing a development plan as well
as evaluating the current period of a development pro-
gram. It will guide to objectively, measurably, and
consistently assesment. Furthermore, the regional de-
velopment program will be determined based on the
analysis of the initial. The conditions of the MSPDM
value also can be expected to be measurable and eas-
ily evaluated. The present research was limited to
three cases studies; therefore, further research should
be conducted to establish a complete understanding
of MSPDM in another form of rural tourism activity.
Does the Context of MSPDM Analysis Relevant in Rural Tourism?: Case Study of Pentingsari, Nglanggeran, and Penglipuran
19
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This research is funded by the Ministry of Re-
search, Technology, and Higher Education of Indone-
sia through Program Penelitian Dosen Pemula (PDP)
2019. We would like to express our greatest gratitude
to STIE Pariwisata API (STIEPAR API) Yogyakarta
and all member of research who have been involved
and friends who have supported this research.
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Does the Context of MSPDM Analysis Relevant in Rural Tourism?: Case Study of Pentingsari, Nglanggeran, and Penglipuran
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