Adrian Loveridge - Hotelier
Adrian Loveridge – Hotelier

First impressions and attention to detail in tourism, I suspect like most sectors can make all the difference whether you retain a customer, or in this case, a visitor. While flying back into Barbados last week, my thoughts were that despite all the time ‘we’ have been involved in the hospitality industry, have ‘we’ really learnt from our mistakes.

While exiting a Virgin Atlantic plane, the second half-full flight on this route that I was personally experiencing in eight days, I funnelled through with the other passengers to immigration. Looking up, many of the overhead walkway ceilings were dirty, cobwebbed and frankly, badly in need of painting.

Reduced airport earnings may be an issue, but what does it take to use some of the currently wasted space to offer advertising opportunities, that would in turn pay for any increased maintenance costs to keep these areas clean. Next you are confronted with what must have been relatively expensive full colour large decals, promoting not as you would reasonably expect, upcoming events, but a 2013 Crop Over Season that ended weeks ago.

With an American Airlines arrival just minutes before, our 146 Gatwick passengers filtered in behind the Immigration queue. Yet despite the overwhelming number of passport holders being ‘International’, just two Immigration Officers are ‘manning’ the many booths. Seemingly lacking any logic or planning, four officers are on the ‘Caricom’ desks, with far fewer persons to process.

Perhaps it’s long past time that tourism is better explained to all the human component parts of the industry who are there to help make it work. Even before our average British visitor boards an eight to nine hour flight, there is an airport check-in requirement of up to three hours. Very few of our cherished guests actually live on the doorstep of Gatwick or Manchester. Many will have to undertake a road or rail journey, sometimes involving hundreds of miles, perhaps under adverse weather or traffic conditions. So, when that traveller finally arrives at Grantley Adams, paramount on their mind is to get to their booked accommodation, relax, unwind and if they are very lucky, take a daylight dip in the inviting warm ocean.

This is what lingering memories are made of. After all, the overwhelming number of our visitors have worked 50 weeks of the year to justify the cost of this precious holiday. The very last consideration on their mind is to experience what many of us feel are unnecessary delays in entering their destination of choice.

And choice is a very big factor here.

If we make it a too difficult or prolonged process, next time we risk them opting for another holiday location choice, where more time can be spent actually participating in what they have paid for. These observations are not new or ground breaking. The immigration situation has been going on for as long as I can remember, but surely now is the time to be doing something positive to improve the status quo?

As we end, what is traditionally the quietest tourism month of the year, is it time to reflect on how we do business, by viewing the industry through our customers’ eyes?

105 responses to “Percy Says Tourism is Our Business, Oink Oink!”


  1. Pyramid Entertainment Management Inc is on the list as well. This is Senator Santia Bradshaw’s company.


  2. What a thing…………


  3. Normally if a company is receiving funding in the form of loans or grants from the Enterprise Growth Fund, a certificate of clearance has to be produced to ensure the company does not owe the government any money before the funds are released, if money is owed the government in the form of NIS or VAT well your dog died, you cannot get the funds, now it would be really interesting to know if Pyramid Entertainment Management Inc owed VAT before or after they received such extremely large amounts of funds from Enterprise Growth Fund, this is where dates become very, very important…..wow!!!


  4. Also at the press conference were: Saint Lucia Deputy Commissioner in charge of crime operations, Joseph Eugene; Assistant Commissioner of Police in charge of crime (in the absence of DCP Frances Henry), Anastasius Mason; and Administrative Officer, Philomen St. Clair.

    The crime records presented by police this week made no reference to homicides as in previous years, but stuck to the crime of murder of which there was 37. Previous figures in 2012 showed 44 homicides – a total of killings found to be intentional and those still under investigation, including killings by the police.

    “We are not in the game of hiding any stats because at the end of the day the stats help us to move from one point to the next – it helps us to re-strategise our operations,” Acting Commissioner Alexander said. “We make available all the stats to the press when it is requested.”

    According to the just released 2012 statistics, there were 39 murder cases in 2011 and 44 in 2010 in St. Lucia.
    …………………
    Keep the excuses coming CL and traitors.

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