logo
Why Live Tourism Is a Top Priority for Global Travel Investment

Why Live Tourism Is a Top Priority for Global Travel Investment

Skift19-05-2025
Live tourism has taken hold across the global travel industry. With trillions of dollars at stake, travel companies are actively looking to invest in destinations that provide seasonality-proof opportunities for entertainment, sports, and cultural experiences that meet this demand.
This sponsored content was created in collaboration with a Skift partner.
The traditional tourism funnel has been turned upside down as more consumers, especially younger generations, seek opportunities to 'play' when they travel. To satisfy this demand for play, they're looking for live tourism centered on entertainment, sports, and cultural experiences that are not defined by a particular place but rather a unique experience at a special time in an unforgettable space.
'Instead of choosing a destination first, younger travelers especially are now deciding what type of experiences they want to enjoy before selecting a location that offers those experiences,' said Ross McAuley, MD advisor and director general of Play Qiddiya City DMMO, at the 2025 Skift Megatrends event in London. 'This shift [toward 'live tourism'] underscores a growing demand for destinations that offer immersive, authentic experiences that go beyond traditional sightseeing or 'fly and flop' travel.'
According to a research report from Skift and Qiddiya City, more than 90% of travelers aged 44 and younger agreed that participating in entertainment, sports, and cultural activities when they travel is important to their overall sense of happiness and well-being. More than 75% said that these types of play experiences have become more central to their travel plans in the past five years.
Millennials and Gen Z are projected to account for 83 percent of hotel guests by 2030, according to an LG Business Solutions report, and industry leaders investing in the future of travel are primarily focused on this generation of travelers.
Destinations like Qiddiya City — specifically designed as a world-class destination where play takes center stage — are fostering live tourism built around entertainment, sports, and culture to create mutually beneficial opportunities for all stakeholders in the travel business.
'The goal is to share experiences, because you will always remember how you feel,' Mehdi Hemici, chief loyalty officer at Accor, told Skift Research. 'Rather than where you were or why you traveled, that emotional aspect once you've experienced it and shared it with your loved one, your children, your family member, your best friend, is ultimately the emotional connection that we're trying to establish.'
How Live Tourism Drives Year-Round Investment Returns
Sporting events, concerts, and unique cultural attractions have consistently inspired travel and raked in billions of tourism dollars annually. For instance, Global Market Insights estimated that sports tourism alone totaled more than $600 billion worldwide in 2024, a figure that is expected to double by 2032.
Skift reported that events such as FIFA's 2022 World Cup in Qatar had 3.4 million fans, generating an event-record-breaking $5.8 billion, while Formula 1's worldwide race circuit brought in 5.7 million attendees in 2022 — up 36% from 2019 — pushing revenues to $2.5 billion.
The economic impact of these experiences is often a catalyst for growth opportunities, but 'investment should not be reliant on a single event,' Dmitri Cooray, Managing Director of Jetwing Hotels in Sri Lanka, told Skift. 'You need to be able to sustain demand in the long term.'
According to Bloomberg, Qatar's government spent more than $300 billion on infrastructure projects, including highway and airport expansions ahead of the World Cup, and hotel investment continued strong following the event, as reported by THP. For a single F1 event in Las Vegas — the first of a now-annual event in the city — roughly 145,000 visitors spent about $561 million. The Taylor Swift effect has been well-documented, generating over $1 billion in direct travel spending in the U.S. in 2023 alone.
Another case in point is Sydney, Australia. On a recent episode of the Skift Travel Podcast, Pip Harrison, managing director of Tourism Australia, explained that the 2000 Sydney Olympics supercharged the economy by about 10 years, but not in the way one might think. The tourism bump drove more visitation in the two or three years following the event, a blueprint they're using again for the Summer Olympics coming back to Queensland and Brisbane in 2032.
'We look at sporting events as moments not just to fill the stadium; when the eyes of the world are on Australia for a particular event, we want to show up and showcase what there is to see and what there is to do outside of the stadium,' Harrison said.
