Latest
issue
GET SPA BUSINESS
magazine
Yes! Send me the FREE digital editions of Spa Business and Spa Business insider magazines and the FREE weekly Spa Business and Spa Business insider ezines and breaking news alerts!
Not right now, thanksclose this window I've already subscribed.
Uniting the world of spa & wellness
Get Spa Business and Spa Business insider digital magazines FREE
Sign up here ▸
News   Features   Products   Company profilesProfiles   Press releasesProfiles   Magazine   Handbook   Advertise    Subscribe  
People
Anthony Rawlins

"We have to continue to embrace innovation and not let that agile mindset slip"


For all the pain and misery the pandemic has wrought on our sector, it’s presented a major opportunity to permanently change and improve it,” says Anthony Rawlins, CEO of Digital Visitor.

“There are countless opportunities to kick-start this evolution, and it’s not change for change’s sake – it’s based on what consumers actually want, and what your businesses actually need.”

With this in mind, Digital Visitor has written a whitepaper, titled An Industry Renewed, to equip attractions with insights and ideas that will drive success in 2021 and beyond.

Agility and short-term focus
“They say ‘necessity is the mother of invention’”, says Rawlins, “and, as an industry, we proved that in 2020. Think of those apps to order food and drink in pubs and museums creating digital tours and experiences. All that happened very quickly by focusing on the problem, identifying a short-term fix, and nimbly solving it with a ‘test and learn’ approach.

“It’s important to realise that in 2021 and beyond, we’ll need to keep hold of this ability to be agile and make it an integral part of our day-to-day business. When you think about what’s changed in the industry in the last 10 years, and what’s going to happen in the next two years, we need to prepare ourselves for continuous change. We have to embrace the mindset and approach to innovation that has enabled us to adapt to the current situation so quickly.”

Digital marketing
“In March 2020, Digital Visitor surveyed 50 UK visitor attractions of all shapes and sizes and found the average marketing budget allocated to digital was around 25 per cent,” explains Rawlins. “Since then, there’s been a rapid and seismic shift in how marketing budgets are allocated in some previously resistant segments, and attractions are up-ending their budgets, spending more of it on digital marketing.

“This has many benefits – especially in the uncertain world we’re in right now. Firstly, it’s immediately optimisable. If it’s not working that day, you can change it. Secondly, you can turn it off instantly if something happens – you’re not committed to months of budget. If someone clicks on an ad, you know. If someone opens an email, you know. If someone visits a landing page then books, you know.

“In this context, digital marketing offers more visible and measurable value than traditional forms of marketing.”

This shift towards doing more digital marketing goes hand-in-hand with digital transformation, explains Rawlins: “If you offered booking by email or phone pre-pandemic and then shifted to online booking during it, will you (and more importantly, your customers) want to go back to the old ways after a vaccine arrives and normal service resumes? I seriously doubt it.”

Staying and spending locally
“Over the next 12 months, we’ll all spend more time locally, which presents a great opportunity for attractions,” says Rawlins. “We don’t know how long lockdowns will last, so we’re not going to plan our six-hour trip to see our family, as we might be confined to quarters – or they might be.

“If we want to get away for a few days, it makes sense to look within an hour of where we live. Yes, it’s still relatively local, but given our confinement, it will still feel different enough and, no doubt, a world away.

“This desire to stay and spend locally opens up another opportunity by way of loyalty and membership programmes. For example, if an attraction offers people within 10-15 miles loyalty points every time they spend on food and drink, I guarantee they’ll pick up good local advocates in 2021. These loyalists are not only perfectly situated to keep coming back, but they’ll add extra clout to any local marketing.”

Shorter booking cycles
“When restrictions were lifted in summer 2020, hundreds of thousands of people went mad booking holidays, which proves that you need to be ready for this latent demand because it will explode again, as people will want to book once things open up,” says Rawlins.

“Consumers are being clever about how they plan their trips and will be making travel decisions based on the most recent recommendations, meaning their booking cycle has shortened to just a few days and in some cases the same day. When restrictions are eased, focus on encouraging visits in the immediate and near-term.”

Experience explosion
“The ‘experiences’ market is set to take off like never before in 2021. Even before the pandemic, people were buying more of them and were happy to pay handsomely for the privilege,” says Rawlins. “Providing special money-can’t-buy-moments will exceed customer expectations and build confidence in what you’re offering, which in turn, raises the perception of value. I think the attractions market will rebound spectacularly as soon as it’s able, as we place an even higher value on the experiences we buy.”

