|
Why Nation
Branding Is Important For Tourism
By Thomas Cromwell
A context for tourism promotion
Promoting tourism products successfully requires
a context that allows your audience to
appreciate what your country has to offer to
visitors. That context is the overall image, or
brand, of your country.
If, for example, your country is widely viewed
as a modern, secure, clean and efficient state,
your chances of getting tourists to visit
attractive destinations are good. What’s more,
if a nation is known for its unique features,
whether they be cultural, artistic, natural or
man-made, positive curiosity will provide a
context that encourages tourists to discover
first-hand something new or at least
interesting.
If, on the other hand, your country is known for
civil war, widespread crime and corruption,
inadequate infrastructure or an unfriendly
population, the task of encouraging tourists to
visit your destinations is very difficult. You
have to either pretend all those disincentives
don’t exist, or convince your audience that they
will have no impact on a visit to your country.
Think about it. If you are heading to a vacation
destination that looks like paradise in the
brochures or on the net, but when you arrive you
are kept in a long line at passport control at
an airport that is dirty and has no climate
control, and then you are exposed to sweaty men
fighting over who will take you in his taxi, and
on and on, your vacation will be spoiled and you
are unlikely to return to that country.
The point is that tourism branding and promotion
cannot be conducted successfully without
consideration of the context for tourism, which
is the state of the country itself. Or,
conversely, tourism branding and promotion can
best be developed in the context of successful
nation branding and promotion.
The purpose of nation branding
We live in a world where countries are trying to
become the same in terms of infrastructure and
quality of life. However, national objectives,
including a universal core agenda to promote
trade, investment and travel/tourism, are best
achieved through differentiation. Countries need
to take a critical look at themselves and ask:
“Why should companies invest here or tourists
come here, rather than go to other countries for
investment and tourism?”
This self-critical analysis might well lead to
recognition of what needs to be done to make
your country more attractive. Is your legal
system robust and fair? Is private property and
foreign investment protected? Do you have the
services in place that business and tourists
need? Do you have the transportation facilities
needed for travel and trade?
This self-analysis is the starting point of a
nation branding process, because a brand must be
truthful and believable. Every country has
strengths and weaknesses and a good brand will
project a nation’s strengths while recognizing
its weaknesses. The good news is that a nation’s
brand is not fixed in stone; it evolves as the
country evolves. Thus even if you know there are
many things to improve in your country, there is
no reason to delay branding, which can be a key
tool in helping you get to where you want to be
as a nation.
The purpose of nation branding is to position
your country in the best way possible in the
world system, given its strengths and
weaknesses.
And nation branding is not simply coming up with
a cute logo and tag line. It has a much deeper
purpose: to position a nation so that it can
achieve the maximum success in the world system,
including garnering the maximum international
recognition and clout, robust business relations
with the world, and a healthy tourism industry.
By doing this, a nation brings the maximum
benefit to its people by giving them dignity,
and by creating jobs and wealth.
Corporate lessons and tools
In the world of business, this is corporate,
rather than product or service, branding.
General Electric, for example, makes everything
from jet engines and locomotives to
refrigerators and irons. It also provides
financial services. Each of these products and
services has its own brand, which is promoted
separately. But they are also all supported by
the corporate brand, with the GE logo and
“Imagination at Work” tag line.
Successful corporations manage their brands
carefully because all of their products and
services can either benefit from a good brand or
be damaged by misuse of the corporate brand.
Also, these corporations tend to invest heavily
in promoting their corporate brands because it
is an efficient way to promote all of their
products and services at the same time as part
of a single budget.
Branding has grown into a science that employs
certain proven methods and techniques, including
research among stakeholders, benchmarking, etc.
And while nation branding is more complex than
corporate branding, because of the complex
nature of countries, many of the tools developed
in the corporate world can be used in the nation
branding process.
However, nation branding is a specialized field
because the complex elements that make up a
nation and the diverse objectives of government
need to be understood deeply and fully for the
branding process to be successful.
Branding is not advertising
Branding is a process that should be undertaken
before money is spent on image-formation and
messaging, and hence before communications
strategies and plans are decided, advertising
campaigns are initiated, web sites built or
public relations paid for. However, most
countries do it the other way round: they
allocate budgets for advertising, web sites, PR,
etc, without having a brand to communicate.
Every nation is a brand
It is a somewhat new way of looking at a
country, but every nation is a brand. That is,
it has an image in the minds of people living
elsewhere, at least those people who are aware
of its existence. Some countries are known for
good things, some for bad, and some are largely
unknown. This last group is probably the most
fortunate, because little-known countries have
the greatest opportunity to establish a brand
from scratch.
The problem is that most countries have had
their brands made for them. Their history, or
current events, as described by others
(historians, mass media, etc) have shaped their
image, good or bad. Hence Sudan is associated
with civil war, inter-religious conflict and
poverty, Iraq with suicide bombings and
widespread violence, Cuba with Fidel Castro’s
Marxism, etc. But meet a Sudanese, Iraqi or
Cuban, and you will know that these countries
have wonderful people and many good points.
But even a ‘nice’ image, such as Switzerland
being known as a land of cuckoo clocks and
chocolates, can be a problem for a country. For
one, cuckoo clocks and chocolates have little to
do with the success of an economy that boasts
half of Europe’s top ten companies, in
everything from financial services to
pharmaceuticals and food processing. And the
Swiss certainly want to be known for their real
value and real contribution to the world system.
Governments must lead the branding process
Clearly, no one in the world will create a good
brand for your country. Why should they? News
organizations are interested in ‘bad news’ such
as wars, disasters and the like. Who is there to
make that attractive image for you?
