1st Edition

Global Alliances in Tourism and Hospitality Management

By Dimitrios Buhalis, John C Crotts Copyright 2000
    174 Pages
    by Routledge

    178 Pages
    by Routledge

    Target your business strategies to fit specific tourist cultures!

    Since Thomas Cook packaged the first tour in 1841, hospitality and tourism enterprises have forged long-term alliances with one another. Yet research suggests that most such alliances will fail. What goes wrong? How can tourism professionals take advantage of all the benefits of international cooperation while minimizing the potentially disastrous risks of failure? Global Alliances in Tourism and Hospitality Management provides empirical research, case studies, and theory to help you make the right decisions about this potentially high-profit strategy.

    To compete in the world travel market, a firm must increase its ability to reach, serve, and satisfy its target markets, while lowering costs. Making an alliance is often the most efficient and effective way to reach these twin goals. However, many firms make alliances without sufficient planning and end up paying the price in failed tours, dissatisfied customers, and damaged reputation. The five critical questions that must be answered before creating a partnership include:

    • Do we want to partner?
    • Do we have an ability to partner?
    • With whom do we partner?
    • How do we partner?
    • How do we sustain and renew a partnership over time?

      Global Alliances in Tourism and Hospitality Management offers specific, detailed ideas and research on vital topics, including:
    • deciding how and when to form alliances
    • handling multicultural management issues
    • identifying the basic elements of successful--and not so successful--partnerships
    • discovering the effects of culture on purchasing decisions
    • dealing with conflicts within alliances
    • ensuring cross-agency cooperation

      The development and management of alliances is a critical skill. Global Alliances in Tourism and Hospitality Management provides you with the strategies you need to build successful alliances. International in scope, this informative guide will help marketers, managers, and other professionals in the hospitality industry to lower company costs, raise profits, and gain strategic advantages in diversified markets.

    Contents Introduction
       Buyer Decision-Making Behavior in International Tourism Channels  Social Networks and Referrals in International Organizational Buying of Travel Services: The Roles of Culture and Location  Team Needs and Management of Multiethnic Work Groups in Hotels Tastes of Niagara: Building Strategic Alliances Between Tourism and Agriculture  Theoretical Perspectives Applied to Interorganizational Collaboration on Britain's Inland Waterways Relationships in the Distribution Channel of Tourism: Conflicts Between Hoteliers and Tour Operators in the Mediterranean Region  The Effect of Cross-Country Industry Cooperation on Performance in the Airline Industry Index Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Dimitrios Buhalis, John Crotts