Changes are afoot for Visitor Economy across the UK – find out more about how your tourism, retail or leisure business can be involved.

Over the next few weeks, a new strategic plan for tourism and the visitor economy will be written. Businesses can now register to join one of six workshops taking place across Greater Lincolnshire. This strategic plan will underpin our collective ambitions, but most importantly it means we’ll all be pulling in the same direction to reach our goals, align activities and tackle the things that are holding us back. 

The work began in March, where Destination Lincolnshire gathered together Greater Lincolnshire’s strategic visitor economy and destination development stakeholders – including business leaders, MPs, Councils, GLLEP and Visitor Economy Sector Board Reps, and educational providers – to discuss how the county will embrace the NEW national destination management organisation scheme from VisitEngland following the de Bois Review and what a new strategic plan, the Greater Lincolnshire Destination Management Plan, should look like. 

From a strategic viewpoint, the de Bois review and the resulting scheme will see a much more structured destination management landscape develop, with new DDPs (Destination Development Partnerships) and LVEPs (Local Visitor Economy Partnerships) created to align closely with VisitEngland and DCMS.

Destination Lincolnshire have been commissioned to steer the direction of the DMP through a 12-month Visitor Economy Research project. The largest research project of its kind, this valuable resource offers a comprehensive profile of current. visitors and provides as insight into how they are experiencing the county. Building on 2017 research, ut also investigated non-visitors to understand and identify the barriers Greater Lincolnshire faces as a visitor destination to recognise where opportunities for growth lie. 

Charlotte Goy, CEO of Destination Lincolnshire said: “This gathering was all about bringing together our strategic place leaders, from around the county, to begin those conversations about how we build the future of our visitor economy.

“Led by the data that Ian Thomas and his team at NGI Solutions have been researching over the last 12 months, I’m confident that together we will all be on the starting line, ready to march forward this new era in tourism, collectively growing Greater Lincolnshire’s £2.4 billion visitor economy socially and sustainably through product development, by tackling seasonality and supporting the workforce skills agenda.”

VisitEngland Director Andrew Stokes said: “Destination Lincolnshire and stakeholders are taking the opportunity to consider the future of the Greater Lincolnshire visitor economy, the direction, opportunities, and the kind of destination management arrangements that will best serve its future.  This is a great example of putting the spirit of the de Bois Review into practice.  VisitEngland looks forward to continuing to work with Destination Lincolnshire as it develops its plans for a potential future Local Visitor Economy Partnership for Greater Lincolnshire.”

Cllr Colin Davie, executive councillor for economy and place at Lincolnshire County Council said: “Lincolnshire has been attracting visitors to the seaside, countryside and city for generations and the sector is of major importance to the county’s economy.  This plan is about the future, and collaboration will be key to that. Much of what we are already working on – attracting more people into hospitality careers, providing year-round attractions on the coast and offering sustainable tourism options – will be strengthened with a joined-up partnership effort.” 

While the research highlights significant room for growth across the sector, it also identifies the need for stakeholders to work together to overcome a number of challenges facing the county. Going forward, working together to create Great Lincolnshire’s DMP will be the next step in collectively understanding how we overcome them. 

Ian Thomas, Destination Director at NGI Solutions, said: “Here in Lincolnshire, you have a huge opportunity. There is nothing in the data that scares me, what it says to me is ‘Let’s work together and make this better’. People are experiencing some wonderful things countywide, with TripAdvisor ratings staying high at 4.5-5 for attractions. But we need to talk about how, through the DMP, we can get more people through the doors. 

“Moving forward it needs to be about developing the product to collectively package more of the county-wide experiences we have, to turn more of the 62% of day visitors into 3–4-day trips. From the research, we know that 78% of visitors are actively looking for somewhere new and different. And within that, we know historical sites, open spaces, cultural events, and attractions pull visitors in. All things Lincolnshire has in abundance.”

Nicky Van Der Drift, CEO of International Bomber Command Centre, and Chair at GLLEP, said: “The power of collaborative working has long been known. The research presentation saw a great cross-section of businesses and organisations come together to push forward the Visitor Economy agenda in the county.  There was an invigorating enthusiasm to develop the plans for making the most of the County’s varied offer for the future.”

Book your place on a Destination Management Plan Workshop

Over July a series of workshops will be hosted by Destination Lincolnshire and councils across Greater Lincolnshire and Rutland. Run by NGI, they will be lively sessions for businesses to feed into the new strategic destination management plan. 

There will be six in-person workshops across Greater Lincolnshire to make the sessions as accessible as possible.

There will also be the option to join a virtual workshop online for people who cannot travel, plus an online survey that everyone can fill out to ensure their ideas are included. 

The draft DMP will be available in September for feedback and review and following any amends it will go through an adoption process with the Greater Lincolnshire LEP, all councils and key stakeholders ending with a new collaboration agreement being signed with Visit England and the national Government. 

The workshops are taking place at:

  • International Bomber Command Centre, Lincoln, July 26th, 9.30 – 11.30
  • The White Hart, Brigg, July 26th, 14:00 – 16:00
  • Stamford Arts Centre, Stamford, July 27th, 9.30 – 11.30
  • Springfields, Spalding, July 27th, 14:00 – 16:00
  • North Shore Hotel, Skegness, July 28th, 9.30 – 11.30
  • Brackenborough Hotel (Brackenborough Lakes Resort), Louth, July 28th, 14:00 – 16:00

All workshops can now be booked on Eventbrite.

 

For more information on the ‘The de Bois Review: an independent review of DMOs in England,’ see: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/independent-review-of-destination-management-organisations-dmos

For more information on the UK Government’s response to the de Bois Review see: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/government-response-to-the-independent-review-of-destination-management-organisations-in-england

For more information on VisitEngland’s LVEP scheme see: https://www.visitbritain.org/visitengland-announces-15-local-visitor-economy-partnerships