Philadelphia’s Tourism
Milestones: Where We’ve Been and Where We’re Going
PHILADELPHIA, May 16, 2006 - The word is out
about the Philadelphia region. In 2005, National Geographic
Traveler named it the “next great city,” while USA
Today raved that Philadelphia has gone “From Rocky to
Rockin’.” The praise continued into the new year with Time
magazine identifying Philadelphia as one of four cities in the
world to “watch” in 2006.
Memorial Hall in Fairmount Park
Photo courtesy of the Please Touch
Museum
Visitation statistics indicate that many tourists already know
Philadelphia’s value as a travel destination. In fact, overnight
leisure tourism has increased 55% since the Greater Philadelphia
Tourism Marketing Corporation (GPTMC) began advertising, from 5.71
million visitors in 1997 to 8.86 million in 2005. But that’s not
all. Saturday night is now the busiest night of the week for hotels
in Philadelphia, with 81% occupancy in 2005. Center City is
bustling thanks to the tourists visiting to the downtown area and
the 88,000 residents who live here – up 12% from 2000.
The travel and tourism industry is healthy and vibrant in the
Philadelphia region, but with all of the high praise comes a great
challenge to keep the momentum going. As GPTMC celebrates its 10th
year of building the region’s image and promoting it as a travel
destination, the non-profit organization is ready to do just
that.
How It All Began
In 1996, Rebecca Rimel, president and CEO of The Pew
Charitable Trusts, along with then-Governor Tom Ridge, then-Mayor
Ed Rendell and then-City Council President John Street identified
leisure tourism as a viable replacement industry for lost
manufacturing jobs and revenue. Together, the City of Philadelphia,
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and The Pew Charitable Trusts made
a three-year, $12 million investment that gave birth to GPTMC, an
organization whose mission was to market the region to potential
leisure visitors. Early on, the group decided that in order to
succeed the effort should be regional, promoting Bucks, Chester,
Delaware, Montgomery and Philadelphia counties.
GPTMC’s goal was a basic one: to paint an accurate image of the
region for potential visitors and to motivate them to visit. That
meant investing significant funds in new photography and video
b-roll, which journalists could use to tell their Philadelphia
stories. It meant developing a presence on the Internet as it was
just starting to take off. It meant creating a media database,
conducting consumer research and planning long-term strategies.
And, of course, it meant running television advertising, the first
of which ran in 1997 as part of the “This Is My Philadelphia”
campaign – with celebrity endorsements from Oprah Winfrey, Kevin
Bacon and Nicole Miller, among others.
Early decisions about GPTMC’s scope of work proved wise. GPTMC
was not designed to be a membership organization. Instead, it would
be a consumer-driven marketing entity free to promote the region’s
greatest assets and stories. GPTMC would give grants to promote
cultural events and attractions of interest to visitors, and it
would build in-house advertising, PR and Web expertise while
contracting with a variety of external creative and media
consultants.
Seminal Moments
In 1999, at the urging of the Greater Philadelphia Hotel
Association, the city and state legislature approved a 1% increase
in the hotel tax, a measure that helped permanently fund
Philadelphia’s leisure tourism marketing efforts. The following
year, the city hosted 20,000 delegates and 15,000 media
representatives for the 2000 Republican National Convention.
In 2001, the events and aftermath of September 11, 2001 hurt the
$100 billion U.S. travel and tourism industry, resulting in its
“worst year” in terms of financial performance in 33 years,
according to Mark Lomanno, president of Smith Travel Research. But
Philadelphia’s recovery was swift. Mayor John Street challenged the
hospitality industry to create a marketing program that would aid
the region’s short-term recovery. GPTMC led the way with the
development of the Philly’s More Fun When You Sleep
Over® campaign, a $3.6 million effort that generated more
than 37,000 room nights and $10 million in direct visitor spending
in its first season alone. Extremely popular from the start, the
campaign helped Philadelphia rebound faster than any other city in
the U.S.
Aware that one size does not fit all, GPTMC has been committed
to marketing to niche audiences since its inception. Over the
years, the organization has made special outreach to African
American and Hispanic visitors, college students, Canadians, cruise
passengers and residents, among others. GPTMC launched one of its
most high-profile campaigns in 2004 in an effort to entice gay
travelers to visit. With its groundbreaking Philadelphia –
Get Your History Straight and Your Nightlife Gay® spot,
the city became the first destination in the world to broadcast a
gay-themed television commercial. Just 18 months after the launch
of the campaign, GPTMC reported that gay travelers were spending
30% more than they did before the effort debuted, up from $179 per
day in 2003 to $233 a day in 2004.
