23 May 2015, 08:17 am
Australia welcomed 807,100 visitor arrivals during the month of December 2014, an increase of 2.8 per cent compared with December 2013.
Tourism Australia Managing Director John O’Sullivan said the ‘remarkable performance’ was testament to the industry’s hard work.
“The industry deserves great credit for delivering such impressive numbers, but now certainly isn’t the time to look back. There’s still a lot of hard work to be done if we’re going to hit our Tourism 2020 targets, and our focus is very much about the future," he said.
“Fundamentally, ours is a destination with enormous appeal – assets such as our world-class natural beauty, great food and wine, warm and welcoming people. But these things only become a competitive advantage if they can be successfully converted in to more visits, particularly from high yielding visitors likely to stay longer, travel deeper and spend more during their trips."
"I think we’ve shown with Restaurant Australia, that if you identity an opportunity and really go hard, you can deliver impressive results,” he said
O’Sullivan said that Tourism Australia was already planning its next marketing salvo, which would sit alongside and complement its ongoing food and wine push, and which would shine a powerful light on Australia’s diverse aquatic and coastal experiences.
- Machu Picchu mystery: What left 1,400 tourists suddenly stranded in the Andes?
- One Fare stays! Ontario extends popular transit programme till 2027
- West Bengal climbs to No. 2 in India for foreign tourists, overtaking major states
- Air Canada Foundation flies more than 1,000 children to U.S. theme parks
- New Zealand revamps Golden Visa: What the shift means for Digital Nomads
- ‘Paris has Fashion Week – Berlin now has Freedom Week’
- Rising fraud, trafficking, kidnapping cases: Why has Iran suspended visa-free entry for Indian citizens
- IHCL steps into Nagaland with 'Ginger'
- India's North-East goes global: Sikkim to host International Tourism Mart from Nov 13
- Beach, sun… no beer? Thailand introduces strict new drinking hours
Air India, India’s leading global airline, and Maldivian, the national airline of the Maldives, have entered a bilateral interline partnership aimed at boosting connectivity between the two countries.
IndiGo, India’s largest airline, is grappling with one of its most severe operational crises in recent years, with widespread flight delays and cancellations disrupting travel across the country for a second consecutive day.
Tata Group-owned Air India on Sunday announced the reinstatement of its codeshare agreement with fellow Star Alliance carrier, Air Canada, to offer more flight options for travellers and boost connectivity between India and Canada.
