The Use of Intelligence in Tourism Destination Management: An Emerging Role for DMOs

Over time, the acronym DMO has evolved from a meaning centered on marketing (i.e. Destination Marketing Organization) to a meaning centered on management (i.e. Destination Management Organization). Expanding the role of DMOs to one of management implies a greater need to engage stakeholders both wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:The international journal of tourism research 2016-11, Vol.18 (6), p.549-557
Hauptverfasser: Sheehan, Lorn, Vargas-Sánchez, Alfonso, Presenza, Angelo, Abbate, Tindara
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container_end_page 557
container_issue 6
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container_title The international journal of tourism research
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creator Sheehan, Lorn
Vargas-Sánchez, Alfonso
Presenza, Angelo
Abbate, Tindara
description Over time, the acronym DMO has evolved from a meaning centered on marketing (i.e. Destination Marketing Organization) to a meaning centered on management (i.e. Destination Management Organization). Expanding the role of DMOs to one of management implies a greater need to engage stakeholders both within the destination and external to the destination. We assert that this places the DMO in a fundamentally unique position of being a boundary spanner between the internal destination environment and the external competitive environment. This boundary‐spanning role requires higher capabilities in knowledge management. The successful DMO of the future will be an intelligent agent of the destination that is able to identify, engage and learn from disparate stakeholders both within and outside the destination. It must acquire, filter, analyze and prioritize data and information from various sources to create knowledge that can be used to fulfill its role in destination management. Our paper is conceptual in nature, advocating an organizing framework to help understand the DMO's role as an intelligent agent that acts as a boundary spanner between the destination and the external competitive environment generating and disseminating knowledge. Outside the destination, the DMO must gain knowledge about the competitive environment, opportunities and threats, and trends that will change the future competitive landscape. Within the destination, the DMO must use this knowledge to strategically assess the strengths and weaknesses of the destination, align the resources of stakeholders and develop adequate competencies to formulate a strategy that is both competitive and sustainable. We conclude with a set of prescriptions for destination managers seeking to create an intelligent DMO that maximizes their knowledge management capabilities. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/jtr.2072
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source Wiley Online Library - AutoHoldings Journals; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects collaboration
Competition
Destination Management Organization
intelligence
knowledge agent
Knowledge management
Marketing
stakeholder
Tourism
title The Use of Intelligence in Tourism Destination Management: An Emerging Role for DMOs
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