Training and Development For A Successful Tourism Industry in Newfoundland: A Literature Review
Training and Development For A Successful Tourism Industry in Newfoundland: A Literature Review
Training and Development For A Successful Tourism Industry in Newfoundland: A Literature Review
Bronwyn L. Cass
Harris Centre Strategic Partnership
Memorial University of Newfoundland
31 March 2014
Author Note
Bronwyn L. Cass, Master of Employment Relations (MER) Candidate, Memorial
University of Newfoundland.
Research was supported by the Strategic Partnership Harris Centre Student
Research Fund. The author would like to acknowledge the financial support of
the Harris Centre and the Strategic Partnership. The author would also like to
thank Dr. Gordon B. Cooke for providing encouragement and support to write this
piece.
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 2
Abstract
This paper reviews literature on training and development, tourism training, and
rural tourism and identifies information that may contribute to a successful
tourism industry in Newfoundland, Canada. Upon review, a set of considerations
is provided for the purpose of understanding training and development needs in a
rural context. This paper aims to interpret previous research in order to condense
it into practical and accessible information for tourism professionals and policy
makers in the province. Findings suggest that cooperation among stakeholders is
critical to the success of the rural tourism industry.
Keywords: tourism industry, training and development, rural tourism
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 3
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 4
DEFINITIONS AND CONTEXT ........................................................................................ 4
TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT ......................................................................................... 5
TOURISM TRAINING ....................................................................................................... 7
TOURISM TRAINING IN NEWFOUNDLAND ........................................................................... 9
RURAL TOURISM .......................................................................................................... 10
RURAL TOURISM IN NEWFOUNDLAND ............................................................................. 13
DISCUSSION .................................................................................................................. 15
COOPERATIVES IN COMMUNITIES .................................................................................. 16
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT ......................................................................................... 16
ACCESSIBLE EDUCATION ............................................................................................... 17
SERVICE QUALITY AND COMPETITIVENESS..................................................................... 17
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR RURAL TOURISM IN NEWFOUNDLAND ........................ 18
Table 1. Training Considerations ............................................................................ 18
CONCLUSION ................................................................................................................ 19
REFERENCES ............................................................................................................... 20
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 4
Introduction
Over the past few decades, the Canadian economy has shifted away from
manufacturing and towards more service-based industries (Heron, 1996). The
tourism industry has become the single largest employer in Canada (MacLaurin,
2005), and provides new jobs and opportunities to diversify the economy. The
tourism and hospitality industry incorporates many different types of businesses,
such as accommodations and food service providers, transportation companies,
and tour operators. As a labour-intensive industry, organizations depend on the
availability of good quality personnel to deliver, operate, and manage the tourist
product (Amoah & Baum, 1997) as well as for competitive advantage (Zagonari,
2009). Thus, organizations must ensure that their employees are capable of
providing top quality service to increasingly discerning customers in a global
market.
One integral aspect of ensuring that employees have the right knowledge,
skills, and abilities to provide top service is providing effective training. Training
and development in organizations has come to be seen as a normal cost of doing
business in order for companies to maintain productivity (Percival, Cozzarin, &
Formaneck, 2013) and stay competitive in the marketplace (Zagonari, 2009). The
purpose of this paper is to interpret previous research in the areas of training and
development, tourism training, and rural tourism in order to condense it into
practical and accessible information for tourism professionals and policy makers
to continue growing the success of tourism in rural parts of Newfoundland,
Canada. Major sources of economic growth are usually associated with urban
centres (Jarábková & Hamada, 2012) that attract and support a variety of
businesses. Thus, the remaining rural parts of the province represent an
opportunity for growth and prosperity if economic diversification is a viable option
to support the people who live in these rural areas.
In the sections that follow, separate analyses are aimed at capturing the
essence of the training and development literature, the tourism training literature,
and the rural tourism literature. First, a snapshot is provided to outline definitions
and give context to the following analyses. Then, in the review of tourism training
and rural tourism, subsections are offered to focus on specific details relevant for
Newfoundland. The discussion aims to synthesize the preceding sections and
offers useful comparison of the literature as well as practical reference material to
tourism industry professionals and policy makers.
much more is known about the effects of training at the level of an individual
worker, and less is known about how it translates to the greater organization.
Therefore, Tharenou and colleagues (2007) urge researchers to continue
working to bridge the micro-macro gap in undestanding (i.e. understand how
individual training success can lead to success in an organization).
