ABSTRACT

This textbook shows how cities, regions and countries adopt branding strategies similar to those of leading household brand names in an effort to differentiate themselves and emotionally connect with potential tourists.

It asks whether tourist destinations get the reputations they deserve and uses topical case studies to discuss brand concepts and challenges. It tackles how place perceptions are formed, how cities, regions and countries can enhance their reputations as creative, competitive destinations, and the link between competitive identity and strategic tourism policy making.

part |66 pages

Destination Brand Concepts

part |17 pages

Tourism places, brands, and reputation management

part |11 pages

Competitive Identity

part |21 pages

A place marketing and place branding perspective revisited

part |12 pages

Nation branding

part |173 pages

Destination Brand Cases

part |12 pages

Branding and the accreditation approach

part |16 pages

Branding a ‘new' destination

part |11 pages

City brands and special interest tourism

part |14 pages

Repositioning city brands and events

part |12 pages

Branding and the opportunities of movies

part |18 pages

Branding, stakeholders, and integration

part |22 pages

Branding, destination image, and positioning

part |12 pages

Country brands and identity

part |17 pages

Destination branding and the urban Lexicon

part |13 pages

Branding a post-conflict destination

part |12 pages

Repositioning destination brands at a time of crisis

part |9 pages

Epilogue