Last week, on
Thursday, Uganda Tourism Board (UTB) old guards officially handed over
office to the new guards in a ceremony hosted at Sheraton Hotel. While
sitting at the back with fellow tour
operators, I listened to different speeches.
operators, I listened to different speeches.
Some speeches were good, others just okay
but looks like no one wanted to mention our challenges and potential
solutions. Like I have always said, tourism is not well understood and
it is fairly a new area for us all Ugandans, including myself. I am
still a student of tourism and when I travel outside Uganda, I try to
learn from people in mature tourism markets such as Kenya, South Africa,
Egypt, Botswana etc. It is difficult to find competent and
knowledgeable people with ability to transform tourism fast enough. The
creation of professionals takes time and it is easier in mature markets.
I
tell many Ugandan operators that we are all still very small even when
compared to those performing well in Kenya. In Kenya, you have very many
tour operators whose annual turnover is above $50m (Shs187b). One
Kenyan tour operator recently told me: “Wekesa, this year we did not do
very well; we only turned over $68m (Shs254.4b).” That guy has as many
tour cars as half of all Ugandan tour operators combined. In Uganda, you
will find a person who turns over just $120,000 (Shs449m) annually will
spend much of his or her time making people to think he has arrived.
You do not need much for people to think you have arrived in Uganda.
It
is very true that Uganda has massive potential and has achieved some
steps and the future looks even brighter. Recently, I was telling a
friend that Uganda has not started tourism at all and he seemed so
shocked about that statement.
I told him to drive to
the shores of Lake Victoria here in Kampala and see for himself how
empty, as there aren’t any serious tourism activities such as sport
fishing, sundowners, sailing to a larger extend among others. Every
Ugandan must get angry about an empty Lake Victoria because this lake
alone can create hundreds of thousands of jobs through transport and
tourism and being next to Uganda’s capital should make us ashamed of
ourselves.
That lake is the world’s largest tropical
lake and at the same time the world’s second fresh water lake. I tell
many Ugandans that it is in a poor country where you find the rich
living in Kololo and the poor living on the shores of a fresh water
lake. The above is just an example of how Uganda has not utilised its
potential in tourism and I didn’t even mention the many islands on that
same lake.
The future looks brighter mainly because government and the general public seems more interested in the sector.
The future looks brighter mainly because government and the general public seems more interested in the sector.
That
said, what has been my personal observation over the many years I have
been in tourism? What has been Uganda tourism board’s challenge over the
last 20 years?
Tourism boards spur tourism business growth. The biggest constraint has been poor financing of the whole tourism sector but that is changing as we see very improved financing.
Tourism boards spur tourism business growth. The biggest constraint has been poor financing of the whole tourism sector but that is changing as we see very improved financing.
In
fact, if the money given by finance now is well utilised, Uganda’s
tourism could create more meaningful opportunities than any other sector
in Uganda. Research on Uganda’s tourism potential shows that we could
earn up to $12b (Shs44.9t) annually if we matched the right monies and
competent teams at the UTB.
Good marketing could spur
demand and hence investment would follow; people do not invest out of
emotions, they must see opportunities. The other challenge of UTB has
been the quality of its board members. You will find a board with two or
three people who have actual investments in tourism; the majority will
be representing different interests. Our challenge lies in balancing
tribe, gender, ministries etc. Such boards do not need people who have
nothing to lose.
The other challenge has been the
attitude of those employed at UTB. There has been more internal fights
than I have seen anywhere else which affects performance. At tourism
exhibitions abroad, staff often arrived late and left early yet other
countries had very committed government people.
In the
last 20 years, I have seen all tourism exhibitions abroad organised last
minute including paying for the stand. Countries that succeed at these
tourism fairs prepare for them at least six months in advance. When we
tried to do a tourism fair here in Uganda, everything was last minute.
We need to borrow a leaf from Magical Kenya or Karibu in Tanzania that
have stood the test of time.
Kenya spends a whole year marketing the Magical Kenya brand and has brought a lot of opportunities to them. It has become an important fair for us as Ugandan operators to attend.
Kenya spends a whole year marketing the Magical Kenya brand and has brought a lot of opportunities to them. It has become an important fair for us as Ugandan operators to attend.
Why
did ours fail? Even things such as Martyr’s Day on 3 June, you will
only see people run around last minute. Why should Namugongo not attract
people every week? The other challenge has been a weak private sector.
We have not been strong enough to demand better from the tourism
government agencies. Since tourism is attracting big boys now, we shall
see people demanding more because of the investments they put up.
The
other challenge was the cold wars between agencies- Uganda Wildlife
Authority and UTB. They fight over mandates; whose mandate became whose
mandate. That said, should the above be addressed, Uganda’s tourism will
win for all of us and I would like to congratulate the new team led by
Lilly Ajarova.
The writer is an investment expert and ceo at Great Lake safaris and Uganda lodges
— amos@greatlakessafaris.com
— amos@greatlakessafaris.com
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