Percival, Cozzarin, and Formaneck (2013) extend Tharenou, Saks, and
Moore’s (2007) research by exploring the evidence of the impact of training on
productivity in Canada. The authors used quanititative data from Statistics
Canada’s Workplace and Employee Survey (WES) containing information on 14
industries over seven years between 1999-2005. The findings suggest that 12 of
the 14 industries showed positive correlation between training expenditure and
productivity. However, only three of the 14 industries showed financial returns on
investment of training dollars. Yet, it is indicated that in order to maintain current
labour productivity, (even for the industries that did not show financial returns in
this study), maintaining training efforts may remain in the best interest of
organizations. Due to normal occurences such as employee turnover or
technological change, training should be considered a normal cost of doing
business when in comes to maintaining labour productivity relative to competitors
(Percival et al., 2013).
Over 50 years ago, Don Kirkpatrick published guidelines for pracitioners
for measuring the effectiveness of training (as cited in Kirkpatrick & Kirkpatrick,
2010). Despite academic debate and criticism, Kirkpatrick’s “four levels”,
measuring 1) trainee reactions, 2) learning, 3) behaviour, and 4) results, are
recommended as a strategy for training evaluation (Salas et al., 2012).
Pervailling popularity of Kirkpatrick’s four levels allows organizations to compare
training efforts to those in the same industry (Salas et al., 2012). Kilkelly (2010)
advises Human Resources (HR) practitioners to take a holistic approach to
evaluating the return on investment (ROI) for training programs. Further to
Kirkpatrick’s four levels, Kilkelly (2010) suggests first evaluating organizational
capability to identify gaps in employee knowledge, then deduce where personal
capability can be improved. Ultimately, the arguments ring true with Tharenou
and colleagues’ (2007) call for integration of micro and macro levels of capability
and performance: “To deliver real value, training should faciliate the ongoing
improvement of organizational as well as individual capability” (Kilkelly, 2010, p.
43). Following a separate but closely related body of research, the next section
explores how training and development has been undertaken in the tourism
industry.
Tourism Training
Tourism education, as a scholastic option for students and as a field of
study for researchers, is relatively new. Canadian colleges and universities
began to offer tourism training programs in the late 1960s (MacLaurin, 2005).
Yet, knowledge has expanded rapidly through the work of social scientists
(Stergiou, Airey, & Riley, 2008) and the tourism industry has developed into the
world’s largest and fastest developing industry (MacLaurin, 2005). While it should
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 8
be noted that education and training are often defined seperately in the literature,
both will be used interchangabley in this paper. For example, Zagonari (2009)
defines vocational training, usually attained at schools, as where students
acquire well-defined skills transferable to the workplace. This is distinguished
from education, referring to formal schooling, usually attained at universitites,
with the purpose of preparing students to “learn how to learn in order to be
flexible enough to cope with the changing skill requirements and rapid
technological advances” in the tourism industry (Zagonari, 2009, p. 2). Yet, for
the purposes of this paper, both education and training are treated as viable
options for improving the knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) of tourism
employees.
Zagonari (2009) discusses the challenges of bringing together multiple
stakeholders (students/employees, employers, educational institututions, and
governments) to develop mutually beneficial tourism curriculum and training
options. The appeal is made for more integration of stakeholder efforts, arguing
that a “professional and well-educated workforce is essential to the provision of
quality service and enhancing overall service delivery in a global market,”
particularly in the face of changing skill requirements and rapid technological
advancement (Zagonari, 2009, p. 4). Canada and the Republic of Ireland are
cited as countries that model such integration of national policy development with
training and development activity for the tourism industry (Zagonari, 2009). In
Canada, these stakeholder relationships are described as being pluralistic
(MacLaurin, 2005). Pluralism, in this case, refers to both the private sector and
government having jurisdiction over the activites of people; tourism education in
Canada has successfully developed through the pluralistic model (MacLaurin,
2005). Yet, given the complex and multidisciplinary nature of tourism,
consistency across curriculums at different educational institutions is difficult to
maintain. Thus, similar to the focus on outcome analysis and evaluation in the
training and development literature discussed above, Stergiou and colleagues
(2008) suggest a set of dimensions with which tourism training can be evaluated
incorporating data collected from tourism students. Essentially, the dimensions
outlined suggest that tourism teachers must have both knowledge and abililty.
