Bachelorarbeit, 2004
118 Seiten, Note: 1,0 (A)
1. Introduction
1.1. Subject and Objective
1.2. Approach
2. Fundamentals
2.1. The Customer
2.1.1. The Status of the Customer
2.1.2. Customer Value
2.1.3. The Customer as Prosumer
2.2. Customer Retention
2.2.1. The Importance of Loyal Customers
2.2.2. Basics for the Loyalty
2.2.2.1. Customer Satisfaction
2.2.2.2. Added Value
2.2.2.3. Proximity to the Customer
2.2.3. Instruments
2.3. Card-Systems as Marketing Instrument
2.3.1. A General Overview
2.3.2. The Customer Card
2.3.2.1. The Position of the Customer Card
2.3.2.2. Objectives of Card Emissions
2.3.2.3. Functions of Cards
2.3.3. Cards in Tourism
2.3.3.1. The Difference of Tourist Cards
2.3.3.2. The Function of Tourist Cards
2.3.3.3. Tourist Cards versus Citizen Cards
2.3.4. Provision of Cards
2.4. The Tourist Destination and the Darss Peninsula
2.4.1. The Tourist Destination
2.4.2. Destination MV
2.4.2.1. Facts about MV
2.4.2.2. The Darss Peninsula
2.5. The Visitor's Tax
2.5.1. The Visitor's Tax in Germany
2.5.2. Ahrenshoop's Ordinance as Example
2.5.3. Comprehension Difficulties for the Tourists
2.6. Benchmarking
2.6.1. Definition
2.6.2. Types of Benchmarking
2.6.2.1. Internal Benchmarking
2.6.2.2. External Benchmarking
2.6.3. The Use of Benchmarking in this Essay
3. Benchmark-Study and Market Analysis
3.1. Tourist Cards
3.1.1. German Tourist Cards
3.1.2. The Rügen Card as Competitor
3.1.3. The Engadin Card as Best Practice Example
3.1.4. The Stralsund Card as Negative Example
3.2. Card Systems in other Sectors
3.2.1. An Overview
3.2.2. The Miles-and-More Program of Lufthansa
3.2.3. The Payback Card as Market Leader
3.2.4. The Soltau Card as City Card Example
3.3. Sample Companies for the Implementation
3.3.1. Smart Loyalty AG
3.3.2. Smart Approach GmbH
3.3.3. The Basic Functions of the Systems
4. Data Interpretation
4.1. Data of the Destination Darss
4.1.1. Number of Visitors
4.1.2. Calculation of the Target Group
4.2. The Questionnaire
4.2.1. Fundamentals of the Survey
4.2.2. The Survey as Snapshot
4.2.3. Interview Rules
4.2.4. About the Questions
4.2.5. Scale
4.2.6. ServQual
4.2.7. Further Surveys about this Subject
4.2.8. About the Analysis
4.3. Analysis of the Survey Results
4.3.1. Single Question Frequencies
4.3.1.1. Satisfaction with the Visitor's Tax
4.3.1.2. Interests in a Bonus-System
4.3.1.3. Effects on the Off and Low Season
4.3.2. Cross Tabulation
4.3.2.1. Interests in Bonus System vs. Federal State of Origin
4.3.2.2. Interests in a Bonus System vs. other Bonus Programs
4.4. Interpretation Summary
5. Implementing a Destination Bonus Card System
5.1. Procedure
5.2. Stage 1: Preparing Research
5.2.1. Competitors and Comparable Products
5.2.2. Card Systems on the Local Market
5.2.3. Interests of Potential Partners
5.2.4. Interests of Potential Customers
5.3. Stage 2: Setting the Objectives
5.3.1. Functions of the Card
5.3.2. Partner Companies
5.3.3. Target Groups
5.3.4. The Award System
5.3.5. System Providers
5.4. Stage 3: The Implementation
5.4.1. Project Group
5.4.2. Project Structure
5.4.3. Card Name and Design
5.4.4. Emission Price of the Card
5.4.5. Integration of Partner Companies
5.5. Stage 4: Controlling
6. Conclusion
The primary objective of this thesis is to evaluate the feasibility of implementing a customer loyalty bonus card system within a tourist destination, using the Darss Peninsula as a practical case study. The research explores whether such a system can effectively increase repeat visitation, improve competitiveness against other tourist destinations, and enhance the acceptance of local visitor taxes by providing added value to the tourist.
