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Does VN spent too much in the wrong place to market tourism?
The Ministry of Culture,
Sports and Tourism (MoCST) seems to be delighted with the recent two advertising
campaigns for Vietnam’s tourism on the BBC and 27 taxi London in the UK.
However, many travel companies doubt the effects of these campaigns.
London taxis or buses?
In mid-2008, the Government allowed the Ministry of Culture, Sports and
Tourism to use up to 30 billion dong (US$1.7 million) from the Fund for
Investment, Trade and Tourism Promotion for the first time. However, the
ministry unexpectedly assigned its International Cooperation Department (ICD) to
be in charge of using this money, rather than VNAT, the National Administration
for Tourism. ICD, which had never before been involved in tourism promotion,
didn’t do anything in the second half of 2008, though it had the funds in hand.
Now, according to ICD, Vietnam has signed a 20,000 UK pound contract to put the
image of a Vietnamese girl in an ao dai and Ha Long Bay on the bodies of 27
London taxis for six months. This campaign began on July 1, 2009.
This campaign originated from an experiment several years ago, when the
Vietnamese Embassy in the UK received around 7000 pounds from some overseas
Vietnamese. With that sum, the embassy arranged for ads to be put on ten London
taxis for three months. Impressed by the effectiveness of this advertising mode,
the embassy introduced it to tourism agencies.
Hanoitourist’s director Luu Duc Ke isn’t impressed. Taxis are small and run
fast, he said. In his view, it is more effective to advertise on double-decker
buses. Ke also questioned why Vietnam launched this campaign at a time when
spreading A/H1N1 outbreak and the global economic crisis are hammering the world
tourism industry?
Meanwhile, an official from MoCST announced that a Vietnamese Culture Day
program will be held in the UK in September 2009.
Some fail to see a plan
A senior official from the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT)
commented that “to date, the we have been advertising without any plan. Tourism
Association Chairman Nguyen Phu Duc is very anxious because he feels the
situation will just get more confused if we pour more money into advertising
without a long-term strategy.”
Focus Travel Co. Director Dang Bao Hieu agrees. “The biggest weakness of tourism
management agencies is the lack of a long-term promotion strategy. Whenever they
have funds, they launch a lot of advertising campaigns. When they run out of
money, they stop.”
“They don’t conduct research and surveys to understand why they need to
advertise Vietnam’s tourism in this market and not in others, or what are the
most effective forms of advertisement, the right scale and duration. With modest
funds, promotion campaigns often don’t last long enough for our message to sink
in.”
Consultants say the BBC is for the rich
Though the International Relations Department has stressed the global reach
of a tourism advertising campaign on BBC in May and June, which cost more than
$200,000, many tourism firms and experts disagree.
Speaking at a meeting with many officials from the VNAT and Vietnamese travel
companies in Hanoi on July 24, a well-known travel consultant from Europe said:
“It is very expensive to advertise on the BBC. There are many wiser and more
effective forms of advertising.”
Deputy director Nguyen The Vinh of the big Saigontourist firm said that
Vietnam’s budget for tourism promotion is only a small fraction of the spending
by many Southeast Asian countries.
Baron Ah Moo, the head of Indochina Land’s Hotels and Resorts Division,
commented that there is so much information on the BBC that the advertising
message can get lost. As advertising on the BBC is very expensive, Vietnam
should only choose this channel if it has a lot of money to spend; otherwise its
investment will be like salt flung on the ocean.
Moo recommended that Vietnam, bearing in mind its limited funding for tourism
promotion, should invest in tourism websites. In case it still wants to
advertise on foreign TV channels, it should choose entertainment channels.
Hanoitourist’s director Luu Duc Ke cited an expert from Spanish International
Cooperation Agency as recommending against advertising on the BBC or CNN. The
expert recently helped VNAT develop a tourism marketing plan for 2008-2015. He
stated that advertising on the BBC and CNN is not highly effective because these
are leading channels for information on news, politics and economics. The
audience of these channels doesn’t pay much attention to tourism information.
“American and European visitors mainly search for information from online
forums, tourism magazines and websites of travel companies. Meanwhile, citizens
of many Asian countries are not fluent in English,” Moo said.
Hapro Tourism Company’s director Phung Van Khai said that the BBC is also good,
but it is as not effective as Discovery, National Geographic and Star Sports,
the TV channels that Thai Airways, Korean Air and the tourism management
agencies of Malaysia and Singapore choose.
Vietnam’s tourism to go CNN
Though the effectiveness of advertising campaigns on BBC and London taxis is
not yet established, ICD has announced that it has reached agreement with CNN on
another marketing campaign. Department head Nguyen Van Tinh said that the total
expenditure for two months of advertising on CNN is $250,000. The images of
Vietnam will be introduced on CNN Asia, including Japan.
“We await the Finance Ministry’s approval to sign a contract with CNN in
September,” Tinh said.
In late 2007, Vietnam introduced its famous landscapes such as Ha Long Bay, Hue,
HCM City and Hoi An on CNN. The funding for that campaign nearly $300,000.
Tinh said that the upcoming advertising campaign on CNN will be similar.
Source: VietNamNet/TBKTSG/Tuoi Tre |
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