How to Revise The Travel and Tourism Industry — Pearson Education Ltd A-Level Travel & Tourism
Identify external factors influencing travel and tourism. Assess the impact of political, economic, social, technological, environmental and legal factors
Examiner Tips for The Travel and Tourism Industry
- Always adopt the PESTEL acronym as a mental checklist to ensure comprehensive coverage of all factor categories in your answer.
- For each factor, immediately pair it with a concrete, real-world tourism example (e.g., 'The UK’s Air Passenger Duty (APD) as a political tax impacting low-cost carriers') to demonstrate applied understanding.
- When assessing impact, structure your response to consider both immediate and long-term effects, and where possible, quantify the impact (e.g., estimated loss in tourist arrivals).
- Use appropriate terminology such as 'disposable income', 'elasticity of demand', or 'carrying capacity' to show depth of knowledge relevant to A-Level grading descriptors.
- Always link your sector descriptions to the travel and tourism customer journey, demonstrating how each sector meets specific traveller needs at different stages.
- Use specific, named UK-based examples (e.g., TUI for vertical integration, the National Trust for voluntary sector) to substantiate your arguments and show applied knowledge.
- For high marks, critically evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of public sector involvement in tourism (e.g., VisitBritain's promotional role vs. market distortion).
- Always anchor your analysis in established frameworks (e.g., Tourism Satellite Account) and reference respected data sources like WTTC or national tourism boards.
Common Mistakes in The Travel and Tourism Industry
- Confusing internal business factors (e.g., marketing strategy) with external macro-environmental factors; all points must relate to the PESTEL framework.
- Merely listing factors without explaining their impact, especially failing to differentiate between positive and negative consequences for the industry.
- Using outdated or generic examples (e.g., the 2008 financial crisis) instead of referencing recent, specific events like post-pandemic travel recovery or current fuel price surges.
- Overlooking the dynamic nature of social factors, such as ignoring the increasing influence of sustainability consciousness on consumer behaviour.
- Treating factors in isolation rather than recognising how they interact (e.g., a technological innovation like virtual reality might reduce environmental impact of physical travel).