Koutoulas @ APTIC 2010 Seoul.pptx
Transcription
Koutoulas @ APTIC 2010 Seoul.pptx
Contents 1. Brief overview of the Greek tourism industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. The emergence of independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons for Asian hotel investors and tourism authorities from the Greek experience Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 2 Contents 1. Brief overview of the Greek tourism industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. The emergence of independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons for Asian hotel investors and tourism authorities from the Greek experience Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 3 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Development of tourism in Greece • Initially a cultural sightseeing destination thanks to its world-class historic monuments • After the 1960s, Greece established itself as a “sea & sun” holiday destination with an ever-growing popularity boosted by blockbuster films such as “Zorba The Greek” and “Never On Sunday” • Greece became the no. 2 mass tourism destination in the Mediterranean after Spain • Ill prepared for the challenges of the 21st century: cost, quality, product/market diversity Tourist arrivals in Greece between 1960 and 2009 18.754.593 Source: ELSTAT 14.914.534 13.567.453 9.310.492 5.271.115 399.438 1960 1.609.210 1970 1980 1990 2000 Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by 2007 2009 Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 4 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Main source markets of Greek tourism • 91% of all international tourists visiting Greece are from Europe • Emerging source markets: Russia and other East European countries, Asian countries • Great variation in the number of American tourists Two major trends • Dropping length of stay (5.3 nights per international visitor in 2009) • Shortening tourist season (70% of all overnight stays between June and September in 2009) Number of tourists per country of origin in 2009 Source: ELSTAT Germany 2.364.486 UK 2.112.149 France 962.435 Italy 935.011 Netherlands USA 651.440 531.276 Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 5 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The Greek hotel sector • There are 9.559 hotels operating in Greece with a total bed capacity of 732.279 in 2009 • Average size is 40 rooms per hotel due to the large majority of family-operated hotels • Nearly half of all Greek hotels are two-star hotels averaging 30 rooms • Most hotels are seasonal operations Average number of rooms per hotel according to star ratings Source: Greek Chamber of Hotels Total bed capacity of Greek hotels Source: ELSTAT & Greek Chamber of Hotels 732.279 172 607.614 438.355 89 278.045 45 5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 30 2 Stars 19 1 Star 118.000 50.000 1960 1970 1980 Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by 1990 2000 2009 Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 6 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Overdependence on tour operators • European tour operators have been the driving force behind tourism development in Greece • For many years, tour operators have been: • filling the hotel beds on the Greek islands • providing a huge airlift capacity on their charter flights from across Europe to Greece • No need for Greek hotel owners to bother with marketing • Tour operators contribute, on average, 60% of all hotel guests in resort areas (2006) • Only one single operator (TUI) contributed 30% of all tourist arrivals from the twelve traditional source market of Greek tourism in West and North Europe • Nearly half of the 17.5 million tourists (excluding cruise passengers) who visited Greece in 2007, arrived on charter flights operated by tour operators • Percentage of tourists arriving in Greece on charter flights: • • • • • 80% 61% 70% 69% 80% of of of of of British tourists German tourists Dutch tourists Austrian tourists Danish tourists • • • • • 76% 90% 81% 62% 57% of of of of of Swedish tourists Norwegian tourists Finnish tourists Belgian tourists Polish tourists Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 7 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Overdependence on tour operators • Drop in tourist traffic generated by tour operators since 2000 • Loss of market share in favour of countries outside the Eurozone (Turkey, Egypt, Croatia, Bulgaria, Tunisia, Morocco etc.) • Immense pressure on Greek hotels to lower their prices and to introduce cheap allinclusive offerings Greek hotels were, thus, forced to explore new markets (new segments, new countries) Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 8 Contents 1. Brief overview of the Greek tourism industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. The emergence of independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons for Asian hotel investors and tourism authorities from the Greek experience Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 9 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience What’s so special about Rhodes? • One of the Mediterranean’s most attractive and most popular islands • World-class historic monuments such as the Medieval Town and the Acropolis of Lindos • Great scenery both along the coast and in the green mountains • Great beaches over two million visitors each year Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 10 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The local hotel sector • 474 hotels with 39.163 rooms and 74.847 beds (2009) • The hotels of Rhodes have twice the average size of all Greek hotels (83 rooms vs. 40 rooms per hotel) • The island’s four-star and five-star hotels are even larger (188 rooms on average) • Efficiently operated large resort hotels offering: • Low room rates for tour operators • Affordable holidays for European vacationers • A healthy profit margin for the hotels (until recently) Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 11 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The golden days (until 1999) • Rhodes was the first Greek resort area to flourish thanks to the tour operators • Tour operators brought easy money and prosperity to the island since the 1960s • Virtually no competition on the mass tourism market until