Archive for the ‘Five Year Plan’ Category

Dann Lewis - Aiming for the Top

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

Goal: To make tourism Maine’s leading industry

Augusta - Maine’s director of tourism, Dann H. Lewis has left a string of success stories in his wake over the years, but now he faces another challenge - making tourism the number-one industry in the state within five years.

Dann Lewis was appointed to head up the state’s tourism office by Governor Angus King, who has made no secret of his desire to promote tourism in Maine.

“It’s a major element in the economic strategy for the state, ” Dann Lewis said in a recent interview. “When I arrived the governor asked me to to prepare a five-year strategy for tourism. One of the major problems, I think, with tourism promotion and development in the past here in Maine is that there’s been no consistent effort. There’s never been a blueprint around which the industry could rally.”

It’s hoped the five-year strategy will remedy that. Dann Lewis said “The bottom line is to see tourism grow geographically, on a year-round basis” - and through tax revenue and job creation, “generally increase it’s contribution to the ecomony.”

Dann Lewis grew up in Massachusetts and in New Hampshire, where he attended Dartmouth College and majored in English literature and mechanical engineering. “After school I went down to the Bahamas and built and operated a small resort, and later wound up as director of marketing for the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism,” Lewis said.

From the Bahamas, Dann Lewis went to the U. S. Virgin Islands where he became director of tourism and oversaw double-digit increases in visitor arrivals. Tha job led him to director of tourism for New York state. After leaving New York, Dann Lewis worked as president of several regional airlines from the West Coast to the Northeast. Though he’s not a commercial pilot, he piloted seaplanes in the Caribbean islands.

The husband of a respected airline consultant and father of two, now resides in South China, Maine.

Dann Lewis said some areas of Maine, particularly the coastline already enjoy status as successful tourist markets. The new challenge is to market the Eastern and inland areas to visitors, and to stretch the season beyond just the summer months.

Similar efforts have paid off in other states, most notably in New York in the late 1970’s when Lewis oversaw the creation of the heart-stopping “I Love New York” campaign. Before the campaign was implemented and promoted on the world stage, there were many areas of upstate New York that did not enjoy a flourishing tourism base and were very much like inland areas of Maine today. Dann Lewis went on to say” I Love New York changed all that, and the prospects here are just as good.”

The most recent economic impact studies done in Maine show tourism account for more than 75,000 jobs and roughly $2.75 billion in expenditures, so its importance to the state cannot be understated, Lewis said.

“I would hazard a guess that at the end of the five-year strategy, you’ll probably see tourism as the number-one industry in the state,” Dann Lewis said.

by: Jonathan Humphrey

How To Keep ‘Em Coming - The Dann Lewis Plan

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Dann Lewis didn’t ease into his new job as director of the Maine Office of Tourism. On his first day, Governor Angus King asked him to figure out how to maximize the value of tourism for Maine. King wanted a written long-term strategy, something the state tourism office had never had before. And he wanted it in three months.

Dann Lewis met his mid-October deadline. He marshalled the advice of business people statewide and crafted a five-year strategy that is likely to drive future discussions of tourism in Maine for years to come.

Dann Lewis’s goal in the plan is to boost tourism expenditures in Maine, last officially estimated at $2.75 billion, by 15 percent by the year 2000. Among other things, the strategy calls for making tourism a year-round industry in Maine.

“It’s an ambitious major program” said Dann Lewis, most recently an executive at several airline companies. But, Lewis said, “you’ve got to have a plan to know where you’re going.”

Dann Lewis admitted that the buggest hurdle over the long-term is likely to be securing adequate funding to further promote and develop tourism. The strategy repeats familiar refrains from past tourism studies, like enticing more tourists to venture inland and into northern Maine and extending the tourism season into traditionally slow months like November and December.

The Dann Lewis strategy has some new twists - ideas that could help Maine market itself without having to dig deeply into state coffers:

  • The strategy puts more emphasis on the emerging trend of regional promotion in tourism. The state would continue to project an overall image of Maine. Beneath that marketing umbrella, different regions would market specific activities and packages, and develop a tourism infrastructure in their specific areas.
  • The strategy also suggests the state team more often with private businesses, like airlines, car rental companies and tour operators, for more bang for the cooperative dollar. “Virtually everybody in the business should be looking for cooperative dollars to augment their marketing efforts,” Dann Lewis said.

This is familiar turf for Dann Lewis. He worked on the early stages of the blockbuster “I Love New York” campaign earlier in his career. That, he said, was highly leveraged with private funds from domestic and international airlines, companies like Coca Cola and the Broadway theatre owners guild.

Dann Lewis acknowledges that Maine “won’t get that type of scale as New York State, but there are similar opportunities on a smaller scale.”

The point is, Lewis said, “we now have a long term plan, and with tourism a proven economic development engine, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to ignore it.

“From: The Portland Press Herald, November 1995