Applicability of the market appeal-robusticity matrix: a case study of heritage tourism [An article from: Tourism Management]
Book Details
Author(s)Y. Li, R.L.B. Lo
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR1L1I
ISBN-13978B000RR1L16
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Tourism Management, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
Hong Kong is a city where contemporary global culture coexists with traditional Chinese heritage. One way of promoting Hong Kong's traditional built heritage is to develop a number of linked sites as a heritage trail. For helping the development of such, this study evaluates the applicability of the market appeal-robusticity matrix on heritage tourism development, by assessing the potential for tourism in the single-surname villages of Hong Kong's New Territories. The study techniques include documentary research, questionnaire survey and interviews. The findings indicate the matrix is effective for enabling the assessment of heritage tourism potential because it simultaneously demonstrates the importance of two major considerations for both tourism industry and heritage managers, namely market appeal-an asset's appeal to tourists, and robusticity-its ability to endure visitation. The shortcomings of the model includes the inappropriateness of the technical term ''product design needs'' in the market appeal subset and lack of community concerns in the robusticity subset of the matrix.
Description:
Hong Kong is a city where contemporary global culture coexists with traditional Chinese heritage. One way of promoting Hong Kong's traditional built heritage is to develop a number of linked sites as a heritage trail. For helping the development of such, this study evaluates the applicability of the market appeal-robusticity matrix on heritage tourism development, by assessing the potential for tourism in the single-surname villages of Hong Kong's New Territories. The study techniques include documentary research, questionnaire survey and interviews. The findings indicate the matrix is effective for enabling the assessment of heritage tourism potential because it simultaneously demonstrates the importance of two major considerations for both tourism industry and heritage managers, namely market appeal-an asset's appeal to tourists, and robusticity-its ability to endure visitation. The shortcomings of the model includes the inappropriateness of the technical term ''product design needs'' in the market appeal subset and lack of community concerns in the robusticity subset of the matrix.