the 1990s • Overbuilding of some parts of the island (especially in the north) • High growth rates between 1968 and 1999 followed by seven years of decline Overnight stays at the hotel of Rhodes Source: ELSTAT 12.000.000 10.816.711 10.000.000 8.000.000 7.861.485 6.000.000 4.000.000 2.000.000 70 19 72 19 74 19 76 19 78 19 80 19 82 19 84 19 86 19 88 19 90 19 92 19 94 19 96 19 98 20 00 20 02 20 04 20 06 68 19 66 19 64 19 62 19 60 19 58 19 56 19 19 19 19 54 76.000 52 0 Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 12 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The decline (after 1999) • Caused by growing competition from other Mediterranean destinations (mainly Turkey) and by unfavourable exchange rates after the introduction of the Euro • Rhodes became a highly substitutable “me too” holiday destination aiming at the most price-conscious segment of this market • The island’s marketing activities focused not on the unique features of Rhodes but on the similarities with hundreds of other Mediterranean destinations (sea and sun) • Hotel overcapacity further aggravated the pressure on hoteliers 300 250 200 150 100 50 Source: various 0 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Comparative development of overnight stays at the hotels of Rhodes, arrivals on charter flights and hotels beds for the period 1981-2006 (1981 = 100) Overnight Stays Arrivals on Charter Flights Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Hotel Beds Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 13 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The decline (after 1999) • Less overnight stays per bed and lower occupancy • Shorter stays (9,9 nights per hotel guest in 1981 7,9 nights in 2006) • Shorter season • Less tour operator-generated traffic Annual overnight stays per available hotel bed Source: ELSTAT 250 226 200 150 100 110 50 Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by 2005 2003 2000 1998 1996 1994 1992 1990 1988 1986 1984 1982 1980 1978 1976 1974 1972 1970 1968 1966 1964 1962 1960 0 Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 14 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The decline • Hotels on Rhodes were forced by tour operators to slash their rates • Low rates attracted a rather undesirable clientele to the town of Faliraki: The British customers of Club 18-30 Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 15 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The reaction • Upgrading hotels in order to escape price competition with low-wage countries outside the Eurozone • Introducing pool villas, spas and convention facilities at the large resort hotels • Creating new boutique hotels • Upgrading marketing and Internet skills in order to attract independent travellers • More sophisticated pricing tactics with tour operators in order to deal with overcapacity • Providing incentives to low-cost airlines to substitute the shrinking airlift capacity of charter flights operated by tour operators #The result: Rhodes was among a very few Greek destinations that managed to grow visitor numbers in 2010 Convention Centre of Rodos Palace Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 16 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The next steps • Re-establishing Rhodes as a quality resort island • Further growing cruise traffic • Reviving The Colossus of Rhodes, one of the seven ancient wonders Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 17 Contents 1. Brief overview of the Greek tourism industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. The emergence of independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons for Asian hotel investors and tourism authorities from the Greek experience Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 18 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience A very different holiday experience • Different clientele with different travel preferences and different spending power • Different types of accommodation • Far less dependent on tour operators • Sophisticated Internet marketing skills • Sophisticated boutique hotel concepts Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 19 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience A few words about the island… Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 20 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The local hotel sector • 260 hotels with 5.322 rooms and 10.190 beds (2009) • Different types of accommodation • The Caldera-side boutique hotels are the most prominent and highly recognisable Perivolas Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 21 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The local hotel sector • Charging among the highest room rates in the country • The longest tourist season in Greece • Boutique hotels emerging also in the other parts of the island • Several conventional hotels charge much lower rates Santorini Grace Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 22 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The tourism model of Santorini is future-proof because… … it is based on the very unique volcanic feature of the island … it represents a very distinctive lifestyle proposition and an aesthetic concept … it appeals to a market segment – weddings and honeymoons – that will always generate demand … it is attractive to many nationalities from around the globe … it creates value as visitors are ready to pay the premium prices of the island … the unique hotel concepts are complemented by an extraordinary gastronomic offering (cuisine and wine) One factor that can undermine this otherwise perfect product is overbuilding! Santorini Grace Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 23 Contents 1. Brief overview of the Greek tourism industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. The emergence of independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons for Asian hotel investors and tourism authorities from the Greek experience Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 24 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Getting away from the control of tour operators • Tour operators can be an excellent partner in growing tourist traffic to a resort • In some cases there are such strong conflicts of interest, that it doesn’t make sense to work with them • The