Wanted: Canadians and their tourism $$$$'s

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by highland3, Oct 26, 2007.

  1. highland3

    highland3 Member

    From today's Orlando Sentinel......

    Tourism officials hope to lure neighbors from the far North using TV ad
    Christopher Boyd

    Sentinel Staff Writer

    October 26, 2007

    Canada's strengthening dollar and its frigid winters make it a natural target for an advertising campaign aimed at attracting tourists to sunny Central Florida.

    For the Orlando/Orange County Convention & Visitors Bureau, which is in the midst of a two-year, $68 million promotional drive, the time is right for a major drive urging Canadians to head south this winter.

    The Canadian campaign, like its domestic counterpart, is aimed at women between the ages of 25 and 54. It promotes Central Florida as a place where familial bonds can be strengthened during a respite from bitter seasonal weather. The theme: "How to get closer to those who mean the most."

    "This is a time when people in Canada are planning their winter vacations," bureau spokeswoman Danielle Courtenay said. "Coming on the heels of the Canadian dollar reaching parity with the U.S. dollar for the first time since the 1970s, the timing is good."

    The steady decline of the U.S. dollar relative to other major currencies is making U.S. vacations increasingly affordable for foreign visitors. But tourism experts say that international travel to the United States has never completely recovered from the plunge that followed the 2001 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.

    Courtenay said Canada, with its shared border and large number of English speakers, is a natural growth market for the U.S. tourist industry. She said the $1 million campaign focuses on the nation's eastern provinces.

    The bureau estimates that 690,000 Canadians visit the region each year, making their country Orlando's second-largest international market, after the United Kingdom. The multimedia-marketing campaign will reach nearly 7 million households, and will include the CVB's first Canadian broadcast-television campaign.

    The first barrage consists of a four-week series of TV commercials that will air in southern Ontario; those are expected to reach 4.7 million households. The bureau also will distribute a 16-page glossy insert in five Ontario newspapers beginning next month. Internet advertising is also part of the mix, with ads appearing on a variety of search engines.

    The bureau is in the process of winding down an advertising campaign in the United Kingdom, where the pound sterling has also gained strength on the dollar. And earlier this month, the bureau began a domestic cable-TV advertising effort, which will later expand to U.S. broadcast television.
     
  2. CameraGirl

    CameraGirl Member

    Well The US is going to get some of my money that is for sure. ; I have a few things in mind already that I am going to come home with. ; Like Disney Crocs ;D
     
  3. Ham Ham

    Ham Ham Member

    No matter what the exchange rate, Florida has a few things we don't have a lot of up here.
    Disney, beaches and warm weather year round.

    [​IMG]
     
  4. mini-canadian

    mini-canadian Member

    You got that right!!!!!!!! ; Even ; a place with a little mouse too!
     
  5. the new Canadian resident special is just the first attempt to lure Canadians, I'm sure - however, it is a significant one, considering it is happening at peak travel time. ; Any Canadians looking to take advantage of this should move fairly quickly, however, cause the offer might get broadened to non-Canadians...
     

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