2.1.1. The Status of the Customer
In the case of tourism it can be said, that the customer is equal to the tourist. But the word tourist does not describe enough, what he is supposed to do, which is spending money and so creating revenue for the travel industry, the small shops, hotels and restaurants and with this tax income for the destination. He is not only touring and traveling, he is also client and consumer.
But a customer is more than this, he has a much higher status. We are not anymore back in the times, when the customer was acting according to Maslow’s Pyramid, when in the first place he had to fulfill his basic needs to survive, which means he had to buy his bread no matter where and was not able to choose in which bakery he would do this. Today the customer is comparable to a sovereign emperor who has in most cases except for some monopolistic branches the power to decide which product he wants to purchase or which service he wants to use.
1. Introduction: Outlines the subject, objectives, and the research approach regarding the implementation of a loyalty system in a tourist destination.
2. Fundamentals: Establishes the theoretical framework by defining customer value, loyalty, and the role of card systems in tourism and regional marketing.
3. Benchmark-Study and Market Analysis: Compares existing tourist and city card programs to identify best practices and potential pitfalls for a new destination-based system.
4. Data Interpretation: Evaluates primary survey data and secondary statistics to analyze the potential target group and interest in a bonus program on the Darss Peninsula.
5. Implementing a Destination Bonus Card System: Provides a structured four-stage guide for the planning, design, and implementation of a destination-wide loyalty card.
6. Conclusion: Summarizes the findings, confirming the viability of a destination-specific bonus card system as a tool for loyalty and competitive advantage.
Customer Loyalty, Tourist Destination, Bonus Card System, Customer Retention, Market Analysis, Benchmarking, Tourism Marketing, Visitor Tax, Data-based Marketing, Prosumer, Customer Value, Destination Management, Implementation Guide, Service Triangle, Competitive Advantage.
The work investigates the feasibility and strategic benefits of applying customer loyalty programs, typically used by private companies, to the structure of a tourist destination.
The research covers customer value concepts, customer retention instruments, benchmarking of existing card systems (tourist cards vs. city cards), and practical implementation phases for a destination.
The goal is to increase tourist loyalty, turn one-time visitors into repeat customers, and create an added value that justifies local visitor taxes, ultimately boosting the destination's competitiveness.
The thesis combines an extensive literature review, a benchmark study of existing card models, and a empirical snapshot survey of tourists on the Darss Peninsula.
It addresses the theoretical foundation of customer behavior, an analysis of regional and city card examples (e.g., Rügen Card, Engadin Card), and a step-by-step implementation guide.
Key terms include Customer Loyalty, Tourist Destination, Bonus Card, Customer Retention, Benchmarking, and Destination Management.
The Darss serves as a representative case study of a region with many small/mid-sized, privately owned tourism businesses that could benefit from a joint marketing and loyalty association.
By using the bonus card system as a tactical marketing tool, offering specific incentives or rewards that are only valid or more attractive during the low-demand seasons.
Der GRIN Verlag hat sich seit 1998 auf die Veröffentlichung akademischer eBooks und Bücher spezialisiert. Der GRIN Verlag steht damit als erstes Unternehmen für User Generated Quality Content. Die Verlagsseiten GRIN.com, Hausarbeiten.de und Diplomarbeiten24 bieten für Hochschullehrer, Absolventen und Studenten die ideale Plattform, wissenschaftliche Texte wie Hausarbeiten, Referate, Bachelorarbeiten, Masterarbeiten, Diplomarbeiten, Dissertationen und wissenschaftliche Aufsätze einem breiten Publikum zu präsentieren.
Kostenfreie Veröffentlichung: Hausarbeit, Bachelorarbeit, Diplomarbeit, Dissertation, Masterarbeit, Interpretation oder Referat jetzt veröffentlichen!

