Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons

Using brand netnography (analyzing first-person on-line stories consumers tell that include discussions of their product and brand use), this article probes how visitors report specific Italian cities as unique brand icons. Visitor stories interpreting Bologna and Florence support Robert McKee'...

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Main Authors: Woodside, Arch, Cruickshank, B., Dehuang, N.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Pergamon 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25486
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author Woodside, Arch
Cruickshank, B.
Dehuang, N.
author_facet Woodside, Arch
Cruickshank, B.
Dehuang, N.
author_sort Woodside, Arch
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Using brand netnography (analyzing first-person on-line stories consumers tell that include discussions of their product and brand use), this article probes how visitors report specific Italian cities as unique brand icons. Visitor stories interpreting Bologna and Florence support Robert McKee's wisdom that powerful storytelling moves people via unique “inciting incidents”—incidents serving to unfreeze or throw life out-of-balance. The visitors’ city lived-dramas give credence to Tom Peter's advocacy of focusing strategically on brand experiences—“an experience–event–happening leaves an indelible memory” and Doug Holt's treatise on how brands become icons. The analysis includes applying Heider's balance theory in maps showing immediate and downstream positive and negative associations of concepts, events, and outcomes in visitors’ stories [cf. Collins, J., & Loftus, E. F. (1975). A spreading activation theory of semantic processing. Psychological Review, 87, 407–428; Epstein, S. (1994). Integration of the cognitive and the psychodynamic unconscious. American Psychologist, 49(8), 709–724]. These maps include descriptions of how visitors live Bologna's and Florence's unique promises (i.e., cultural beauty/decadence and total Italian Renaissance emersion, respectively). The article provides a revisionist proposal to Holt's five-step strategy for building destinations as iconic brands and suggestions for tourism management.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-254862017-09-13T15:17:09Z Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons Woodside, Arch Cruickshank, B. Dehuang, N. Tourism Netnography Brand Destination Icon Using brand netnography (analyzing first-person on-line stories consumers tell that include discussions of their product and brand use), this article probes how visitors report specific Italian cities as unique brand icons. Visitor stories interpreting Bologna and Florence support Robert McKee's wisdom that powerful storytelling moves people via unique “inciting incidents”—incidents serving to unfreeze or throw life out-of-balance. The visitors’ city lived-dramas give credence to Tom Peter's advocacy of focusing strategically on brand experiences—“an experience–event–happening leaves an indelible memory” and Doug Holt's treatise on how brands become icons. The analysis includes applying Heider's balance theory in maps showing immediate and downstream positive and negative associations of concepts, events, and outcomes in visitors’ stories [cf. Collins, J., & Loftus, E. F. (1975). A spreading activation theory of semantic processing. Psychological Review, 87, 407–428; Epstein, S. (1994). Integration of the cognitive and the psychodynamic unconscious. American Psychologist, 49(8), 709–724]. These maps include descriptions of how visitors live Bologna's and Florence's unique promises (i.e., cultural beauty/decadence and total Italian Renaissance emersion, respectively). The article provides a revisionist proposal to Holt's five-step strategy for building destinations as iconic brands and suggestions for tourism management. 2007 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25486 10.1016/j.tourman.2005.10.026 Pergamon restricted
spellingShingle Tourism
Netnography
Brand
Destination
Icon
Woodside, Arch
Cruickshank, B.
Dehuang, N.
Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons
title Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons
title_full Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons
title_fullStr Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons
title_full_unstemmed Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons
title_short Stories Visitors Tell about Italian Cities as Destination Icons
title_sort stories visitors tell about italian cities as destination icons
topic Tourism
Netnography
Brand
Destination
Icon
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25486