10
Journal of Travel Research 00(0)
The effect of informativeness on memorable experience was
significantly stronger for the low familiar group (
β
=
0.300,
p
<
.01) than the high familiar group (
β
=
0.01, p
>
.05),
which indicated that the less familiar respondents wanted
more reliable, real-time, and accurate information than the
more familiar respondents did for enhancing their travel
experience. However, personalization significantly and posi-
tively affected the high familiar group (
β
=
0.506, p
<
.001)
stronger than the low familiar group (
β
=
0.124, p
>
.05).
Thus, respondents with high STT familiarity had more mem-
orable experience than those with low STT familiarity when
STTs suited their own needs and offered personalized and
customized features.
Conclusion
As one of a few empirical studies in the field of STTs and
tourists’ experience at the smart tourism destinations, this
study identified, in general, tourists used various STTs and
had memorable travel experience in the select US smart tour-
ism destinations. As expected, such STTs as Google maps,
ride-sharing
programs, city guide app, mobile payment, and
parking apps were tourists’ top five most used STTs at the
smart tourism destinations. Even though the majority of
respondents consisted of generation Y, advanced digital
STTs such as virtual reality, IoTs, augmented reality, and
mobile concierge were not commonly used at smart tourism
destinations, yet.
Adopting the four attributes of STTs from the studies of
Huang et al. (2017) and No and Kim (2015), this study
attempted to measure key STT attributes that affected tour-
ists’ memorable experience, which in turn led to their satis-
faction with STTs and future behavior intention to visit the
destination again. Findings of this study indicated that inter-
activity, personalization, and informativeness appeared to be
the key factors that affected tourists’ memorable experience.
Accessibility was not a main factor for tourists to maximize
the memorability of their experience. This might be due to
the current technological infrastructure
of smart tourism des-
tinations in the sense that the cities selected for this study
were all advanced smart cities in the United States and were
fully equipped with a high capacity of bandwidth.
Of the three significant STT attributes, interactivity was
the most influential contributor to tourists’ memorable travel
experience. Reasons may be that various interactive features
of STTs at the destinations helped tourists be more engaged
in tourism activities, keep them informed about all events
and activities, build social space in a digital environment,
and share with others about their memorable and unique
travel experience. These technology-based travel experi-
ences could induce high satisfaction with STTs and stronger
intent to visit the destinations again. STTs’ personalization
was also an influential feature that enhanced tourists’ experi-
ence at the destinations. By recognizing individual tourists’
requests, needs, and issues and by offering tailored responses
and services, STTs could play a role of self-operated tour
guides and help tourists actively participate in their inter-
ested tourism activities. Another influential attribute of STTs
was informativeness. STTs’ quality and trustworthy features
were starting points for tourists to build a loyal relationship
with the destination. Using STTs at destinations enables
tourists to enjoy their trip with
degrees of freedom and inde-
pendence and to participate selectively in unique and memo-
rable tourism activities to maximize their travel experience.
The perceptions of security/privacy in using STTs at des-
tinations moderated the relationships between the three STT
attributes—informativeness, interactivity, and personaliza-
tion—and tourists’ memorable experience. Findings showed
that the respondents would use STTs more for their memo-
rable experience in a high-security/privacy-protected envi-
ronment than in a less protected environment in the sense
that they viewed STTs as carriers of high quality and trust-
worthy information as well as enhancers of tailored service
and interactions. Thus, for an effective use of STTs at smart
tourism destinations, tourists need a technological environ-
ment with a high level of guaranteed security and privacy of
the users.
Findings of this study offer both theoretical and practical
implications. Although the researchers adopted four attri-
butes of STTs from the previous studies (i.e., Huang et al.
2017), the context of the present study was different from
that of Huang et al.’s (2017). Their study examined how trav-
elers used STTs in planning their travel in order to maximize
their travel satisfaction, while the
present study focused on
evaluating respondents’ actual use of STTs at smart tourism
destinations in the post travel stage. Apparently, the results of
this study are slightly different from those of Huang et al.’s
(2017). From the theoretical perspective, by examining the
importance of the four STT attributes and their relationships
with tourists’ memorable experience, this study found that
three of the four STT attributes, Interactivity (
β
=.53),
Personalization (
β
=.27), and Informativeness (
β
=.21), were
positively and statistically significant factors affecting tour-
ists’ memorable experience at smart tourism destinations.
The memorable experience appears to be a key predictor of
tourists’ satisfaction with STTs (
β
=
.75, p
<
0.001) and
behavior intention (
β
=
.26, p
<
0.01). In contrast, Huang
et al. (2017) examined tourists’ perceived travel satisfaction
(i.e., transaction and travel experience) by using second-
order STT attributes to understand how respondents per-
ceived and used STTs at the pretravel stage. In their study,
STTs included online-based tourism applications and travel
agents, blogs, websites, social media, and smartphone apps.
