Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1013173 | Tourism Management | 2008 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Tourism researchers report differences between first-time and repeat visitors in terms of their demographics, tripographics, destination perception, perceived value, and travel motivations. The majority of previous studies focus on comparing only one or a couple of these dimensions, with fragmented and sometimes conflicting findings. Consequently, the existing literature presents a rather mixed picture of the similarity and differences between the two groups. This article offers a systematic comparison of first-time and repeat visitors via demographic and tripographic characteristics, travel planning behavior, pre- and post-trip congruency in travel activity preferences, and post-trip evaluation. The findings indicate that first-timers' behaviors are more tourism/travel oriented, while repeaters' behaviors demonstrate a recreation/activity orientation. First-timers are more active travel planners, while repeaters indicate more positive post-trip evaluations. Plus, on-site experiences influence the two groups' activity preferences.
Keywords
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Business, Management and Accounting
Strategy and Management
Authors
Xiang (Robert) Li, Chia-Kuen Cheng, Hyounggon Kim, James F. Petrick,