Read the whitepaper at:
www.attractionsmanagement.com/digitalvisitor

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2021 issue 1
  • Editor's letter: Doing better
    The Black Lives Matter movement has challenged museums professionals to ask testing questions about their role in reparative history and the way we display and interpret racist and colonial collections
  • People: Brent Bushnell
    Two Bit Circus has pivoted to an innovative online model aimed at keeping its community in touch
  • People: Michel Linet-Frion
    After decades creating for Disney, Grévin and Center Parcs, Linet-Frion has launched his own consultancy
  • People: Anthony Rawlins
    The Digital Visitor CEO explains a new whitepaper on how attractions can survive 2021 and beyond
  • Interview: Sarah Roots
    Warner Bros’ Sarah Roots shares exciting details of the second Harry Potter Studio Tour, set to open in Japan in 2023
  • Talking Point: Black Lives Matter and museums
    Many museums expressed solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, but is it leading to actual change? We ask the experts
  • Inspired: Alone with Vermeer
    The Mauritshuis in The Hague has allowed visitors one-to-one time with Vermeer’s <i>View of Delft</i>, ‘the most beautiful painting in the world’
  • Aquariums: Into the deep
    Merlin and the Sea Life Trust share the highs and lows of the epic journey to get two whales to their new home in the world’s first beluga whale sanctuary in Iceland
  • Innovation: Sea change
    Edge Innovations’ incredibly life-like robot dolphins could spell the end of marine mammals in aquariums, says CEO Walt Conti
  • Interview: Bob Rogers
    As BRC Imagination Arts celebrates 40 years in business, its founder celebrates his team’s achievements
  • Sponsored: Technically Creative
    With clients including the Xplore Family Entertainment Centre in Athens, Technically Creative provides a one stop, in-house solution to create memorable and magical experiences. We talk to CEO, Marc Broadbent
  • Technology: Bringing digital to life
    Extended reality technology provides opportunities to connect with audiences in amazing new ways
  • Sponsored: Fun Spot: Providing turnkey solutions
    Industry innovator, Fun Spot, is on a roll, with a new EMEA office and a range of innovative new products to help operators deliver excellence to the family fun market. We find out more
  • Interview: Phil Hettema
    The Hettema Group president on weathering the pandemic and creating powerful experiences
  • Theas: Award season
    A celebration of the winners from the TEA’s recent Thea Awards
  • Museums: Tough art
    A Pittsburgh museum is challenging artists to create displays tough enough for an audience of children
  • Design: Dorte Mandrup
    The Danish architect is designing the Exile Museum in Berlin and a climate change museum in Greenland
  • Family entertainment: Linda Dong
    China Leisure’s president talks about partnering with Nickelodeon
Attractions must continue to innovate and create digital and live experiences
Attractions must continue to innovate and create digital and live experiences / Photo: shutterstock/Zyabich
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

Embrace the chill: TechnoAlpin's Snowsky revolutionises post-fitness recovery with falling snow
In the fast-paced world of fitness and wellness, where high-intensity workouts push us to our limits and the sweat pours, the importance of efficient recovery cannot be overstated. [more...]

Longevity in spas: a strategic choice, not a default setting
Longevity has become one of the most debated concepts in contemporary wellness. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
G.M. Collin

G.M. Collin develops superior skin care products, from preventive care to combating the first signs [more...]
Fenix Group srl

Founded in Italy by Gianluca Cavalletti, Fenix Group introduced Endospheres with the aim of redefini [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
 

+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

21-23 Jun 2026

Spa Life International (UK)

Midlands (Venue TBA), Liphook, United Kingdom
26-27 Jun 2026

The Longevity Show

Tobacco Docks, London, United Kingdom
+ More diary  
 
ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
 
SPA BUSINESS
SPA OPPORTUNITIES
SPA BUSINESS HANDBOOK
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026
Uniting the world of spa & wellness
Get Spa Business and Spa Business insider digital magazines FREE
Sign up here ▸
News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
People
Anthony Rawlins

"We have to continue to embrace innovation and not let that agile mindset slip"


For all the pain and misery the pandemic has wrought on our sector, it’s presented a major opportunity to permanently change and improve it,” says Anthony Rawlins, CEO of Digital Visitor.

“There are countless opportunities to kick-start this evolution, and it’s not change for change’s sake – it’s based on what consumers actually want, and what your businesses actually need.”

With this in mind, Digital Visitor has written a whitepaper, titled An Industry Renewed, to equip attractions with insights and ideas that will drive success in 2021 and beyond.

Agility and short-term focus
“They say ‘necessity is the mother of invention’”, says Rawlins, “and, as an industry, we proved that in 2020. Think of those apps to order food and drink in pubs and museums creating digital tours and experiences. All that happened very quickly by focusing on the problem, identifying a short-term fix, and nimbly solving it with a ‘test and learn’ approach.

