Saturday, 16 April 2016

Big Is Good?

Dubai is famed to have:

·         The world’s tallest tower – Burj Khalifa;
·         The world’s tallest dancing fountain - The Dubai Fountain;
·         The world’s biggest mall - The Dubai Mall, which has more than 1,200 stores and houses an Olympic-sized ice skating rink, and the Dubai Aquarium & Underwater Zoo;
·         The world’s largest themed shopping mall - The Ibn Battuta Mall, designed in honour of Ibn Battuta, a famed Arabic explorer.  The mall’s six courts draws design inspiration from Andalusia, Tunisia, Egypt, Persia, India and China, places where he travelled;
·         The world’s largest Ferris Wheel - Dubai-I, the biggest attraction in Venu Bluewaters Island Hotel, a new leisure concept from the Jumeirah Group when it’s completed in 2017.

For the first time in the Middle East, Dubai will be hosting World Expo 2020, as it also kicks off the country’s Golden Jubilee anniversary celebrations.  About 25 million visitors are estimated to visit the Expo, and Dubai is already planning to build:

·         A new airport – the five-runway Al Maktoum International Airport that will be able to accommodate 160 million flyers a year after it’s completed in 2020;
·         A new The Tower at Dubai Creek - taller than the Burj Khalifa; inspired by the mythical hanging gardens of Babylon.  The tower would be a "gift to the city before 2020" says the Chairman of Dubai-based Emaar Properties Mohamed Alabbar, the company behind the Burj Khalifa, also behind the new tower.

So does ‘the bigger the better’ hold true? It is definitely a short cut way to put a destination on the map very quickly. Everyone wants to see the biggest, the largest, the best.  However, in a world that is so internationalized now, the bigger of something may just be the same everywhere else.  The biggest, largest, best may draw people, once.  To draw them back again and again, this is where we may have to connect the soul of the place with the people who are visiting it. Information is no longer sought for information’s sake (because it is too easy to get information nowadays), but the information must be inspiring and surprising.

This is where the concept of sharing live stories to connect with visitors may be useful.  Sharing stories also mean that there must be a person-to-person connection, and no longer just one-way information giving to visitors.  In a Forbes article “Tap the Power of Storytelling” dated 4 January 2014, Geoffrey Berwind, a professional Storytelling Consultant and Trainer who’s created storytelling projects for historic sites and provides consulting services for leaders and companies says that “people buy from people they know, like and trust”, (like key opinion leaders or influencers*) and that “great leaders recognize that human connections need to go before concepts and strategies.

Small is good too.  Small has charm.  We have hope. 

*STB Dubai works with travel blogger Michelle Karam at http://traveljunkiediary.com/ for their social media marketing. 

Sources:
Retrieved from http://www.visitdubai.com/en/articles/new-hotels-in-dubai
  
Dubai Mall
Dubai Mall

The Aquarium in Dubai Mall
The Souk in Dubai Mall
The Waterfall in Dubai Mall
The Piano in Dubai Mall

The Village in Dubai Mall
The Dubai Fountain

Burj Khalifa

Burj Khalifa

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