TheWorld Travel Monitor (WTM) /European Travel Monitor (ETM) is a worldwide tourism information system detailing the foreign (outbound) travel behaviour practiced by a country’s respective resident population.[1]
TheEuropean Travel Monitor has been continuously surveying the most important data on outbound travel behaviour from all European countries since 1988. In 1995, theEuropean Travel Monitor was expanded to theWorld Travel Monitor to cover all the important overseas markets (United States, Canada, Australia,Argentina,Brazil,United Arab Emirates,Saudi Arabia, Japan, China, India, etc.). Data is collected by the architects of the Monitor or by means of working cooperations in the various countries. Today (2013), theWorld Travel Monitor chronicles about 90% of all international travel flows. Conceived and realised by IPK International, the surveys have the objective of tracking all outboundtravel of at least one overnight stay, regardless of travel motive. Apart from holiday trips, business trips and all other private trips (e.g. visiting friends or relatives) are also recorded.[1]
The driving impetus behind establishing this information system – initially for Germany (German Travel Monitor) andEurope – was that it was not possible for decision-makers in thetourism field, based on the information available to them up to that point in time, to gain an overview of the European market or any overseas markets (in the form of adatabase enabling a direct comparison of aspects such as the volume and structure of outbound trips taken by theGermans,Americans,British,Russians,Chinese, etc.). While varioussurveys and officialstatistics were available prior to the introduction of theWorld Travel Monitor / European Travel Monitor, the individualdatasets were virtually impossible to compare because there were major dissimilarities among the samplings as well as among the survey methods used in the individual countries.
TheWorld Travel Monitor / European Travel Monitor are cooperative partnership studies. Main contracting entities include national and regionaltourist boards, tourism and economicsministries,tour operators, internationalhotel chains,advertising agencies,consulting firms, etc.
TheWorld Travel Monitor / European Travel Monitor are population-representative surveys; i.e., the composition of the sample corresponds to the composition of the population in the respective countries (over the age of 15). Study respondents are surveyed by computer-supported telephone, face-to-face interviews (the so-calledCATI andCAPI methods or viaonline interviews. The number ofinterviews conducted varies depending upon the size and significance of a source market (from 2,000 interviews per year in smaller markets up to 24,000 interviews per year in large markets). Altogether, approximately 500,000 interviews are conducted annually on behalf of theWorld Travel Monitor.
This large sample size translates into better quality and yields a stronger, more profoundstatistical analysis of the data acquired. It also allows a considerably more precise analytical market segmenting so that reliable information can be furnished even on smaller segments.
All the importantparameters of travel are surveyed using a standardizedquestionnaire, the basic questions of which have remained unchanged since 1988. The questionnaire used for theWorld Travel Monitor / European Travel Monitor factors in both a determination of travel volume (number of trips taken abroad) as well as numerous individual trip characteristics. Apart from the number of trips/overnights, the following parameters are identified:[2]