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What is the vision of the destination management plan?

A Destination Management Plan (DMP) is a shared statement of intent to manage a destination over a stated period of time, articulating the roles of the different stakeholders and identifying clear actions that they will take and the apportionment of resources.



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Components of a Destination Management plan
  • Define the destination. Defining the destination is important when multiple stakeholders with various perspectives are involved. ...
  • Define the vision. ...
  • Data, research and analysis. ...
  • Strategic fit. ...
  • Brand positioning. ...
  • Target markets. ...
  • Experience and product development (Attractions) ...
  • Access.


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To effectively execute destination management, destinations can follow these four steps:
  1. Strategy Development. Define the destination's vision, goals, and target markets. ...
  2. Collaboration and Engagement. ...
  3. Marketing and Promotion. ...
  4. Performance Measurement and Adaptation.


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What Are the Responsibilities of a Destination Management Organization?
  • Educating travelers about the destination's attractions and offerings.
  • Marketing through targeted campaigns.
  • Working with other organizations on issues related to sustainability to achieve common goals.
  • Addressing resident concerns related to tourism.


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The critical success factors for business tourism destinations include: leadership; networking; branding; skills; ambassadors; infrastructure; and bidding.

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Destination development planning should be a step by step process.
  • Understand the place and all of its attractions. ...
  • Understand the visitor. ...
  • Inventory what services are available. ...
  • Bring it all together with the SWOT Analysis. ...
  • Develop the future vision and its major objectives.


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Destination management can include anything of the following:
  • Local resources.
  • Accommodation.
  • Amenities.
  • Events & activities.
  • Environmental concerns.
  • Marketing efforts.
  • Transportation.
  • Tourist attractions.


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Destination management companies are organizations that assist with corporate travel planning. For example, these companies often assist with hotels, food, entertainment, transportation and more. These organizations are commonly known as “DMC companies” for short, and the singular is “destination management company.”

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Their primary long-term objective is to attract visitors to relative destinations and develop local economies as a result of increased tourism.

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Although a location's capacity for number of tourists and the specific number of sustainable years may vary from location to location, Butler proposed that every tourist location evolves through a common set of stages: exploration, involvement, development, consolidation, stagnation, and then some variation of ...

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Destination life cycle : There are six stages of any tourism destination; there are exploration, involvement, development, consolidation, stagnation and decline.

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According to Butler (1980), under destination life cycle, an area undergo an evolutionary cycle of six stages. These stages are exploration, involvement, development, consolidation, stagnation and decline. Mostly all tourists' destinations passes through all these mentioned stages.

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