The present study, however, examined how the respondents
used 28 different STTs and tested their effectiveness based
on the four attributes of STTs.
The current study seems to be one of the first attempts to
evaluate tourists’ holistic experience with STTs after they
used them at smart tourism destinations, instead of measur-
ing the effects of STT usage on tourists’ travel satisfaction at
Jeong and Shin
11
the pretravel stage. Although Huang et al. (2017) identified
the key STT attributes and examined customers’ satisfaction
with STTs, their study focused on use of STTs for travel
planning, while this study centered on SST usage at smart
tourism destinations based on actual experiences and recall
of such experiences. Additionally, by examining the explana-
tory power of tourists’ memorable experience with STTs in
the proposed model (R
2
=
.70), this study asserted that the
three STT attributes could be key indicators in measuring the
effectiveness of STTs in smart tourist destination. This study
also confirmed the importance of perceived security/privacy
when tourists used STTs at destinations as shown in its mod-
erating effects in multigroup analyses.
This study provides destination tourism organizations with
practical insights into effective deployment of STTs at destina-
tions to enhance tourists’ memorable experience. Regardless
of tourists’ age, the majority of tourists used at least two STTs
from their smartphone while traveling in the destination.
Tourists’ usage rate of STTs at destinations expects to increase
in the future. To accommodate tourists’ needs and their pre-
ferred environment for STT usage, destination marketers
should ensure high performance on at least three key
STT attributes, namely, Interactivity,
Personalization, and
Informativeness. When tourists use STTs to browse destina-
tions, they expect STTs to be highly interactive sharing local
information, highly personalized to their preferences and
requests, and reliable and useful for their trip. When tourists
use City Guide Apps to find a local museum in San Francisco,
for example, they want to have information about the exact
location of the museum, the distance from their location, local
traffic conditions incorporating accidents and constructions,
reliable reviews about local restaurants, and so forth.
Because one fundamental goal in most trips is to have a
memorable experience through participation in various
activities, marketers of smart tourism destinations should
ensure tourists’ privacy by providing a secure and worry-free
environment for those who use STTs at the destination.
Findings of this study indicated that although three STT attri-
butes were key predictors of tourists’ memorable experience,
such memorable experience with STT usage would deterio-
rate if security and privacy were concerns in using STTs.
Thus, destination tourism organizations must have IT secu-
rity personnel check their Internet platforms on a regular
basis and update their security system frequently.
Although there are various destination-specific factors
that affect tourists’ behavior, their satisfaction with STTs
and intention to visit the destination again are highly depen-
dent on how they experienced
STTs in the highly digital
tourism destination environment. It is clear that tourism
organizations of smart destinations should pay more atten-
tion to enhancing tourists’ memorable experience with
STTs. Although tourists’ use of augmented reality, virtual
reality, and other STTs appeared to be relatively low in this
study, local smart tourism organizations need to begin
incorporating these features in their destinations, as tourists
start showing interest.
The findings of this study are subject to several limita-
tions. This study selected only five smart tourism destina-
tions in the United States to test the study’s model. These
five smart tourism destinations are located in large, metro-
politan areas representing key US smart cities. The findings
could be different if smart tourism destinations were located
in suburban or smaller cities. Future studies can sample dif-
ferent scales of smart tourism destinations featuring different
levels of STTs’ availability and functionality in an effort to
increase generalizability of the findings across more destina-
tions and tourists’ memorable experiences.
Of another question is whether
the proposed framework is
applicable to smart tourism destinations in different coun-
tries and across travelers of foreign origins. More studies are
encouraged to replicate this study in different countries with
different travelers in order to assess the model’s applicabil-
ity. As a starting point, this study used security/privacy as a
moderator and found outcomes of theoretical as well as prac-
tical importance. Examinations of additional moderators
and/or mediators along the destination location and traveler
origins or cultural background will greatly enhance the
explanatory power of tourists’ memorable experience.
Because of a potential selection bias in sampling STT
users, the results of the study may be unique to the sample.
Future studies may explore differences and similarities of
STT users versus nonusers in responding to STT attributes
and their relationships with tourism experience and intention
to revisit the smart tourism destinations. It would be also
interesting to investigate and understand what kind of digital
environments can cater to tourists’ STT needs and usage.
Lastly, since tourists’ perceived destination image has been
one of the key pull factors in destination marketing, assess-
ing the effects of STTs on destination image may result in
valuable contributions to theoretical progress as well as to
industry practice.
Acknowledgments
We greatly thank USC College of Hospitality, Retail, and Sport
Management for the financial support for this research.
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