Teachers require knowledge of the field while staying up-to-date with industry
trends, but also the ability to organize classes in ways which will challenge
student thinking (Stergiou et al., 2008). This speaks to students’ desires to
achieve both educational and vocational outcomes. With such research, tourism
education is not only being advanced, but teaching can be held to higher
standards. MacLaurin (2008) asserts that other industries have long recognized
the benefits of working strategically with universities and urges the tourism sector
to do the same. Importantly for the topic of this paper, the literature predicts that
the future of tourism education will include increasing use of distance learning
technologies making flexible and distance learning a possibiity regardles of time
and location (Cho & Kang, 2005; MacLaurin, 2005). Further discussion is
included in later sections.
The role of leadership in improving tourism and hospitality businesses has
recently been explored (Alexakis 2011). It is accepted that, ultimately, it is the
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 9
behaviours of organizational leaders that shapes the business and the working
environment of its employees. Essentially, “what effective tourism and hospitality
industry leaders do is make work enjoyable, engaging, interesting, and otherwise
intrinsically rewarding as an efficient means to further the organization’s goals”
(Alexakis, 2011, p. 709). However, it would appear that this is not an easy task in
light of the longstanding human resource issues that exist in the industry
including a high proportion of part-time employees, low wages, irregular hours,
high turnover, and poor career image (MacLaurin, 2005). Alexakis (2011)
recommends tourism education that fosters leadership that embodies trust,
appreciation of others, and empowerment. Empowering employees through
supportive, nurturing, motivational leadership, leaders gain the ability to harness
and utilize the full intellectual capital of their employees. Cho and Kang (2005)
recommend training and development as vital business activity to ensure tourism
employees feel valued, to help reduce staff turnover, and to ensure that staff who
are promoted to supervisory or managerial positions can perform efficiently.
Tourism experts from around the world agree that enhanced human
resource skills such as team building, effective listening and negotiation,
motivation and leadership, working with distributed, virtual project teams, and
emotional intelligence will be important factors in tourism education and training
leading into the next decades (Sheldon, Fesenmaier, Woeber, Cooper, &
Antonioli, 2008). With the understanding that these skills can be taught, it follows
that tourism education and training will help to prepare students for success in
the tourism industry. The following section explores tourism training available in
Newfoundland.
Rural Tourism
Rural tourism is quite simply defined as tourism that takes place in rural
areas (Kulczycki, 2008). Rural areas are attractive to tourists for a number of
reasons including, but not limited to, picturesque scenery, farms, nature,
adventure, arts, history and folklore, local food, and romantic notions of rural life
(Farrell & Russell, 2011; MacDonald & Jolliffe, 2003). In the rural tourism
literature, many forms of tourism including cultural rural tourism (MacDonald &
Jolliffe, 2003), sustainable tourism (McAreavey & McDonagh, 2011), and creative
tourism (Jarábková & Hamada, 2012) have been discussed in relation to rural
locations. At the core of sustainable tourism are the “issues of economic
efficiency and equity; environmental protection and cultural awareness”
(McAreavey & McDonagh, 2011, p. 177). Creative tourism is defined by
“authenticity of experiences that enable visitors to develop their creative potential
and their skills by means of contact with local people and their culture”
(Jarábková & Hamada, 2012, p. 10). All of these conceptualizations of tourism
describe culture as an important aspect.
Described in a Canadian context, ‘cultural rural tourism’ is an integrative
term used by MacDonald and Jolliffe (2003) to describe tourism activities that
take place in a “distinct rural community with its own traditions, heritage, arts,
lifestyles, places, and values as preserved between generations“ (p. 308). The
authors’ case study example of an Acadian community on Prince Edward Island
(PEI) sheds light on the process of developing rural tourism. Specifically,
evidence is provided to support three hypotheses suggesting that cultural rural
tourism can: 1) be developed to provide a short-term and long-term economic
tool for rural communities, 2) be a key to identify distinct rural communities as
destinations for education, entertainment, and enrichment for tourists, and 3) be
the impetus for partnerships and networking important for achieving a
community’s goals. Ultimately, these findings are seen to aid in job creation for
local residents and become a matter of interest to planners and policy makers
(MacDonald & Jolliffe, 2003).
