New Orleans achieves 8.75 million visitors in 2011

New Orleans’ tourism industry welcomed 8.75 million visitors in 2011, an increase of 5.6 percent, or 462,263 from the number of visitors in 2010 (8.3 million).

New Orleans’ tourism industry welcomed 8.75 million visitors in 2011, an increase of 5.6 percent, or 462,263 from the number of visitors in 2010 (8.3 million). Those 8.75 million visitors spent US$5.47 billion, a US$180 million increase over 2010 and the highest spending in the city’s history, according to a study released today. Tourism in New Orleans is an important economic engine, employing 74,000 people and generating spending that represents roughly half of the tourism spending for the entire state of Louisiana.

“These results are a reflection of the hard work of all those in the hospitality industry and a testament to the continued resilience of our great city,” said Mayor Landrieu, “Our city’s reputation as a top destination only continues to grow, as evidenced by the unprecedented run of special events we continue to host as we continue to work toward the goal of welcoming 13 million visitors in the year 2018.”

The 2011 results come as New Orleans kicks off the 2012 spring festival season and is in the midst of hosting an unprecedented series of high-profile events such as Navy Week, the NCAA Final Four, and SEC Championship, all leading up to the Super Bowl next year.

All key indicators increased in 2011, compared to 2010:

– Overnight visitors grew by 337,000
– Hotel visitors grew by 75,000
– Lodging spending increased by US$29.6 million
– The number of visitors visiting friends and relatives increased by 251,000
– The number of visitors who came in just for the day increased by 125,000
– 76.5 percent of visitors surveyed were in New Orleans for vacation/pleasure
– 23.5 percent of visitors surveyed were in New Orleans for a convention, association, trade show, corporate meeting’ or general business travel
– 58.6 percent of business travelers extended their stay for pleasure for an average of 2.1 days
– Cruise visitors comprised about 1.3 percent of the total number of visitor responses
– Restaurant spending increased by US$67.3 million (4.3 percent) – Entertainment/recreation increased by US$65.1 million (11.0 percent)

The 2011 New Orleans Area Visitor Profile report also found:

– 75.7 percent of visitors had an income $50,000 or more, over 35.8 percent having US$100,000 or more
– 40.6 percent of New Orleans visitors were in town for the first time; 59.4 percent are repeat visitors
– Overnight visitation from top feeder markets outside of Louisiana were: Texas, California, Florida, and New York
– Visitors age 50-64 made up the largest demographic for 2011 visitors (37.8 percent), followed by 35-49 (29.2 percent), 25-34 (18.4 percent), 65 and older (9.1 percent) and 18-24 (5.4 percent)
– Overnight visitor stays in New Orleans went from 4.1 in 2010 to an average of 4.2 nights in 2011
– The proportion of overnight visitors staying in a hotel was 57.7 percent
– verage party size was 2.9 people
– The majority of visitors who stayed in a hotel-made reservations through the hotel website (31.1 percent), or a travel website (22.1 percent)
– 16.7 percent of visitors called their hotel directly, while 8.4 percent used association housing during their stay in New Orleans
– The majority of New Orleans area visitors surveyed arrived by airplane (50.5 percent) or in their personal vehicle (44.1 percent)

“Reaching a record-breaking US$5.47 billion dollars of visitor spending in 2011 proves that the visitor demand for New Orleans and their impact on our economy is on a steady growth trajectory,” said Stephen Perry, President and CEO of the New Orleans Convention and Visitors Bureau, “Yet tourism does not just happen on its own. It is fueled by marketing, public relations, and aggressive sales strategies. In order to reach our goal of 13.7 million visitors and US$11 billion dollars by 2018, the hospitality industry is seeking to raise its own additional funding for marketing. Tourism funding is a tremendous investment in job creation, the expansion of our cultural economy, the restoration of our core infrastructure, and new tax revenue generation that benefits every citizen in every neighborhood in New Orleans.”

Mark Romig, President and CEO of the New Orleans Tourism Marketing Corporation added: “These results continue to demonstrate that New Orleans is seen by visitors as an authentic and unique travel destination, offering the widest variety of attractions, restaurants, and hotels, fitting all budgets and interests. Our advertising and marketing plan for 2012 will build on these positive survey results as we continue to target both regional markets throughout Louisiana and neighboring states and key national markets such as the West Coast, Midwest, and Northeast.”

John Williams, Interim Dean of the School of Business at the University of New Orleans commented: “New Orleans has become a dining mecca, as noted by Travel & Leisure’s November, 2011 issue declaring us #1 in fine dining, #1 in cafรฉs, and #3 in ethnic food. Supporting these rankings, 85.5 percent of visitors have a casual dining experience and 42.3 percent a fine-dining experience when visiting New Orleans. Visitors to New Orleans place a high importance on food, and our study shows that we consistently exceed their expectations.”

The University of New Orleans Hospitality Research Center is a collaborative effort of the University of New Orleans’ Division of Business and Economic Research (DBER) and the Lester E. Kabacoff School of Hotel, Restaurant, and Tourism Administration (HRT). Its function is to provide a variety of research services to hospitality, travel, and tourism organizations. The HRC has been producing reports similar to this visitor study since 1997.

The New Orleans Tourism Marketing Corporation is the City of New Orleans’ official leisure travel promotion agency created to foster jobs and economic growth by developing the tourism industry in New Orleans. NOTMC is publicly-funded and provides year-round online marketing, advertising, public relations, and special event programming in order to support the growth of leisure travel to New Orleans.

The New Orleans Convention & Visitors Bureau is a nationally-accredited, 1,000-member destination marketing organization and the largest and most successful private economic development corporation in Louisiana. The CVB and its members influence thousands of decision-makers and millions of visitors
to choose New Orleans through direct sales, marketing, public relations, branding, and visitor services at our New Orleans headquarters and offices in Washington DC, New York, Chicago, and four foreign countries. Consistently recognized as one of the top five CVBs in the country, the New Orleans CVB celebrated its 51st anniversary in 2011. For more information, please visit www.neworleanscvb.com .

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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