Micro Perspective
Micro Perspective
OF TRAVEL
OBJECTIVES
• To show awareness of the factors
motivating people to travel
• To clarify the relationship of needs, wants
and motives.
• To explain the relation between Maslow’s
hierarchy of needs and travel motivations
listed in travel literature.
Motivation for travel
• Escape • Interpersonal
• Relaxation relations
• Relief of tension • Roots and ethnic
• Sunlust • Self-discovery
• Health • Cultural
• Family togetherness • Education
• Wanderlust
• Interest in foreign
country
Motivation
Something that stimulates interest or causes
a person to act in a certain way.
Is the driving force that causes the flux from
desire to will in life.
Ex: Hunger is a motivation that elicits a
desire to eat.
4 Classes of Basic Travel Motivators
Physiological
• Tour packages that offer frequent rest stops
• Easily accessible food outlets in theme parks
• Sleeping shelters strategically located
Safety
• Reservation service provided at government-approved agencies or
locations
• Cruise ship lines providing medical facilities and doctors
• Tour guide services provided in exotic or unfamiliar locations
Belonging
• Group tours with people having similar interests and/or backgrounds
• Group recognition gained by membership in frequent-user programs
provided by airline
• Trips to explore one’s ancestral roots
Esteem
• Elite status in frequent-user programs such as gold, silver or bronze
• Incentive travel awards for superior company performance
• Flowers, champagne and other tokens provided to guests in recognition of
occasions.
Self-Actualization
• Educational tours and cruises
• Theme parks providing educational opportunities and glimpses of other
cultures
• Learning the language and culture before traveling to another country.
The END
Leisure Ladder Model
• This model is developed by Philip Pearce.
Stimulation
Need for excitement and safety (fun and thrill of rides,
experience of unusual, out-of the-ordinary settings and
different foods and people)
Relationship
Need to build and extend personal relationships
(tenderness, affection, joint fun, joint activities, altruism
and being directly involved)
Fulfillment
Need to feel peaceful, profoundly happy (magical as if
transported to another world, spiritual and totally
involved in the setting)
Crompton’s Push-and-Pull
Model
• This model emphasizes that the choice of
destination of a tourist is driven by two forces:
push and pull.
The explorer
•Tourist usually planning his/her own trips and trying to avoid developed tourist
attractions
•Desire to mix with locals but still protected within the environmental bubble.
•Dominant novelty, tourist not fully integrating with locals
The drifter
•Tourist plan their trip alone
•Tourists avoid tourist attractions and live with the locals
•Almost entirely immersed in the host culture, sharing its shelter, food and
habits
•Novelty is dominant and familiarity disappears.
Global Travel Survey
• This survey done in the United Kingdom in 2005
has a more general approach to classifying
tourists into adventurers, worriers, dreamers,
economizers and indulgers.
• These are based on how tourists perceived
traveling.
Adventurers
• Are motivated to seek new experiences
• Value diversity
• Seek new activities, cultures and people
• Are independent and in control
• Travel plays a central role in their lives
• Don’t need to be pampered
• “I feel confident that I could find my way
around a city that I have never visited before.”
“I really hate traveling with a group of people,
even if they’re people I know.”
Worriers
• Suffer considerable anxiety about traveling
• Travel is relatively unimportant to them
• Are not particularly adventurous
• “Most traveling is too stressful for me.” “I worry a
lot about home when I’m away.” “I have a fear of
flying”.
Dreamers
• Are fascinated by travel
• Their own travel tends to be more mundane than
might be expected give their travel ideas.
• Their trips are oriented more toward relaxation than
adventure.
• Lack confidence in their ability to master the details
of traveling
• Anxious about the stresses of travel.
• “I like I have to travel to enjoy life fully.” I like to be
able to impress people by telling them about the
interesting places I’ve visited.” “I really rely on
maps and guidebooks when I travel to a new
place.”
Economizers
• They travel primarily because they need a break,
travel is not a central activity for them.
• Seek value in travel
• Their experience of travel does not add meaning
to their lives
• Their sense of adventure is low
• “Traveling first-class is a waste of money, even if
you can afford it.”
Indulgers
• Like to be pampered
• Their travel is not a central or important
experience
• Are generally willing to pay for a higher level of
service when they travel
• Do not find travel intimidating or stressful
• “I don’t worry about how much things cost when
I travel.” “It’s worth paying extra to get the
special attention I want when I travel.”
Pearce’s Travel Category
• Pearce developed 15 traveler categories
based on major role-related behaviors.
– Tourist - Explorer
– Traveler - Missionary
– Holidaymaker - Overseas student
– Jetsetter - Anthropologist
– Businessperson -Hippie
– Migrant - International
athlete
– Conversationist - Overseas journalist
-
Religious pilgrim
Tourist
Takes photos, buys souvenirs, goes to
famous places, stays briefly in one place,
does not understand the local people.
Traveler
Stays briefly in one place, experiments
with local food, goes to famous places,
takes photos, explores privately.
Holidaymaker
Takes photos, goes to famous places, is
alienated from society, buys souvenirs,
contributes to the visited economy.
Jetsetter
Lives a life of luxury, is concerned with
social status, seeks sensual pleasures,
prefers interacting with people of his/her
own kind.
Businessperson
Concerned with social status, contributes
to the economy, does not take photos,
prefers interacting with people of his/her
own kind, goes to famous places.
Migrant
Has language problems, prefers
interacting with people of his/her own kind,
does not understand the local people,
does not live a life of luxury, does not
exploit people.
Conversationist
Interested in the environment, does not
buy souvenirs, does not exploit the local
people, explores places privately, takes
photos.
Explorer
Explores places privately, is interested in
the environment, takes physical risks,
does not buy souvenirs, keenly observes
the visited society.
Missionary
Does not buy souvenirs, searches for the
meaning of life, does not live a life of
luxury, does not seek sensual pleasures,
keenly observes the visited society.
Overseas student
Experiments with local food, does not
exploit the local people, takes photos,
keenly observes the visited society, takes
physical risks.
Anthropologist
Keenly observes the visited society,
explores places privately, is interested in
the environment, does not buy souvenirs,
takes photos.
Hippie
Does not buy souvenirs, does not live a
life of luxury, is not concerned with social
status, does not take photos, does not
contribute to the economy.
International athlete
Not alienated from own society, does not
exploit the local people, does not
understand the local people, explores
places privately, searches for the meaning
of life.
Overseas journalist
Takes photos, keenly observes the visited
society, goes to famous places, takes
physical risks, explores places privately
Religious pilgrim
Searches for the meaning of life, does not
live a life of luxury, is not concerned with
social status, does not exploit the local
people, does not buy souvenirs.
Market Segmentation
Market Segmentation
• Market segmentation is similar to tourist
typology.
• It is another way of classifying tourists and
understanding them.
• Segmentation is a sort of grouping people
with the same characteristics such as
geographic, demographic, psychographic,
and product-related characteristics.
Tourist Market Segmentation