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 11
Tourism and its integration into the rural product can be very much part of
developing employment opportunities, increasing local prosperity,
conservation and maintenance of the environment, celebrating cultural
assets and generally ensuring a greater spread in terms of who can
benefit (economically, socially and culturally). (p. 177)
tourism, “Nong jia le”(Happy Farmer Home) (Su, 2011). Su (2011) uses the
example of “Nong jia le” to present six models of rural tourism development with
varying degrees of external input. Su (2011) points out that government
intervention has helped rural tourism flourish as a way of creating new jobs and
promoting economic prosperity. Due to most owner/operators’ experience in the
primary industry of farming, there exists a skills gap in the transition from farming
activities to providing tourism services. It is suggested that “it is absolutely
essential for all levels of government in collaboration with public sector agencies
to promote a unified training system in order to train them for the managerial and
marketing knowledge and capability they need” (Su, 2011, p. 1441).
Furthermore, governments and tourism administrative authorities can provide
cohesive marketing materials to entice the rural tourism market inclined to pursue
higher quality products and personalized services. The financial support of
government in China has also allowed for the restoration of traditional buildings
and properties that may have otherwise fallen into disrepair. The younger
generation of farmers who had formerly left to pursue work in urban areas have
in some cases returned back to their hometowns to start small tourism
businesses using the technological and managerial skills they learned elsewhere
(Su, 2011). The development of “Nong jia le” and other forms of rural tourism
have shown promise for the people and the economies of rural China.
While rural China and rural Newfoundland may initially seem
incomparable, upon closer inspection the results of declining primary industry
bear striking similarity as rural communities in both societies turn to tourism as a
way of revitalizing local industry. The following section explores the
circumstances in rural Newfoundland that contribute to the undertaking of rural
tourism activities.
Thus, the virtue of being an island may hold additional appeal for adventurous
visitors, but not without certain drawbacks. For example, the expense to travel to
an island destination can be prohibitive to visitors travelling on a budget. Such is
the case with Newfoundland being geographically distant from the priority routes
of national airlines. The island is also accessed by ferry and cruise ship, but the
vast majority of visitors arrive by plane (Department of Tourism, Culture and
Recreation, 2013). Baum (1999) points out that one of the main contributing
factors for helping potential visitors to overcome financial barriers to visiting
Iceland has been the country’s strong national carrier, Icelandair. Prior to
deregulation, Icelandair promoted stopovers between North America and Europe
as one of the cheapest options to cross the Atlantic (Baum, 1999). Yet, beyond
enticing reductions to access cost, is it suggested that Iceland’s success in
tourism can be attributed in large part to an integrated, cooperative social
structure supported by a community-led political system. Similar to
Newfoundland, Iceland has been similarly affected by a decline in fishing as its
primary industry. However, the Icelandic response to the economic need to
diversify is strongly characterized by initiation at the local level with government
playing an active policy and guiding role, while providing limited financial support.
Baum (1999) considers the relative success of Iceland’s tourism industry
(compared to Newfoundland) at the turn of the 20th century as being attributed
largely to this type of development initiated by cooperatives at the community
level.
In addition to using Iceland for comparison, Felt (2003) discusses the
success of a number of small, isolated communities in the North Atlantic with
specific attention paid to lessons that might be useful to Newfoundland. Felt
(2003) cautions that lessons learned from other societies cannot simply be
applied or imposed, but must be modified and adapted to be of use. Advocating
international competitiveness as a desired outcome, Felt (2003) claims that in
Newfoundland “governments have too often justified extensive intervention in the
development process with the rationalization that being small and geographically
distant, extraordinary guarantees and subsidies (if not outright government
ownership) were necessary to entice development” (p. 141). As understood from
other North Atlantic island societies, providing generalized, non-monetary
assistance to promote higher productivity is claimed to be more effective (Baum,
1999; Felt, 2003). This is an interesting point for consideration when assessing
training and education options for people in rural areas. Indeed, Felt (2003) notes
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 15
Discussion
A review of the literature indicates varying states of maturity across the
areas of study. Although the training and development literature is young in the
overall scope of business and management studies, it has increasingly gained
attention and validity in the past couple decades. Tourism training and education
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 16
is a relatively recent field of too, having emerged in the late 1960s. Rural tourism
is represented by a growing body of literature, showing a diversification away
from primary industry in rural areas and support for rural tourism as an alternative
to city-based vacations or sun and sand tourism activities.