Year-round attractions like those in Orlando, a destination built around play, highlight the value of consistent opportunities for visitation. According to Visit Orlando, the region's 74 million visitors in 2023 contributed $58.5 billion to its community and generated a total economic impact of $92.5 billion — a 5.6% increase. 'That's like hosting the Super Bowl nearly twice a week for a year,' the organization said.
Mike Waterman, currently president and CEO of Visit Anaheim, formerly worked with Visit Orlando and sees many similar opportunities in southern California.
'The beauty of [these destinations] is that every year as a DMO or CVB, we have new attractions, new events, new things to promote,' Waterman said on stage at the 2024 World Travel Market. 'So whether you come every year or every two or three years, you are going to be able to experience something new.'
How Live Tourism Attracts Global Visitors and Benefits Local Communities
According to Skift and Qiddiya City research, 93% of travel executives agreed that destinations focused on offering entertainment, sports, and cultural activities will become more important in the global tourism landscape in the next five years. Furthermore, 84% of travel executives said that they are excited about investing in new destinations designed exclusively for entertainment, sports, and culture.
Tourism growth and development require thoughtfulness, especially as cities and regions with dense populations consider the positive economics of more visitation. Where well-tread places like Barcelona and Amsterdam are looking to stem challenges from overtourism, growth markets like the Middle East have an opportunity to be more thoughtful as they build anew.
For instance, Qiddiya City is rising from the ground up just 40 minutes from Riyadh, a metropolitan area with more than 7 million residents and an airport that saw 37.2 million passengers in 2024, a 16.6% increase from the year prior, according to travel retail publisher Moodie Davitt Report. These factors compel Qiddiya City's developers to think holistically about its appeal and approach.
Destinations focusing on play are more fundamentally inclusive and more economically diversified for investors since they're catering to all types of demographics: sports fan bases, festival goers, thrill-seekers, art enthusiasts, and critically, a consistent flow of domestic travelers and local residents.
'While Qiddiya City isn't a cure for all societal issues, it represents a new vision for urban living centered on sustainable lifestyles, fostering connections, and promoting well-being,' said McAuley. 'We have tried to reimagine what cities can offer to enrich lives and communities. People are going to live here. It will be bigger [in area] than the city of Orlando and have over 500,000 residents. So as we build this master plan from nothing, it's important that it's universal and accessible, and everyone is welcome to come and play.'
Waterman agreed with this sentiment. OCVibe, a 100-acre, $4 billion 'hub for a vibrant culture [and] a community connected through shared experiences,' undoubtedly aims to attract Disneyland tourists to extend their stays in southern California, but it's being built primarily for residents.
'Play is different for everybody, and I think for us as marketers and DMO leaders, we have to understand what people want to see,' Waterman said. 'And it varies by day, it varies by time of season. So it's [about having] this abundance of riches at our disposal, and if they build it right and do it authentically, we're going to make sure it's as accessible as possible to both locals and out-of-town visitors.'
Why Travel Investors Should Prioritize Live Tourism
These lessons apply across the travel industry as global traveler demographics evolve and sentiments and behavior continue to change alongside them. Don't be mistaken: Paris, London, and New York aren't dropping off the list of top tourist arrivals any time soon.
However, smart travel executives seeking success in the next era of global tourism would be wise to diversify their growth by investing in destinations that are focused on live tourism and play, which foster seasonality-proof revenue opportunities, support authentic experiences, and build symbiotic relationships with the communities of which they're a part.
'Play thrives on collaboration, and the travel industry is inherently collaborative, bringing people, ideas, and expertise together to craft immersive experiences that resonate deeply with travelers worldwide,' said McAuley. 'At its core, this shared process of discussion, ideation, and creation embodies the essence of play: vibrant, dynamic, and filled with collective energy.'
Download the report from Skift and Qiddiya City for extensive research and deeper insights into the power of play and its impact on the future of global tourism.
This content was created collaboratively by Qiddiya City and Skift's branded content studio, SkiftX.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fox News hosts were determined to help Trump stay in office after 2020 election, legal filing says
Fox News hosts were determined to help Trump stay in office after 2020 election, legal filing says