“It’s important to realise that in 2021 and beyond, we’ll need to keep hold of this ability to be agile and make it an integral part of our day-to-day business. When you think about what’s changed in the industry in the last 10 years, and what’s going to happen in the next two years, we need to prepare ourselves for continuous change. We have to embrace the mindset and approach to innovation that has enabled us to adapt to the current situation so quickly.”

Digital marketing
“In March 2020, Digital Visitor surveyed 50 UK visitor attractions of all shapes and sizes and found the average marketing budget allocated to digital was around 25 per cent,” explains Rawlins. “Since then, there’s been a rapid and seismic shift in how marketing budgets are allocated in some previously resistant segments, and attractions are up-ending their budgets, spending more of it on digital marketing.

“This has many benefits – especially in the uncertain world we’re in right now. Firstly, it’s immediately optimisable. If it’s not working that day, you can change it. Secondly, you can turn it off instantly if something happens – you’re not committed to months of budget. If someone clicks on an ad, you know. If someone opens an email, you know. If someone visits a landing page then books, you know.

“In this context, digital marketing offers more visible and measurable value than traditional forms of marketing.”

This shift towards doing more digital marketing goes hand-in-hand with digital transformation, explains Rawlins: “If you offered booking by email or phone pre-pandemic and then shifted to online booking during it, will you (and more importantly, your customers) want to go back to the old ways after a vaccine arrives and normal service resumes? I seriously doubt it.”

Staying and spending locally
“Over the next 12 months, we’ll all spend more time locally, which presents a great opportunity for attractions,” says Rawlins. “We don’t know how long lockdowns will last, so we’re not going to plan our six-hour trip to see our family, as we might be confined to quarters – or they might be.

“If we want to get away for a few days, it makes sense to look within an hour of where we live. Yes, it’s still relatively local, but given our confinement, it will still feel different enough and, no doubt, a world away.

“This desire to stay and spend locally opens up another opportunity by way of loyalty and membership programmes. For example, if an attraction offers people within 10-15 miles loyalty points every time they spend on food and drink, I guarantee they’ll pick up good local advocates in 2021. These loyalists are not only perfectly situated to keep coming back, but they’ll add extra clout to any local marketing.”

Shorter booking cycles
“When restrictions were lifted in summer 2020, hundreds of thousands of people went mad booking holidays, which proves that you need to be ready for this latent demand because it will explode again, as people will want to book once things open up,” says Rawlins.

“Consumers are being clever about how they plan their trips and will be making travel decisions based on the most recent recommendations, meaning their booking cycle has shortened to just a few days and in some cases the same day. When restrictions are eased, focus on encouraging visits in the immediate and near-term.”

Experience explosion
“The ‘experiences’ market is set to take off like never before in 2021. Even before the pandemic, people were buying more of them and were happy to pay handsomely for the privilege,” says Rawlins. “Providing special money-can’t-buy-moments will exceed customer expectations and build confidence in what you’re offering, which in turn, raises the perception of value. I think the attractions market will rebound spectacularly as soon as it’s able, as we place an even higher value on the experiences we buy.”