Internet has empowered tourist service providers to directly reach their markets, thus limiting the need to use wholesalers and/or retailers • There are two major market segments among European holidaymakers: • Those who book their holidays with a tour operator • Independent travellers who prefer to organise their vacations by themselves • Independent travellers: • Book through the Internet • Use scheduled flights – and especially low-cost carriers – instead of charter flights Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 25 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience The market of independent travellers • Santorini and Mykonos were the first Greek destinations to turn to this market • Most local resort hotels have successfully disengaged themselves from dealing with tour operators • They now secure higher room rates, have a longer season and a higher occupancy than resort hotels in other parts of the country • Hotels in other parts of Greece are also being forced to turn to independent travellers as tour operators (1) keep asking for lower room rates and (2) are sending less business • Large increase in hotel consortium membership (e.g. Leading Hotels of the World, Small Luxury Hotels, Relais & Châteaux etc.) among Greek hotels which are in search of alternative sources of business • New marketing efforts to attract low-cost carriers to the Greek islands Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 26 Contents 1. Brief overview of the Greek tourism industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. The emergence of independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons for Asian hotel investors and tourism authorities from the Greek experience Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 27 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Conclusions from the comparison of Rhodes and Santorini • Rhodes has been a highly successful mass tourism destination for four decades (until 1999) • Now it has reached a point where the destination must reinvent itself in order to ensure the prosperity of the island for the next four decades • It has become a highly substitutable “me too” sea & sun destination, one among hundreds in the Mediterranean, without taking advantage of its unique features • Santorini, on the other hand, represents a future-proof model that has allowed local businesses – even extremely small ones – to prosper • The tourist industry capitalised on the unique features of the island and took it to the next level Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 28 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Some thoughts for resort developers 1. Find a compelling answer to a tourist’s most obvious question: “Why should I visit your resort?” Include a strongly differentiating – “iconic” – element in the project Adhere to strict quality standards and offer a compelling value proposition Create a strong brand Make sure that all visitors from all market segments are going to have a really great time! 2. Develop a future-proof resort concept Create a place that will remain appealing and competitive even after 20 or 30 years Avoid “me too” resort concepts and instead opt for being distinctive Avoid being part of future overcapacities by employing careful market analysis 3. Manage seasonality by attracting different market segments throughout the year – How? # By diversifying your markets – “Don’t put all eggs in one basket!” By diversifying your products and offerings Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 29 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Some thoughts for resort developers 4. Keep your destination and your products fresh Plan ahead for regular resort refreshment and upgrading before becoming obsolete and before competitors start outshining you 5. Be environmentally and socially responsible or else risk being the target of extensive negative publicity and social media exposure 6. Curb any construction activity that will undermine the positioning and appeal of your resort Develop a detailed master plan and zoning regulations and work towards convincing all stakeholders that it is in their best interest to strictly adhere to it Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 30 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Some thoughts for government authorities • Some Greek coastal areas were deeply scarred by poorly planned tourism development • However, bureaucracy saved Greece from the vacation real estate bubble • Spain is facing not one but three problems: • Thousands of ugly high-rise buildings – partly abandoned – are deforming the coast • Hotel and other tourist operators are directly impacted by urban decay • Thousands of buyers are being trapped with devalued property and loans they cannot pay back Benidorm, Spain Valencia, Spain Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 31 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience Some thoughts for government authorities • It is important to understand the different interests – and their conflicts. For instance: • Are resort developers just sellers of vacation real estate? • Are resort developers also operators of hotels, marinas, theme parks etc. with a longterm commitment to the resort? • No future-proof resort development without strict zoning and construction regulations! • Encouraging investment with a long-term commitment to the resort’s success! Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 32 1. The Greek Tourism Industry 2. The mass tourism model of Rhodes 3. The "boutique" tourism model of Santorini 4. Independent travellers in the age of the Internet 5. Useful lessons from the Greek experience One last word… • There are tempting investment opportunities in Greece despite – or because of – the economic crisis in Greece • Prices are expected to go down, thus making Greece a more attractive tourist destination • Real estate in privileged locations is up for sale • Hotels and other businesses are available for purchase at considerable discounts • The Greek government has made a serious commitment to attracting and facilitating foreign investors And let’s not forget: • There is no better time to visit Greece than now! Rhodes and Santorini: Two different models for successfully developing coastal tourism in Greece presented by Dr. Dimitris Koutoulas 33