Los Angeles Times

time11 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Fox News hosts were determined to help Trump stay in office after 2020 election, legal filing says

The 2020 presidential election is history, but a legal dispute over Fox News' reporting on President Trump's false claims of voter fraud is heating up. A motion for summary judgment by voting equipment company Smartmatic filed Tuesday in New York Supreme Court laid out in detail how phony allegations that it manipulated votes to swing the election to Joe Biden were amplified on Fox News. The motion also described how the Fox News Media hosts who are defendants in the suit — the late Lou Dobbs, Jeanine Pirro and Maria Bartiromo of Fox Business — were allegedly committed to helping Trump prove his fraud theories so he could remain in office. 'I work so hard for the President and the party,' Pirro wrote in a text to Ronna McDaniel, then chair of the Republican National Committee. Pirro left Fox News in May to become U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Smartmatic is suing Fox News for $2.7 billion in damages, claiming that the network's airing of the false statements hurt the London-based company's ability to expand its business in the U.S. Fox News settled a similar suit from Dominion Voting Systems for $787.5 million in 2023. The motion alleged that on-air hosts repeated the fraud claims even though executives and producers were told they were false. The Fox News research department, known as the 'Brainroom,' allegedly informed network producers that Smartmatic's role in the 2020 election was limited to Los Angeles County and that the company's software was not used in Dominion voting machines, another false claim made on the air. Fox News maintains the network's reporting on President Trump's false claims were newsworthy and protected by the 1st Amendment. But part of the company's legal strategy has been focused on minimizing the damage claims. Fox News has asserted that any problems Smartmatic has experienced in attracting new business are rooted not in its reporting but in the federal investigation into the company's activities with overseas governments. Last year, Smartmatic's founder, Roger Alejandro Piñate Martinez, and two other company officials were indicted by the U.S. attorney's office and charged with bribing Philippine officials in order to get voting machine contracts in the country in 2016. While the Trump camp's assertions that the election was fixed were not believed throughout Fox News and parent company Fox Corp., the conservative-leaning network gave continued to give them oxygen to keep its audience tuned in, the motion alleged. The motion described a 'pivot' that occurred on Nov. 8, 2020, when then-Fox News Executive Chairman Rupert Murdoch and his son Lachlan asked Fox News Media Chief Executive Suzanne Scott to address the decline in the network's ratings after Biden was declared the winner of the election. The network also looked at research to evaluate why viewers were leaving. 'The conclusion reached based on performance analytics: give the audience more election fraud,' the court document stated. Such thinking, the filing said, permeated the company, already in a panic over losing viewers to right-leaning network Newsmax. The upstart outlet saw a ratings surge after Biden's win due to its unwavering support of Trump's claims. 'Think about how incredible our ratings would be if Fox went ALL in on STOP THE STEAL,' Fox News host Jesse Watters said in a text to his colleague Greg Gutfeld. Throughout November and December 2020, the three hosts named in the suit, Dobbs, Pirro and Bartiromo, repeatedly featured Trump's attorneys Rudolph Giuliani and Sidney Powell as guests. They spread the falsehoods that Smartmatic software was used in Dominion voting machines and altered millions of votes. Smartmatic's work in Los Angeles during the 2020 election was meant to be an entry point for the company to expand its domestic business. The company's defamation suit claims that Fox News obliterated those efforts by presenting the false fraud claims. But Fox News believes that issues with Smartmatic's $282-million contract with Los Angeles County could help advance its case. On Aug. 1, federal prosecutors filing a legal brief alleging that taxpayer funds from the county went into a slush fund held by a shell company to help pay for its illegal activities. Federal prosecutors handling the case involving Smartmatic's business in the Philippines said they plan to detail similar alleged schemes out of L.A. County and Venezuela to show that the bribery fits a larger pattern. Fox News attorneys have filed a brief asking for county records that they believe will help bolster their case. The network is also expected to try to get the Smartmatic indictments in front of the court to raise doubts about the company's reputation. A Smartmatic representative said Fox News' records request is a diversion tactic. 'Fox lies and when caught they lie again to distract,' a Smartmatic representative said in a statement. 'Fox's latest filing is just another attempt to divert attention from its long-standing campaign of falsehoods and defamation against Smartmatic.' The company added that it abided with the law in Los Angeles County and 'every jurisdiction where we operate.' Smartmatic's Tuesday court filing also included information that contradicted public statements Fox News made at the time. The document alleged that Fox News fired political analyst Chris Stirewalt and longtime Washington bureau executives Bill Sammon for their involvement in calling the state of Arizona for Biden on election night. The early call of the close result in the state upset the Trump camp and alienated his supporters. At the time, Fox News said Stirewalt departed as part of a reorganization and Sammon retired. But the motion said Rupert Murdoch himself signed off on the decision to sever Stirewalt and Sammon from the company in an effort to assuage angry viewers who defected. The motion cited a communication from Dana Perino, co-host of Fox News show 'The Five,' describing a phone call with Stirewalt after his dismissal. 'I explained to him — you were right, you didn't cave, and you got fired for doing the right thing,' Perino said. Both Sammon and Stirewalt now work in the Washington bureau of NewsNation, the cable news network owned by Nexstar Media Group.

