Following a trip to Georgia in January to support the USAID Economic Security Program, Solimar International CEO Chris Seek prepared to embark on a journey to support the strengthening of several new Destination Management Organizations (DMOs) across the country. This initial trip revealed a key challenge: fragmented collaboration among tourism stakeholders necessitated the development of a national tourism action plan and on-the-ground support of regional DMOs. All of this work is both familiar and fundamental to Solimar’s mission: supporting global development through sustainable tourism.
The Solimar team planned to implement its traditional approach to developing these resources, training a local expert to help implement recommendations that were developed as part of the DMO Development Toolkit. However, in the following weeks and months it became increasingly apparent that nothing about this approach would be traditional: everything about travel, the world, and Solimar’s strategy was about to change due to the COVID-19 travel restrictions.
Like many in the tourism field, we found ourselves questioning what the future would bring when, by the end of March, 100% of tourism destinations worldwide shut down. Solimar’s business model has always been based around deeply engaging with host communities: conducting in-person workshops and trainings, developing personal connections with local coordinators, and familiarizing ourselves with the on-the-ground context and teams leading the projects. Not only was traveling to support destination development no longer possible, but the very industry Solimar supports—travel and tourism—had collapsed overnight, with destinations focused on survival rather than the future of marketing and management.
This growing crisis forced us to critically evaluate both Solimar’s approach to destination management and the very nature of the tourism industry itself. As the shock of the crisis wore off, communities began to question: Was COVID-19 our chance to do tourism differently? Solimar quickly proposed its own COVID-19 response strategy to our clients, focused on an action plan that emphasized an examination of the tourism industry: (1) respond to the immediate challenges of COVID-19 and needs of the community; (2) restart the destination’s marketing and management efforts; and (3) reimagine what tourism means to your destination.
This strategy became the centerpiece of Solimar’s own reimagining of its resources, understanding how to best serve clients like the tourism industry in Georgia in the COVID-19 era. Unable to provide on-the-ground technical support for these regional DMOs, Solimar began working to create an online DMO Development Program to take newly established DMOs on a 16-week journey of self-reliance to improve the capacity and understanding of DMO Development in Georgia. Not only would this new online format enable training for multiple DMOs at once, but it would also allow for a far more comprehensive program that could be replicated in regions around the world—travel restrictions or not.
Each week, the course features a specific topic relevant to DMO development, from COVID-19 action plans to DMO board development and more. Participants have access to a weekly Learning Session presentation from Solimar CEO Chris Seek, an Expert Interview with various DMO professionals, and examples and best practices compiled from across the industry. Participants then work to turn their learning into practice by completing a weekly output exercise, from marketing and branding plans to board policy documents, that help strengthen DMO governance. The Solimar team provides feedback on these exercises each week during a Live Learning Session, where participants have the opportunity to discuss any challenges they had with the content and ask questions to our team of experts.
Thanks to this COVID-19 pivot in our training methods and resources, more DMOs will ultimately be trained and established over the course of the program. Rather than one-on-one support with one DMO in Georgia, six DMOs over the course of the program will produce all the outputs necessary for a well-run DMO: COVID-19 action plans, essential governing documents, board policy orientation guides, new funding streams, members and visitor surveys, marketing and social media strategies, six new or improved websites, and much more.
Like so many, Solimar International has been forced to critically re-evaluated and reimagine the resources we provide to our clients, the way they are delivered, and their intrinsic value in the post-COVID-19 era. The creation of this program demonstrates that international development is not only still possible, but more critical than ever. Utilizing the tools that make our strange new world more connected than ever, Solimar is looking forward to bringing these resources to destinations around the globe—regardless of the distance or challenges we face.