What’s Drawing Visitors to the
Region?
The Philadelphia region has long been home to dramatic historic
sites, interactive museums, a sizzling dining scene, bumping
nightlife and trendy shopping. Over the years, what was hot got
hotter and what was already good got even better – a fact that
became abundantly clear when MTV aired The Real World
Philadelphia in fall 2004. Philadelphia is still home to the
Liberty Bell, but it’s now in a bigger space and surrounded by
several new attractions, including the National
Constitution Center and Independence Visitor
Center, which help tell the story of the nation’s
founding. The Avenue of the Arts carries on as a haven for the
performing arts with new spaces like The Kimmel Center for
the Performing Arts, but it now boasts a vibrant dining,
shopping and nightlife scene as well. The city’s sports teams
continue to show passion and pride, but now they do it on the
shinier courts and on the greener fields of Lincoln
Financial Field, Citizens Bank Park and
the Wachovia Center.
The region’s restaurant and retail businesses are booming as
well. The Center City District’s State of Center City 2006
report reveals that the downtown area is now home to 167 outdoor
cafes, up 61% from 2002. Bring-your-own-bottle (BYOB) restaurants
are more popular than ever too with upwards of 175 such
establishments in the region, according to the 2005 Zagat
Survey. Retail businesses are also expanding at a rapid pace.
From 1996 to 2005, Center City District reports that the number of
retail outlets downtown increased from 1,869 to 2,148. There are no
signs of slowing down either, with major retailers such as
BCBG Max Azaria and H&M
slated to move in or expand in 2006.
Blockbuster events give visitors great reasons to visit the
region now. From last year’s Live 8 and Elton John
benefit concerts on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of
Art to the Body Worlds and Benjamin Franklin:
In Search of a Better World exhibitions in town in 2006, the
region continues to offer visitors experiences they can’t get
elsewhere. GPTMC has worked with host venues to turn major
exhibitions and events into region-wide celebrations. This
collaborative effort worked especially well with the
Philadelphia Museum of Art’s Salvador
Dalí exhibition in 2005. With major support from Advanta,
GPTMC and the Art Museum created a marketing strategy that would
immerse visitors in Surreal Philadelphia: The Dalí
Experience. So successful, “The Dalí Model,” as the
partnership came to be known, now serves as the foundation for many
of GPTMC’s exhibition-based promotions.
What’s in Store for the Future?
It doesn’t end with Dalí though. The Andrew Wyeth exhibition at the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Disney’s The Lion
King at the Academy of Music, Big Cat
Falls at the Philadelphia Zoo and the
revitalization of Franklin Square as a legacy of
Ben’s 300th birthday are just some of the highlights of 2006. In
2007, the region will welcome King Tut to The Franklin
Institute, open the expanded and relocated Please
Touch Museum in Fairmount Park and unveil
the latest addition to the Philadelphia skyline, the 57-story
Comcast Center. With funding challenges, the
constantly evolving media industry and increased competition from
other destinations, GPTMC’s work will not be easy. But, with
consistent support from the city and state, reinvigorated civic
pride and plenty going on in the years to come, the
Philly’s More Fun When You Sleep Over® message
will continue to promote the region as a great place to visit, play
and stay.
The Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corporation (GPTMC)
makes Philadelphia and The Countryside™ a premier destination
through marketing and image building that increases business and
promotes the region’s vitality. For more information about travel
to Philadelphia, visit www.gophila.com or call the
Independence Visitor Center, located in Independence National
Historical Park, at (800) 537-7676.
Note to Editors: For photos of Greater
Philadelphia, visit our Photo
Gallery. On the pressroom, you can also subscribe to RSS feeds
to receive updates on topics that are specifically of interest to
you: What’s New, Dining, Events, Seasonal Travel, Hotel Packages
and Tourism Research.
CONTACT:
Jeff Guaracino, GPTMC
(215) 599-2290, jeff@gptmc.com
Anthony Malerba, GPTMC
(215) 599-2291, anthony@gptmc.com
_
Related RSS Feeds
| Topic |
XML Feeds |
What's New
This feed will be updated whenever any new content is added to
gophila.com’s Press Room. The feed covers all of the topics below
and more. |
 |
What
is RSS?