B Informed

A Guide to Using Picasa
This is the first post in a new series of "A Guide To.." highlighting better practice or at worst opinions on how you might improve your profile online.We hope that you find them useful and of course if you do you can always let your fellow businesses k...

Good Use of Blog by Dornoch Hotelier
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Scottish Highlands Year of Food and Drink Support
New funding for a series of events in the Highlands to mark the year-long celebration of Scotland's iconic produce has been announced.As part of the national drive to promote Scotland as a land of food and drink, additional funding of £25,000 has been aw...

TM Briefing - Using Google Alerts
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Scottish Enterprise - Value for Money?
In the light of all of the figures being pushed about about budget cuts and job losses across the public sector it would seem logical that tourism and hospitality will feel the pain in terms of budget reductions and staffing cuts. However there are argume...

Tourism Matters News Archive

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17-02-2010

Open Championship Loss to Scotland

With the news that The Open will be out of Scotland for a gap of four years because of The Ryder Cup and Commonwealth Games, The Scotsman's comments section had some numpty from Flakirk just simply saying "Aw. Diddums!"

Aw Diddums? Perhaps not unsuitable but certainly reflective of a lack of undestanding of the impact of this on Scottish tourism and revenues.

Zero it in yet further and look at it from an Ayrshire tourism perspective and it becomes a highly significant factor in tourism investment in the years to come. From having two Open championships a decade to having a gap of at least seven, perhaps more is of major concern to an area that is already suffering. It was always likely that Troon wouldn't get The Open Championship because of the combined effects of the Commonwealth Games and The Ryder Cup but it was never (publicly) factored into the economic benefits of hosting them.

The idea that The Ryder Cup is now to be seen as a replacement for an Open Championship that would have been held here certainly removes some of the economic benefits for the country as a whole.

It may not seem such a big deal to aw diddums from Falkirk but with an Open contibuting anything between £10 and £15 million to the local economy and perhaps double that figure for Scotland as a whole. That excludes the television exposure and column inches generated worldwide. A single Open Championship in Ayrshire could eclipse ten years of Homecoming Scotland events.

"Aw diddums" seems a slightly strange reaction to such an economic impact...Back to News