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  • Home > News > Details
    Rwanda is beyond words
    2014-12-12

    I have been to 28 of Rwanda's 30 districts and, from my tourism experience in China, Rwanda will have to do more to enjoy a relatively big share of the tourism cake.

    One area that needs to be addressed is how information about different tourist attractions is packaged and delivered. In this day and age, tourists need information about places they visit in all forms: audio, video and print. But there is little documentation about tourist spots in the country.

    The same is true for many African countries trying to attract foreign tourists.

    Information is largely delivered through word of mouth, and most times the message is lost in translation. At the many different tourist spots I visited in China, I nearly always carried home bundles of information detailing the history of the sites, whether in the form of print, video or audio.

    Tourists need maps to be able to locate which areas they are visiting. Why is all this important? It is now not uncommon to find many tourists writing blogs about their experiences and sharing them on different social media platforms. So the information provided can actually be used to promote a tourism site in addition to enriching a tourist's experience.

    There is need for more investment in tourism infrastructure and in services that tourists need. Two years ago while in Rwanda, I explored the Congo Nile Trail that took me through the districts of Karongi, Rutsiro and through to Rubavu. Beautiful scenery abounds but the lack of decent lodging, poor food, a lack of detailed route information and maps were major downsides to my five-day trek.

    Tourism activities are supposed to be leisure undertakings, a time to relax and enjoy the beauty that nature provides. Most facilities are quick to provide a free Wi-Fi connection but they forget that this could be the very weapon that will be used against them if they provide poor service.

    When tourists are dissatisfied, they will tell the world about it. It is easier to attract new tourists than it is to get them back, especially if they have had a bad experience. One bad experience can ruin the entire industry.

    Tourists who come to Africa have perhaps been to other places. A Chinese tourist enjoying the canopy walk in Nyungwe rainforest in Rwanda will perhaps have been in a cable car to the top of Sanqing Mountain in Jiangxi. But what tourism managers in Nyungwe do to make the canopy walk a more memorable experience for tourists can make a big difference.

    In this increasingly competitive sector, Africa, and Rwanda in particular, will have to put its best foot forward to survive and thrive.

    (China Daily Africa Weekly 12/12/2014 page26)

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