Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Hello World, It's Tasmania Calling

"A MILLION likes would be great ... but paying us a visit would be even better."
That's the message tourism officials hope will spread around the world, through a social media campaign to arrest the tourism downturn in the bushfire-stricken Tasman Peninsula and elsewhere in the state.
The Sunday Tasmanian today partners tourism authorities to launch the campaign and drive tourism traffic back to the state.
For many operators it should be their busiest time of the year but accommodation houses are battling for business.
Guests have cancelled holidays or asked for discounts of up to 50 per cent to stay at venues on the Tasman Peninsula or East Coast.
Tourism Industry Council of Tasmania chief executive Luke Martin said it was too early to tell just how much the bushfires would cost the state's tourism industry.
But operators and regional tourism groups want to take action to limit the impact and let the world know they're open for business.

--> Mr Martin said they wanted to send the message viral, and they needed help from everyone.
He pointed Tasmanians to the Port Arthur & Tasman Tourism Association Inc Facebook page and urged them to click "like" on the Open For Business campaign.
"Then make sure you share the post with family and friends," he said.
People are being urged to post on social media with the tags #tassiecalling and #openforbusiness
Similar campaigns have been run in Australia and overseas with overwhelming success, sharing thousands of photographs, videos and experiences through social media to boost tourism trade and bolster local economies.
Fox and Hounds Resort owner Jo Dias was concerned it could take a long time for local tourism businesses to recover from the bushfires.
"We were into the first week of the busiest three weeks of our year [when the bushfires hit] and it just disintegrated," she said.
"Apart from the [hotel] rooms, our restaurant normally does upwards of 150 people a night. It's gone from that to zero.

--> "There are people worse off than we are, but in order to keep the [region] going businesses need to function."
It was a similar story for Wally Lyne from Port Arthur Villas who said guests had cancelled bookings for coming weeks, demanding full refunds, while others had offered to stay at heavily discounted rates.
"The next week or so I'm down to one or two people [staying] a night and this is a period when we're normally fully booked out," he said.
"This is the time we normally get our reserve to carry us through winter."
Tourism Minister Scott Bacon encouraged Tasmanians to support by visiting the Tasman Peninsula or East Coast for an overnight visit.
"One of the best things we can do is spend a night or two in those parts of the state that have been affected by the fires," he said.
Find more holiday and travel ideas and information on theDiscover Tasmania and Tasman region websites.

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Monday, July 30, 2012

Tasmanian Tourism Short On Funding. Why?




TASMANIA'S key tourism body has slammed the State Government for failing to provide adequate funding to promote the industry.


Tourism Industry Council of Tasmania chairman Simon Currant said more needed to be done to stop the decline in visitor numbers.


Mr Currant was speaking to more than 350 tourism operators at the seventh annual Tasmanian Tourism Conference, being held at the Country Club in Launceston today.

Tourism Minister Scott Bacon officially opened the conference this morning and said the State Government had "quarantined" Tourism Tasmania's marketing funding from recent budget cuts. Mr Currant said it wasn't enough.



"The forward estimates are reducing the expenditure of Tourism Tasmania this year and next year," he said.


"This has to be arrested; the Government has to invest in this industry."


Mr Currant said unless the State Government increased funding for the state's peak tourism marketing body, there would be job losses in the industry.


He said this was despite the fact that Tasmania had a strong tourism product, as shown by five wins at the Australian Tourism Awards earlier this year.





"(The tourism industry) offers the answer for our state," he said.


"We've got a natural asset here that everyone wants. We've got to tell people about it."


But the state's share of the national domestic tourism market was slipping.


Mr Currant said the number of visitors from Melbourne -- traditionally Tasmania's core visitor market -- was dropping drastically.


Despite this, Mr Currant said operators should be "optimistic" about the future and invest in ways to improve the state's tourism product.


Business futurist Morris Miselowski was the keynote speaker at the conference this morning.


He urged operators to harness the benefits of social media for their businesses.


Mr Miselowski said it was not enough for operators to rely solely on the marketing initiatives of Tourism Tasmania.


He said operators need to embrace new technologies and have a presence on social media sites such as Facebook, Pintrest and Tumblr.


TICT chief executive Luke Martin said the sites offered "unique and creative marketing options" for operators constrained by small advertising budgets.


"People have to be responsible for their own business and look at it as part of their own marketing activities," Mr Martin said.


"It's no different from the past where you look at buying an advertisement or paying for marketing information in a booklet."


He said workshops at the conference aimed to lift the skills of operators across the industry.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Tasmanian iPad Gamer Beats Tourette's


By launching a game for the iPad, Tasmanian Tourette's sufferer Paul Wilkinson has done what he thought the disease would never allow him to.
In September 2010, Mr Wilkinson had electrodes inserted into his brain to control the debilitating and potentially dangerous tics that Tourette's triggered.
Since the treatment, the 29-year-old has started Subspark Entertainment, which launched its first game on Apple's App Store in March.


AstroPlasma is a digital version of air-hockey that gives the player a first-person, rather than top-down view, of proceedings.
"This game is the first to utilise so many of the iPad's features and it truly redefines our genre," Mr Wilkinson said.
"Multiplayer allows people across the world to challenge one another."
The game took nine people six months to make and since its launch it has received five-star ratings in Australian, American and Polish App Stores.
Mr Wilkinson said Tasmania was a great place to do business and

hopes to establish a full studio in Hobart.
He has co-ordinated with staff in and out of the state to create the game.
He said the only challenge was to find people with the right expertise in Tasmania and he hoped to work with the education facilities in Tasmania to tailor a course to suit.
"There isn't a fully integrated course to produce the kinds of skill needed," he said.



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