Media practitioners with special focus on brands and
marketing last weekend assessed the contribution of tourism to national
development, with speakers driving the point that this was the time for Nigeria
to look beyond crude oil as a major source of revenue.
The speakers, who included the CEO of Insight
Communications, Jimi Awosika; president of Guild of Editors, Femi Adesina;
president of Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), Rotimi Oladele, and
Sunday Atere, commissioner of information, Osun State, referred to global
economic crisis and its effect on oil price, which is affecting Nigeria, and
said Nigeria must de-emphasise revenue on oil and develop other streams of income
to hedge against external shocks.
The forum was the second annual brand and
marketing conference on ‘Tourism marketing as catalyst for economic
development’ organised by Brand Journalists Association of Nigeria in Osogbo,
Osun State
In his contribution, Atere said “there seems
to be no better time than now when all of us in Nigeria will have to look
beyond oil, especially with the unpredictability starring the world economy at
the face. Narrowing on getting alternative income through tourism might be a solution
as some countries today rely solely on this sector as the bedrock of their
economic survival.”
He called on journalists to continue to draw
government attention to the diversification of the economy, saying the role of
the media in developing country like Nigeria was crucial and “this is why
journalism as a profession occupies the front burner in the scheme of things in
the country. In the same vein, your job as professionals in presenting
unbiased, untainted and accurate reportage should also be seen not to be
compromised.”
President of NIPR, Rotimi Oladele,
represented by his special assistant on media, Grace Achum, who recognised
tourism as optimistic sector that will propel Nigeria said “there is no other
force to drive tourism as major revenue earner than the media. As partners in
the economic development drive, I encourage you to try more and the best will
be the result.”
For many years, according to Femi Adesina,
Nigerians have spoken much on the economic diversification but all resolutions
end up in shelves, saying with dwindling international oil prices, the days of
reckoning had come.
Adesina said tourism should be a veritable
alternative to oil, citing countries like Israel, Australia and UAE, which had
no natural resources but had survived on tourism. According to him, Australia
alone makes about $7.6 billion on tourism annually. But in Nigeria, he said the
potential lie fallow.
He warned that “Nigeria cannot continually
depend on oil, otherwise the country will be declared a solvent nation soon,”
saying that all hands must be on deck to ensure that tourism became a major
revenue earner for the country.
To make tourism a major economic earner, he
advised government to formulate national strategy to reposition Nigeria as
tourism destination, and called on government to ensure security, adequate
infrastructure, health and political stability as necessary factor that will
drive tourism.
Jimi Awosika, represented by Sam Osunsoko,
associate director at Insight, who looked at promotion of tourism from
multi-dimensional media perspective, said traditional advertising cannot
effectively position tourism or any brand.
Citing Kenya, Tanzania and Zimbabwe, Jimi
said though a country could have natural resources, but there was nothing wrong
in diversifying the economy, saying ‘’Kenya earns about $900 million a year
from tourism with coffee still the highest earner.’’
He said in branding, differentiation was very
significant in destination branding. In his speech earlier, the president of Brand
writers, Goddie Ofose, said ‘’as nation drives FDIs, the capital must find
leisure to work effectively as those who invest in the economy assess the
economy in all ramifications before investing.’’
He said without destination branding,
branding a nation would be difficult, as the responsibility of brand
journalists was to identify those niches that would promote the country and
highlight them and constructively criticise impediments to national branding.
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