Everyone loves a vacation. We dream about them, plan them, save for them, obsess over them, count down to the day they start, and brag about them.
If you are responsible for marketing an attraction or destination, you must use your marketing tools to create desire in nearby households to replace or supplement their late-summer plans with a day at your place.
But how do consumers feel about the day trip? Does that leave-in-the-morning and come-back-that-night excursion to someplace nearby leave them wanting? Is it a mini-vacation to them, or is it a poor substitute for a real vacation that might leave them unsatisfied?
When tourism boards and visitors bureaus start promoting “stay-cations” to their residents, the mini-vacation idea is not universally accepted. Many travelers consider it a vacation only once you are far enough away from home to experience the feeling of being cut off from the normal day-to-day grind. They feel that you need to be far away from the distractions, and the lure of home to have a vacation.
But the day trip is, in fact, a real vacation. Just condensed. It’s all in how you market it. Do it right, and cash in on both avid day-trippers and those on the verge of becoming avid day-trippers.
Your destination can, and should, suggest that a day trip is even better than the traditional week away from work. Here are a few tips for getting your late-summer day trip campaign underway: