This Tourism Week. 20 June 2011
Brought to you by the Sir David Boutique Guesthouse, Blouberg Village, Cape Town.
So you think you know domestic tourism? Try China – a country of 1.3 billion people who notched up 1.9 billion domestic trips in 2009 (which kinda makes you want to re-think our on-going problem with Stats SA and the way in which they report our tourism figures. That long-distance Transkei minibus taxi ride… is it any less a tourism product than a coach tour of the Cape Peninsula? Maybe it’s time to start lobbying for holiday and conference tourism to be weeded out from the blanket tourism numbers they feed us…).
But I digress. Here’s what CNN’s Pauline Chiou has to say:
The Power of the Chinese Budget Traveler
The Chinese tourists wandering through Paris’ Louvre this summer or shopping along New York’s Fifth Avenue are part of the nearly 65 million Chinese who will travel abroad this year, according to estimates by the China Tourism Authority. These tourists are among China’s wealthy. But consider this: More than 20 times that number of Chinese citizens will travel within China this year. That’s a huge business opportunity.
So who is the domestic traveler in China? How much do they spend? The latest statistics released by the Chinese government is from 2009. In that year, the average amount of money a Chinese traveler spent per trip was 535 yuan (US $82). That doesn’t sound like a lot, but we’re talking about volume. According to the government, the number of trips taken by domestic travelers more than doubled between 1999 to 2009. In 2009, Chinese made 1.9 billion trips. Considering the population of China is 1.3 billion, this averages out to one or more trips per Chinese citizen. With Hong Kong and Macau as top destinations, other resort areas like southern China’s Hainan Island and the eastern coastal city of Qingdao also draw many local tourists.
As a group, the Chinese low-to-middle market traveler is formidable. Marriott International’s COO and President Arne Sorenson is fully aware of this. In a recent interview, he told me the most interesting change he’s seeing in China’s hotel industry is the face of the guests.
“In virtually every one of our hotels in China today, the most significant guest – in terms of percentage of guests in the hotel – are Chinese travelers. That gets us into a different business than we were in, certainly 10 years ago, which was opening hotels, by and large, catering to global inbound travelers.” As a result, Sorenson sees a growing opportunity for middle market hotels aimed at the Chinese domestic traveler who may not be able to afford the Ritz Carlton (a Marriott brand) , but will find the rates at a Courtyard Marriott appealing. There are already 10 Courtyard Marriotts open in China, 3 under construction and 5 more approved.
“Most of the domestic travelers are still on a rather low budget,” says Chak Wong, finance professor at Chinese University of Hong Kong. “I can see specialized hotels catering to the low-end benefiting from the boom. However, there are not a lot of specialized chains providing clean, cheap and efficient hotels like those in Europe yet. “
Sam Goodman is an entrepreneur and author of “Where East Eats West,” a foreigner’s how-to-guide on doing business in China. “If you’re not focusing on the high-end, then you need to focus on the low-end and go with the Chinese saying ’bo li duo xiao’ which means ‘small profit, high volume,’” says Goodman. “As an entrepreneur, I look for ideas that are scalable. Travel, as a whole, is a very large industry, but extremely fragmented. The larger brands go to where the money already is. [They] have no real desire to nurture and wait for the smaller players to develop the market.”
While Marriott is one of the big names reaching out to the price-conscious traveler, it’s a challenge keeping pace with China’s growth. Sorenson acknowledges the number of middle market Marriott hotels breaking ground is still not enough. He says,” It’s much fewer in number than the potential China ultimately presents at a level like Courtyard. It could be possible we would participate in the (pricing) segment below Courtyard as well.”
Expect the travel landscape to change as the Chinese budget traveler finds strength in numbers.
Pauline Chiou is a CNN anchor/correspondent based in Hong Kong and co-hosts the daily, live morning edition of “World Business Today”. For more, go to www.cnn.com/business.









1 user commented in " The Power of the Chinese Budget Traveler "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackIt is possible for our industry to get to a point, where they can not to cope with the demand. however because of a lack of education and insight into our local traveller, our hotels and lodges are still struggling to fill up. we have the infrustructure and the hotels and yet we dont have the people in beds, and not because they dont have money but because we havent given them a reason to spend it.
At the end of the day we need to realise that just like the Chinese its not about how much the tourists spend, but its in the volumes. This without compromising on the service and quality of our product. Its idealistic I know but its not impossible. I know this because it has been done before.
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