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| Hostelling Promotion How to promote hostels and hostelling. |
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I think that hosteling would be more popular in the US if more Americans knew what a hostel is.
This is an example of a phone call that I've had a few times from a hostel front desk: Quote:
I think that many people in the US are driving around the country and traveling places, but only staying at hotels and motels. If more Americans knew about hostels it would be good for hostels everywhere because there would be a new group of people who suddenly realize that traveling isn't as expensive as it sounds. Does anyone have ideas on how to make the idea of hosteling more known in the USA? Just brainstorming some ideas:
If you are from the US, how did you first hear about hostels? |
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"Bed and Breakfast" started in the British Isles, I believe.
When I lived in the US in the 80s, the idea of B&B seemed to be catching on there, probably as a result of American travellers who had visited Britain and discovered B&Bs there, and some of them started them in the US. What I did notice, however, is that the US ones were a substantially different type of thing. I never visited any, but they appeared to focus on being REALLY homely, with emphasis on lots of antique furniture, smothering attention and big meals, and they were also very expensive, of the same price level as hotels. (The main point of B&Bs in Britain was that they were cheaper than hotels). On the other hand, your cheaper-than-hotel accommodation was Motels, which have never taken off very far in Britain. The moral: People need to experience them elsewhere first. The anti-moral: they may get the wrong idea. |
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Where are your hostel guests from? |
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![]() (but always a good adventure) I got the impression that Germany had many more hostels than the US... but maybe they are mostly foreign guests? Traveling Americans generally know what hostels are, but I don't think the average American has ever stayed in one -- or else they think "hostel" means "flophouse", or maybe means "youth hostel" with an age limit. I didn't even know what a hostel was until I was in my 20s. I drove across the USA six times before I discovered hostels. |
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Germany has hundreds of YHI hostels - they are full of German school groups. There is a recent boom in independent hostels - some of them cater mainly to school groups as well (like the Meininger and A&O chains) and those who prefer backpackers (like we do) fill up with Americans and Aussies. |
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![]() A week in Berlin is a "must" in German schools, those in the south often go skiing for a week every year and during the final year it was a week in Florence in my case. |
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Also, A lot of the adventurous travelers who like the idea of staying in hostels are more intrigued by far-off exotic lands like Europe and Asia than they are by their own backyard. As a result, they don't travel in their own country. I am one of those people. Many people I have talked to also hear the term "youth hostel" and think it has to do with underprivileged children. Similarly, the connotation of "backpacking" where I'm from is hiking and camping in the woods, not traveling. |
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