Across
- 3. / is the simplest and oldest approach to grouping tourist, this segmentation is the basis commonly used for market segmentation.
- 9. / are the places where trips begin, where people who will later be described or counted as tourists starts there journey.
- 11. / level of educational attainment is an important determinantof travel propensity as education broadens horizons and stimulates the desire to travel.
- 13. / activities have grown and changed,many different definitions and ways of classifying the industry have emerged.
- 14. / in this Impact, it involves many activities that can have adverse environmental effects.
- 17. / five large and distinctive segments of tourism consumers deserve special discussion because of their size and importance to the industry.
- 20. / the range of businesses and organizations involved in delivering the tourism product.
Down
- 1. / represent the 'sharp end' of tourism.
- 2. / in developing countries, one of the primary motivations for a region to promote itself as a tourism destination is the expected economic improvement.
- 4. / the expenditure made by or on behalf of the visitor before, during or after the trip and which expenditure is related to the trip and which trip is undertaken outside the usual environment of the visit.
- 5. / are two critical determinants of tourism demand, but the relationships are not clearly understood.
- 6. / is the actor in this tourism system.
- 7. / we are indirectly grouping people based on characteristics we assume are related to their needs and wants.
- 8. / are closely liked and exert important influences upon both the level and the nature of tourism demanded by an individual.
- 10. / grouping potential tourism customers based on their location, is the oldest and simplest basis for market segmentation.
- 12. / it involves grouping people on how they live, their priorities, and their interests.
- 15. / the increase in leisure time experienced by most individuals in the developed world since 1950 is well documented.
- 16. / an intermediate zone where the principal travel activity of tourism occurs, distinct from visit activity in destinations.
- 18. / the effects on host communities of direct and indirect relations with tourists, and of interaction with the tourism industry.
- 19. / an important influence on travel propensity, especially with regard to domestic holidays.
