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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Volunteer tourism, greenwashing and understanding responsible marketing using market signalling theory

Victoria Louise Smith, +1 more
- 25 Apr 2014 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 6, pp 942-963
TLDR
In this article, the authors used an online content analysis based on the International Voluntourism Guidelines for Commercial Operators to understand the use of responsibility as a market signalling tool and found that responsibility is not used for market signalling; preference is given to communicating what is easy, and not what is important.
Abstract
Volunteer tourism has been heavily criticised for its negative consequences on destinations and volunteers, often the direct result of unrealistic demand-led marketing and lack of consideration for the environmental and social costs of host communities. While some industry participants have responded through adherence to best practice, little information or support is available about how to responsibly market volunteer tourism. This research uses an online content analysis based on the International Voluntourism Guidelines for Commercial Operators to understand the use of responsibility as a market signalling tool. Five influential web pages of eight organisations are scored across 19 responsibility criteria and compared against the organisation’s legal status, product type and price. We find that responsibility is not used for market signalling; preference is given to communicating what is easy, and not what is important. The status of the organisation is no guarantee of responsible practice, and price and responsibility communications display an inverse relationship. We conclude volunteer tourism operators are overpositioning and communicating responsibility inconsistently, which highlights greenwashing, requiring at least industry-wide codes of practice, and at best, regulation. This paper reflects on its methodological limitations, and on its practical achievements in encouraging change within some of the organisations examined.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Means and End of Greenwash

TL;DR: Greenwash: Greenwash is communication that misleads people into forming overly positive opinions about environmental performance as discussed by the authors. But, greenwash is a form of communication that encourages people to form overly positive beliefs about environmental outcomes.
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Sustainability and marketing in tourism: its contexts, paradoxes, approaches, challenges and potential

TL;DR: Sustainability marketing can, however, use marketing skills and techniques to good purpose, by understanding market needs, designing more sustainable products, and identifying more persuasive methods of communication to bring behavioural change.
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Volunteer tourism: evolution, issues and futures

TL;DR: A review of the 30-year evolution of volunteer tourism as phenomenon, industry, and research area, charting changes in the size, breadth, definition, and perceived positive and negative contributions of the volunteer tourism industry can be found in this article.
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Greenwash and Green Purchase Intention: The Mediating Role of Green Skepticism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined a model linking greenwash and green skepticism with green purchase intentions and investigated the moderating role of information and knowledge on the relationship between greenwash, green skepticism, and green purchase intention.
References
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TL;DR: The attainment of quality in products and services has become a pivotal concern of the 1980s as discussed by the authors, while quality in tangible goods has been described and measured by marketers, quality in services is la...
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TL;DR: In this paper, evidence from past research and insights from an exploratory investigation are combined in a conceptual model that defines and relates price, perceived quality, and perceived value for a product.
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Job Market Signaling

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model in which signaling is implicitly defined and explains its usefulness, in which the employer is not sure of the productive capabilities of an individual at the time he/she hires him.
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Conceptualizing, measuring, and managing customer-based brand equity

TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual model of brand equity from the perspective of the individual consumer is presented, which is defined as the differential effect of brand knowledge on consumers' perceptions of the brand.
Book

The Content Analysis Guidebook

TL;DR: The Content Analysis Guidebook provides an accessible core text for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students across the social sciences that unravels the complicated aspects of content analysis.
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