The logical conclusion is that each country must
take control of its own brand. This means that
it must invest in its brand, as well as the
management and promotion of that brand. This is
a task that must be led by governments. Only a
national government knows the full agenda of the
country and has the power and resources to lead
the nation in a branding process.
Nevertheless, governments must get the buy-in of
all the key stakeholders, including NGOs, the
business community, etc. With this participation
in the branding process, these stakeholders will
then become natural promoters of the brand.
Furthermore, if the government takes an
initiative that is intelligent and clearly of
benefit to the whole country, it is likely to
get the willing support of other stakeholders.
After all, every citizen and organization in a
nation would like to be part of a positive image
for the country.
A nation’s brand is complex
One should not think that branding a nation
successfully is an easy task. In fact there are
few if any examples of such a success. Countries
are made up of a mix of elements, including
location, peoples, cultures, religions,
traditions, industries, habits, natural
resources and often complex histories. A
successful brand will embody and represent the
diverse positive elements that comprise a
nation. Hence, we at East West Communications
call a nation’s brand a metabrand. That is, a
brand that embodies several complex elements,
possibly including other brands.
Most commonly, countries have depended on a
tourism brand for their national identity.
However, this can be problematic. For example,
famously the Cool Britannia campaign initiated
by Prime Minister Tony Blair to help repair
damage done by the outbreak of Mad Cow disease
in the United Kingdom was considered a failure,
despite many millions of dollars spent on the
campaign. The main problem was the Cool
Britannia brand was far too narrow. It might
have served the tourism sector well, or part of
it, but industry as a whole, including
manufacturing, IT, financial services, etc, were
not at all happy with it. The campaign did
nothing to help them, and they saw it as
ultimately damaging to Britain’s overall image
and hence to their interests.
A good brand will take into account the
complexity of the nation it seeks to embody, and
be believable. At the same time it will
differentiate the nation from all others,
putting it in the best light possible, without
exaggeration or distortion of the truth.
Depending on a tourism brand is risky
Many countries have depended on their tourism
brand to project a positive image about the
nation as a whole, but there is the risk that
the tourism brand is too narrow or limited, as
in the Cool Britannia case. Furthermore, in an
age of global terrorism, a tourism brand can be
highly vulnerable. We have seen that terror
attacks at tourist destinations, such as Luxor
in 1997, Bali in 2002 and Sharm El Sheikh
earlier this year, can result in huge financial
losses and a set-back for the country in
general.
In the cases cited here, Egypt and Indonesia
both lost billions of dollars in tourism-related
business, but also in their stock markets, in
reduced investment levels and other related
difficulties. For both of them, tourism was the
only positive image they projected to the world.
Neither had invested in a broader brand that
supported industry, investment and trade. And
they haven’t done so since. This is a risky
approach.
Building on a tourism brand
However, in some cases tourism brands have been
successfully extended to serve a nation as a
whole. A case in point is Spain’s famous sun by
Joan Miro, with its tag line: Everything Under
the Sun. Although essentially a brand adopted to
promote tourism, it has also served to make
Spain seem a modern, warm and inviting country,
for business as well as tourism. When Franco
died in 1975, Spain was a European backwater.
Today it is a dynamic and successful member of
the European Union. After investing hundreds of
millions of dollars in promoting its brand, tens
of millions of tourists flock there every year,
and its economy is robust and developing well.
The Barcelona Olympics in 1992 certainly helped,
but the City of Barcelona was able to win the
Olympics in the first place due to successful
branding and development beforehand.
Spain has been fortunate with the success of its
brand. Other countries might also seek to extend
a tourism brand to cover the country generally,
but this is not always easy, especially if your
tourism products are strictly sea, sun and sand.
A better strategy is to create a brand identity
for the nation that supports tourism, including
a tourism brand.
Many countries are now seriously thinking about
the process and benefits of nation branding, but
in many instances the task seems overwhelming in
its magnitude, and governments simply don’t take
action.
In these cases, it might be wise for tourism
branding to take on as much of the role of
nation branding as possible. Looked at in its
broadest sense, the tourism sector includes much
of what makes up a nation, including
infrastructure, government and private services,
the environment, etc, and there is a good
argument for a tourism brand to embrace those
elements, especially in the absence of a nation
brand.
All these considerations must be carefully
crafted into any tourism communications strategy
and be delivered with maximum creative impact to
the target audiences. In this way the nation
branding process is initiated through tourism
branding.
The nation branding process
The techniques used in branding nations are
largely taken from the corporate world and
adapted to the particular circumstances of
countries. In particular, any credible branding
process must begin with in-depth research and
analysis, including getting the input of
stakeholders. With this information, as well as
an articulation of the nation’s vision,
brand-building can begin in earnest.
It is difficult for us humans to see ourselves
in a true perspective, as others see us. Even in
the corporate world, outside branding
consultants are used to help corporate
executives make wise decisions about their
all-important brands.
Likewise, it is difficult for a nation to see
itself clearly. Therefore, it is desirable for a
country to seek a branding partner to conduct
the research and analysis, to develop a creative
brief, and to propose images and messages. Every
nation owns its own brand, and must make all the
critical decisions regarding its formation and
management, but in the complex world we live in
today, the advice of experts is essential to
success.
Promoting the brand
The brand must be adopted internally first, then
domestically, meaning throughout the nation, by
all stakeholders. Only then can it be
effectively promoted internationally. At this
point, a variety of tools can be used to promote
the brand, from web sites and trade missions to
advertising campaigns and embassies abroad.
Again, advice from a branding and communications
partner is needed for these steps in the
roll-out, management and promotion of the brand.
Thomas Cromwell is the president of East West
Communications, based in Washington, DC, which
advises the Communications and Press Department
of the World Tourism Organization. He is
considered one of the leading nation branding
experts in the world.
 |