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A spending behaviour model for selected South African arts festivals

dc.contributor.advisorSaayman, M.
dc.contributor.authorLabuschagne, Veronique
dc.contributor.researchID10201424 - Saayman, Melville (Supervisor)
dc.date.accessioned2014-10-16T07:44:58Z
dc.date.available2014-10-16T07:44:58Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.descriptionPhD (Tourism Management), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014en_US
dc.description.abstractArts festivals form a large part of the South African culture originally as many local communities began to share their culture with visitors by means of arts festivals. This has grown into a large industry that has tremendous financial gain for the hosting communities. With over 500 arts festivals each year in South Africa alone, visitors are certain to find a festival to satisfy their specific needs and wants. Therefore, with so many genres available, each festival has created its own niche market and loyal customer base. An extensive literature study was conducted for the purpose of this thesis and it was found that research of small to medium arts festivals has been neglected. This finding motivated the main theme of this research. As mentioned earlier, there are so many genres available that the festival organisers may experience difficulty when deciding what to offer and how many genres to offer in order to still be sustainable and attract a sufficient number of visitors. Furthermore, the large number of arts festivals organised each year makes it increasingly difficult for festivals to build a loyal client base. First-time visitors can be converted into repeat visitors if the marketing strategy is precise. Repeat visitors, as stated in the literature, results in a sustainable income for each festival. Another question that motivated the research was the location of the three arts festivals (Innibos, Vryfees, and Kierieklapper). Three arts festivals in three provinces makes an interesting study to determine whether there is a difference in the three types of visitors that they attract and the spending patterns at each festival. While addressing the problems stated above, this study produced the following three articles: * Article 1: ―"Determinants of spending at Vryfees with a focus on genres". * Article 2: ―"First-time versus repeat visitors at Innibos Arts Festival". * Article 3: ―"Role of location in the attendance and spending of festinos". Article 1 investigates spending determinants that influence visitor expenditure on the different genres offered at the Vryfees Festival in Bloemfontein, based on a survey conducted in 2011. The research is based on the notion that different genres have different spending patterns. Article 2 focuses on the differences and/or similarities between first-time and repeat visitors at the Innibos Arts Festival as an alternative approach to market segmentation. Lastly, the third article focuses on three different arts festivals in three different locations in South Africa. The research was conducted by means of a visitor survey at the three arts festivals during the same year with questionnaires administered at Innibos (428), Vryfees (336), and Kierieklapper (202) respectively. The most significant contributions of this study can be summarised as follows: * the tourist spending behaviour in regards to the difference between first-time and repeat visitors is significant and can be considered an important spending determinant; * the tourist spending behaviour in terms of length of stay between first-time visitors and repeat visitors is significantly different, suggesting that familiarity with the destination (as the repeat visitors are) has an important impact; * different locations attract their own type of tourists and certain locations receive a higher economic injection than other provinces do because of the type of festival held. All three arts festivals attract mainly Afrikaans speaking attendees; and for the first time, a comparative study has been conducted on three arts festivals targeting the Afrikaans speaking community. Additionally, this is the first time a comparative study was conducted on three small to medium arts festivals located in three different provinces; and * the developed spending model described in the last chapter of this thesis can assist the festival organisers with future festival marketing to improve their income and marketing strategy.en_US
dc.description.thesistypeDoctoralen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/11735
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectInnibos Arts Festivalen_US
dc.subjectVryfeesen_US
dc.subjectKierieklapperen_US
dc.subjectFirst time versus repeat visitorsen_US
dc.subjectSpending behaviouren_US
dc.subjectMarket segmentationen_US
dc.subjectLocationen_US
dc.subjectTourismen_US
dc.subjectFestivalsen_US
dc.subjectEconomic impacten_US
dc.subjectEconomic valueen_US
dc.subjectDeterminantsen_US
dc.subjectGenresen_US
dc.subjectEvent managementen_US
dc.subjectInnibos-kunsfeesen_US
dc.subjectAanvanklike- versus gereelde besoekersen_US
dc.subjectBestedingsgedragen_US
dc.subjectMarksegmenteringen_US
dc.subjectLiggingen_US
dc.subjectToerismeen_US
dc.subjectKunsfeesteen_US
dc.subjectEkonomiese impaken_US
dc.subjectEkonomiese waardeen_US
dc.subjectBepalende faktoreen_US
dc.subjectGeleentheidsbestuuren_US
dc.titleA spending behaviour model for selected South African arts festivalsen
dc.typeThesisen_US

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