EV Company Everrati Unveils New 993-Generation Porsche 911-Based Model
EV Company Everrati Unveils New 993-Generation Porsche 911-Based Model

Forbes

time13 minutes ago

  • Forbes

EV Company Everrati Unveils New 993-Generation Porsche 911-Based Model

There are more than a few methods of automotive preservation in our current era, and among the most tech-forward is by United Kingdom-based Everrati Automotive Limited. Rather than strictly following the norms and folkways of maintaining originality, this company preserves the core fundamentals in certain iconic cars' driving characteristics, yet with an eco-friendly twist: dropping the internal combustion engine (ICE) in favor of its own tailored EV powertrain. And, wrapped in a ground-up re-engineering of the entire vehicle, complete with bespoke luxury customization. Everrati's made a name for itself with its 964-generation Porsche 911-based creations, one of which I had the privilege of driving for a different publication a few months back. I was pleasantly surprised by how true to the original 911 formula it was, between its beautiful steering, braking, and handling. Plus, more than enough power to walk any one of the 964's original iterations in the quarter mile. Now, the company's unveiled that it's now working with 993-generation-based 911s, the generation that came after the 964 and before the water-cooled 996. Think: Quintessential '90s Porsche styling and driving. And if it follows the same fun-to-drive formula as the 964, it could be the best sports car it's created, yet. The 993 is widely regarded as the pinnacle air-cooled 911, with its compact and lightweight (for its era) construction, improved structural rigidity, and just-modern-enough accouterments. Everrati's 993 will take the form of an initial, nine-unit run dubbed the Founders Edition that pays design homage to the generation's Turbo S, of which only 345 were ever made. It will err on the side of luxury grand touring with a bespoke tailored interior, emphasis on refinement in its driving experience, and harness the latest EV technology derived from motorsports duty. What's particularly appealing to some discerning enthusiasts, is the ability to savor their very own Turbo S without costly maintenance. Or, any other potential trouble keeping it alive for future generations to appreciate. 'The Porsche 911 (993) Founders Edition is for those who missed their chance to own an air-cooled Turbo S or those who want to relive it, responsibly,' says Everrati Founder & CEO, Justin Lunny. 'These cars hold stories. They were never just machines; they were memories in motion. But most classics weren't built for the long haul, not without help at least. With this redefined 993, we're giving people a way to preserve that emotional connection and still enjoy the drive, every day. It's the dream garage car you don't just have to admire, you can use it, pass it down, and keep it alive. That's what truly makes this a timeless classic.' There's no telling what emissions standards, parts availability, etc., will look like down the line. This helps alleviate these concerns, and, at the same time, increases interest from EV-focused circles and reduces enthusiasts' carbon footprint along the way.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store