A General Theory Of Tourism

03/15/07  Print This Post Print This Post    9 Comments   Popular   Written by Travis Smith
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Blackboard filled with wonderful math

When you break down travel into its essential elements, you start to see patterns emerge.

As I jaunted about town (town currently being Singapore) today by taxi, bumboat, escalator, staircase and metro, enjoying restaurant, museum, statue, skyscraper and crowds, I found myself musing on a general theory of tourism.

The way I see it, all tourism can be reduced to six categories (view handy diagram here).

  • 1. Learning something new
  • 2. Eating something new
  • 3. Buying something new
  • 4. Watching/seeing something new
  • 5. Doing something (physically) new
  • 6. Meeting someone new

Every possible tourist activity falls into one (or in a few cases, several) of those categories. Satisfaction comes from doing something that is more extreme and interesting and new in one of these six ways.

Tourist activities cost money, of course, and the amount you’re willing to pay is increased by what extent it fulfills one of the six categories (and correspondingly limited by the total amount of funds you’ve got at your disposal).

In Search Of Experience

For example, you can go parasailing behind a boat in Mazatlan. The physical activity is #5, doing something new. The view of Mazatlan from the air is #4, seeing something new. And if you need to be trained to do it, it can be #1, learning something new.

Overall, it’s not that expensive compared to your total budget, so you decide to do it.

Now, if you’ve done parasailing before, maybe in the Bahamas, you’re not doing something new. And if it’s basically fool proof and they just need to strap you in, then you’re not learning much.

So therefore, you’re just paying for the view. This means you might decide not to do it again.

Big Ben in LondonOn the other hand, if you decided on your first day not to do it, but it’s now your last day and you haven’t spent your budget, you might look at the money you have and compare it to the cost and decide that it’s now worth it.

Going to see a play in London. That’s seeing, and if it’s a play about the French Revolution, perhaps you’d consider it learning, too. Getting dressed up might make it “doing” as well.

Is it worth it? Depends if you’ve gone to lots of plays before, and if you’ve got money enough to also accomplish the other tourist activities you have planned.

Going out to a restaurant in a hawker’s market, that’s eating and seeing. Possibly meeting, because you might be at a table with someone interesting. That’s better than a restaurant, which is only eating, and maybe seeing if it’s something out of the ordinary architecturally.

Buying is usually a category of its own, but you tend to pay more if it’s at a place where you’re doing or seeing or learning, because then you feel like the thing you bought has a little more value.

Buying something expensive can also, itself, become a valued memory or interesting tourist tale-like a rug from a Turkish bazaar.

To Each Their Own

What’s interesting is that the thing doesn’t have to be good-seeing something awful (disaster tourism, or visit to Auschwitz), eating durian fruit or something raw and icky, or even meeting someone weird or obnoxious, which later can be turned into a highly amusing anecdote.

Overall, each person tends to prefer some of the categories over other categories, and this, more than anything else, should determine who travels well together.

You might have different budgets and still come to some agreement over what to do. But if one person likes to shop and the other person likes to hike up mountains, that companionship is doomed.

What I’ve come to realize about myself is that of all things touristic, I prefer learning and eating, and if at all possible meeting new people.

Everything else is secondary.

Travis Smith is the owner of Hop Studios, a Web design and development company. He’s also a professional speaker on such topics as blogging, subscription-based revenue models and online journalism.

What numbers of the tourism theory are you most likely to embrace?


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About the Author

Travis Smith

Travis Smith is the owner of Hop Studios, a Web design and development company. He’s also a professional speaker on such topics as blogging, subscription-based revenue models and online journalism.

9 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Livia replied on March 15, 2007

    Well, I’d say I embrace them all. But I think that n 1 and n 6 are the ones that summarize the whole list. You always learn something new while traveling and sometimes you do it because you have met someone special who introduced you to a different world. What’s your take?

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  • The TravMonkey replied on March 15, 2007

    Hmm I’ve never really put much thought into analysising travelling like this, I thought it just went without saying.

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  • ianmack replied on March 15, 2007

    hi Livia, thanks for your comment. I agree, #1 and #6 are probably the most compelling reasons most people travel. It’s interesting to note though, that all of these points can be applied to “living” in general — it’s what makes any day memorable.

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  • JennDZ replied on March 15, 2007

    I agree with IanMack, you can apply these things to everyday life. It is really important to try to learn as many things as possible and always try to increase your experiences in life, traveling abroad or just around your hometown, even if it is to just stop and have a friendly conversation with someone!

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  • Car Seat Traveler replied on March 15, 2007

    We are currently trying to figure out our next adventure. We’re deciding between Costa Rica, Argentina, Morocco, and New Zealand. The more exotic and new, the better!

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  • KisSy` replied on May 28, 2007

    I like that point of view and this theory helped me to write an essay about tourism:a mixed blessing.Thank you very much Travis Smith

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  • Enrique Chavez replied on March 17, 2008

    I’d like to point out that this guide is well-written and it actually has substance to it. My compliments to the author. I’d like to comment though that even though you may have tried the experience, you’ll go back? Why? Because a typical vacation would last around a month or so, so that’s not enough to satiate human curiosity about an area.

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  • faith kamande replied on April 18, 2008

    hi, i completely agree with Travis. am a tour guide and the six points are actually ingredients to a successful safari. By the way have you ever been to Africa? KARIBU KENYA

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  • isdaryono sunardiyo replied on April 15, 2009

    I agree with you. Although we go to the same place ( a repeat visit) we always everything new, especially when we are involved in many activities. But it depend on us whether we search for it or not.

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