The comparison of these bodies of literature provides some apparent
similarities and dissimilarities that warrant discussion. A common theme across
all the disciplines reviewed here is the call for collaboration and coordination of
efforts between stakeholders. Additional themes span across the literature and
have implications for rural tourism in Newfoundland. Below, connections are
drawn between the literature to elaborate on the concepts of cooperatives in
communities, the role of government, accessible education, and service quality
and competitiveness in the rural tourism industry. Following this thematic
discussion, a practical framework (see Table 1) is offered to support the decision
to provide training and development for rural tourism in Newfoundland.
Cooperatives in Communities
As described by MacDonald and Jolliffe’s (2003) four stages of community
development, cooperatives in communities can signify the coming together of
community members for the common goal of developing local tourism. The
success of rural tourism in Iceland based on community cooperatives driving
tourism development (Baum, 1999) is not dissimilar to the success story of the
Acadian community on PEI described by MacDonald & Jolliffe (2003). Although
cooperatives are not insusceptible to disagreement (McAreavey & McDonagh,
2011) the more decisions that are made collectively, the more support is likely to
be garnered locally. Furthermore, presenting a unitied effort during
communications with DMOs may give communities greater sway in how their
tourism offerings are marketed on a larger scale. By partnering with
organizations that can offer support and training options (such as HNL),
communities can be benefited more fully with the buying power of a cooperative
versus individual business owners. Overall, there is support in the literature for
the advantages of forming cooperatives to drive community development for the
purposes of rural tourism.
different parts of the world helps to provide the full spectrum of ideas on the role
of government. Given the challenging task of ensuring tourism training
curriculums remain consistent and of high standards across Canada, it is
plausible that governments could support these efforts. Perhaps of greatest
interest to tourism operators is what support their communities can expect to
receive, whether financial or through coordinated marketing efforts, etc. So, while
the literature provides varying perspectives on how government should be
involved, it also remains the responsibility of rural communities to communicate
their requirements to local, provincial, and federal levels of government. To
advance the industry, governments may play a role in influencing tourism
organizations to become more environmentally or ethically conscious (Zagonari,
2009) through policy and education. This in turn could have an effect on drawing
the conscious consumer of tourism products to the province.
Accessible Education
Researchers have predicted the growth of more accessible forms of
education, such as distance learning and virtual classrooms for tourism
education and training (Cho & Kang, 2005; MacLaurin, 2005). Indeed, in a
meeting of tourism educators from around the world, advanced human resource
skills were identified as a key area of focus required for success in the tourism
industry (Sheldon et al., 2008). In particular, it is suggested that students who
learn to work with distributed, virtual project teams would have more success by
way of access to additional ideas and resources not available in traditional
educational settings. This is of particular importance to people in rural
communities seeking tourism education if brick and mortar institutions are not
feasible options due to distance. Virtual training methods have been developed
but, as Salas and colleagues (2012) caution, they may not always be appropriate
to the type of training required. Where hands-on skills are required, simulations
can be developed and delivered virtually, but may not wholly substitute traditional
in-person training methods. Thus, while online training and education becomes
increasingly available, decision-makers are advised to consider whether the
outcomes they require can be met by such programs. Thus, careful consideration
of training as a system, with a view to what occurs before, during, and after, will
help to ensure training and education can be used to achieve individual and
organizational goals.
Conclusion
In this paper, previous research was reviewed with the aim of synthesizing
and condensing it into practical and accessible information for tourism
professionals and policy makers in Newfoundland. Studies reviewed included
examples from Europe (Jarábková & Hamada, 2012; McAreavey & McDonagh,
2011), the United States (Murova & Hanagriff, 2011), and China (Su, 2011),
indicating that rural tourism is of interest to researchers all around the globe. By
comparing the literature in the fields of training and development, tourism training
and education, and rural tourism, the similarities and differences provide
interesting ideas for tourism professionals, policy makers, and academics alike.
What is considerably valuable is that, by using one body of literature to inform
another, practical information can be applied to support and improve rural
tourism in Newfoundland. Overall findings suggest that rural tourism is a viable
tool for supporting the diversification of rural economies while helping to protect
and maintain cultural resources. Cooperatives in communities are suggested to
improve the success of rural tourism initiatives by creating ownership and
promoting utilization of various stakeholders’ knowledge and skillsets. Providing
tourism education and training not only enables organizations to provide
excellent service quality, but by doing so also builds competitive advantage for
rural tourism initiatives in a global market.
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR A SUCCESSFUL TOURISM INDUSTRY 20
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