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What is Perishable Tourism Product

Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, Second Edition
Tourism services are perishable, and cannot be stored for sale at a later date. This affects the distribution of tourism services, as they must be marketed in a way that minimizes lost capacities.
Published in Chapter:
Artificial Intelligence Applications in Tourism
Carey Goh (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong), Henry M.K. Mok (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), and Rob Law (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-026-4.ch042
Abstract
The tourism industry has become one of the fastest growing industries in the world, with international tourism flows in year 2006 more than doubled since 1980. In terms of direct economic benefits, United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO, 2007) estimated that the industry has generated US $735 billion through tourism in the year of 2006. Through multiplier effects, World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC, 2007) estimated that tourism will generate economic activities worth of approximately US $5,390 billion in year 2007 (10.4% of world GDP). Owing to the important economic contribution by the tourism industry, researchers, policy makers, planners, and industrial practitioners have been trying to analyze and forecast tourism demand. The perishable nature of tourism products and services, the information-intensive nature of the tourism industry, and the long lead-time investment planning of equipment and infrastructures all render accurate forecasting of tourism demand necessary (Law, Mok, & Goh, 2007). Past studies have predominantly applied the well-developed econometric techniques to measure and predict the future market performance in terms of the number of tourist arrivals in a specific destination. In this chapter, we aim to present an overview of studies that have adopted artificial intelligence (AI) data-mining techniques in studying tourism demand forecasting. Our objective is to review and trace the evolution of such techniques employed in tourism demand studies since 1999, and based on our observations from the review, a discussion on the future direction of tourism research techniques and methods is then provided. Although the adoption of data mining techniques in tourism demand forecasting is still at its infancy stage, from the review, we identify certain research gaps, draw certain key observations, and discuss possible future research directions.
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