 
          Business View Caribbean
        
        
          
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          that many hoteliers and other tourism industry players
        
        
          were yet to implement online marketing strategies. He
        
        
          challenged conference delegates to find creative ways
        
        
          to share the knowledge gained to inspire others in the
        
        
          industry to embrace the benefits of these new digital
        
        
          technologies.
        
        
          “We have to satisfy the discerning visitor who wishes
        
        
          to experience all the simple pleasures, all the natural
        
        
          ambience, all the scenic beauty and the hospitality of
        
        
          our people that we advertise in our brochures but at
        
        
          the same time is not prepared to be inconvenience by
        
        
          communication and other challenges,” he said.
        
        
          CTO Secretary General Hugh Riley suggested that un-
        
        
          locking creative capacity would create new employ-
        
        
          ment opportunities within the tourism sector and in-
        
        
          crease loyalty among visitors.
        
        
          “Tourism is the business of creating and delivering
        
        
          memorable experiences to people who have left their
        
        
          own environment and have gone to great lengths to
        
        
          share our space and break bread with us. How we
        
        
          manage that is entirely within our control. There is no
        
        
          limit to the ideas involved in turning those strangers
        
        
          and their friends into our friends forever,” he said.
        
        
          The CTO’s secretary general also underscored the