Read the whitepaper at:
www.attractionsmanagement.com/digitalvisitor

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2021 issue 1
  • Editor's letter: Doing better
    The Black Lives Matter movement has challenged museums professionals to ask testing questions about their role in reparative history and the way we display and interpret racist and colonial collections
  • People: Brent Bushnell
    Two Bit Circus has pivoted to an innovative online model aimed at keeping its community in touch
  • People: Michel Linet-Frion
    After decades creating for Disney, Grévin and Center Parcs, Linet-Frion has launched his own consultancy
  • People: Anthony Rawlins
    The Digital Visitor CEO explains a new whitepaper on how attractions can survive 2021 and beyond
  • Interview: Sarah Roots
    Warner Bros’ Sarah Roots shares exciting details of the second Harry Potter Studio Tour, set to open in Japan in 2023
  • Talking Point: Black Lives Matter and museums
    Many museums expressed solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, but is it leading to actual change? We ask the experts
  • Inspired: Alone with Vermeer
    The Mauritshuis in The Hague has allowed visitors one-to-one time with Vermeer’s <i>View of Delft</i>, ‘the most beautiful painting in the world’
  • Aquariums: Into the deep
    Merlin and the Sea Life Trust share the highs and lows of the epic journey to get two whales to their new home in the world’s first beluga whale sanctuary in Iceland
  • Innovation: Sea change
    Edge Innovations’ incredibly life-like robot dolphins could spell the end of marine mammals in aquariums, says CEO Walt Conti
  • Interview: Bob Rogers
    As BRC Imagination Arts celebrates 40 years in business, its founder celebrates his team’s achievements
  • Sponsored: Technically Creative
    With clients including the Xplore Family Entertainment Centre in Athens, Technically Creative provides a one stop, in-house solution to create memorable and magical experiences. We talk to CEO, Marc Broadbent
  • Technology: Bringing digital to life
    Extended reality technology provides opportunities to connect with audiences in amazing new ways
  • Sponsored: Fun Spot: Providing turnkey solutions
    Industry innovator, Fun Spot, is on a roll, with a new EMEA office and a range of innovative new products to help operators deliver excellence to the family fun market. We find out more
  • Interview: Phil Hettema
    The Hettema Group president on weathering the pandemic and creating powerful experiences
  • Theas: Award season
    A celebration of the winners from the TEA’s recent Thea Awards
  • Museums: Tough art
    A Pittsburgh museum is challenging artists to create displays tough enough for an audience of children
  • Design: Dorte Mandrup
    The Danish architect is designing the Exile Museum in Berlin and a climate change museum in Greenland
  • Family entertainment: Linda Dong
    China Leisure’s president talks about partnering with Nickelodeon
Attractions must continue to innovate and create digital and live experiences
Attractions must continue to innovate and create digital and live experiences / Photo: shutterstock/Zyabich
LATEST NEWS
The SATCC announces first five-day Living with Cancer and Beyond retreat
The Standards Authority for Touch in Cancer Care (SATCC) charity has announced its first five- day Living with Cancer and Beyond retreat, which will be held at Carden Park Hotel and Spa in Cheshire, UK, between 1 and 5 September.
Palazzo di Varignana launches family wellbeing and longevity retreat in Emilia Romagna
Palazzo di Varignana, in the Emilia Romagna region of Italy, has created a new tailored health programme designed specifically for families.
Ansana Wellness and Spa debuts at Patmos Aktis as it joins Marriott
Patmos Aktis, a Luxury Collection Resort and Spa, has opened in Greece, with a renovated and rebranded wellness offering called Ansana Wellness and Spa.
Mauna Kea Beach Hotel launches destination spa with sacred Hawaiian cultural concept
The Mauna Kea Beach Hotel, an Autograph Collection property in Hawaii, US, has opened its 22,000 sq ft indoor-outdoor Spa at Mauna Kea as the final step in the property’s overall renovation, which has cost more than US$180 million (€166 million, £140 mill
The Good Spa Guide sets up event for modified Good Spa Guide Awards
The UK spa review and discovery platform for consumers, the Good Spa Guide, has announced it will host the Good Spa Guide Awards 2026 during an event on 16 November at Sopwell House Hotel in St Albans, UK.
McKinsey: 84 per cent of consumers say wellness is a top priority
Eighty-four per cent of consumers now say wellness is a top priority in their lives, with this percentage increasing year on year, according to a preview presentation of McKinsey’s Future of Wellness 2026 research report.
Protests continue in Albania against US$1.6 billion luxury resort backed by Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump
Mass protests have been taking place since Monday 1 June in Albania over the development of a luxury resort by Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner.
Barons Eden rebrands to Hiddenwell ahead of spa hotel portfolio expansion
Barons Eden, the UK parent company that operates luxury destination properties in England, has rebranded to become Hiddenwell.
Belgin Aksoy marks 15 years of Global Wellness Day
Global Wellness Day (GWD) marked its 15th anniversary on Saturday 13 June 2026, with the theme: #JoyMagenta – a celebration of the healing qualities of simple gestures and activities that spark joy.
HUM2N launches longevity clinic at Six Senses London
Global luxury hospitality brand, Six Senses, has partnered with longevity healthcare provider, HUM2N, to launch a clinic at Six Senses London, at The Whiteley.
Mayrlife opens first hotel day clinic in partnership with Rosewood Vienna
As part of its first hotel partnership, Mayrlife – the medical health resort company known for its site in Altaussee, Austria – has launched a day clinic at the Rosewood Vienna.
KX Chelsea invests £15 million to upgrade its wellness offering
Premium London health club, KX Chelsea, will imminently unveil its most significant redevelopment since its launch in 2002 to create an integrated wellness model combining training, recovery and relaxation.
+ More news   
 
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

Embrace the chill: TechnoAlpin's Snowsky revolutionises post-fitness recovery with falling snow
In the fast-paced world of fitness and wellness, where high-intensity workouts push us to our limits and the sweat pours, the importance of efficient recovery cannot be overstated. [more...]

Longevity in spas: a strategic choice, not a default setting
Longevity has become one of the most debated concepts in contemporary wellness. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
G.M. Collin

G.M. Collin develops superior skin care products, from preventive care to combating the first signs [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

21-23 Jun 2026

Spa Life International (UK)

Midlands (Venue TBA), Liphook, United Kingdom
26-27 Jun 2026

The Longevity Show

Tobacco Docks, London, United Kingdom
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS