Apart from news and views on media covering tourism, travel, and hospitality, writers, editors, photogs, and bloggers share tips, leads, ideas, news, gripes. PR reps/journos ISO press releases/trips, see also "PR/Marketing." Opinions stated are not necessarily those of Tripatini.
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A friend of mine who is a meeting planner says if he sees more than 20 minutes scheduled for a site inspection he skips it or walks out after 20 minutes. It sounds cruel, but if you see 13 hotels in a day (as some places have scheduled), you really can't recall anything. A professional who is used to looking at spaces and flow can quickly see what they need to see. It needn't be dragged out.
Thanks for any help/contacts that you can provide...
Colin
This is my business. I never accept an invitation without an assignment. (Okay, twice in 20 years have I done this, and each time I was published.) The one time I didn't write about a destination was when the PR host changed the itinerary without telling me. I had a golf assignment and she decided replacing my tee time with a two-hour drive across an island to a plantation wouldn't affect my story. She reasoned this was such a neat thing that my editor wouldn't mind switching the focus. And she didn't tell me. I thought the group was dropping me off at the golf course, so there I was with shoes, glove, balls, cap and we kept on going. I was so pissed that I wouldn't even bother pitching anything for this island or any of her other clients. She wasted my time and cost me money.
As for those writers who you say enjoy hosted trips without an obligation to write a story, isn't that the fault of the PR rep or whoever issued the invitation? Haven't they failed to check out who is a real producer and who is a sham? It's right up there with those 'writers' who travel with their own 'photographer' who can also share their hotel room... (Apologies to the legit husband and wife or husband and husband or wife and wife teams who do double up.)
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