A DMC is responsible for the planning, coordination, and execution of ________ experiences.
Tourism (or travel/touristic) experiences
A stakeholder is any actor who may influence or be ________ by an event.
AFFECTED
Event classification (local, national, international) primarily reflects differences in ________ and complexity.
Scope (or scale).
A single point of failure is a weakness that can interrupt the ________ of the event
Operation
In tourism, image influences perception and ________.
Decision-making (or trust).
State one key difference between a Corporate DMC and a Specialized DMC.
Corporate DMCs focus on business/corporate clients; Specialized DMCs focus on a niche (e.g., luxury, incentives, cultural).
What makes professional networking different from social networking?
It is strategic, goal-oriented, and institutional.
Name one variable that changes when moving from national to international event scale.
Institutional involvement / infrastructure requirements / budget size / media reach
Distinguish System A (arrival) from System B: (Mobility) in one phrase each.
System A = arrival/access reliability; System B = internal movement/flow management.
Why must experience selection align with positioning?
To maintain coherence and credibility of the event brand.
A client wants a highly customized luxury incentive trip. Which DMC type is most appropriate?
Specialized DMC.
Before requesting a public venue, what is the first strategic step?
Identify the correct institutional stakeholder and send a formal professional email.
A team proposes an international event but lacks institutional partnerships. What should they adjust?
The event scale
Guests may arrive late due to unpredictable highway traffic. Which system is being evaluated?
System A: Access
A “luxury wellness” event selects overcrowded mass-tourism attractions. What is the strategic mistake?
Positioning inconsistency.
A student writes: “A DMC’s main role is promoting the destination.” Identify the mistake.
A DMC’s role is operational coordination, feasibility evaluation, and risk management—not primarily promotion.
A team sends an informal message to a convention center director and gets ignored. Identify one risk.
Loss of credibility and reduced likelihood of institutional cooperation.
Why is saying “international is better because it’s bigger” strategically weak?
Because classification must align with destination readiness and systems capacity, not size alone.
A venue has only one entrance road. Why is this risky?
It creates a single point of failure, increasing operational and reputational risk.
Incomplete LinkedIn profiles weaken venue negotiations. Why?
Digital image affects credibility and institutional trust.
A DMC recommends a remote luxury venue without evaluating transport reliability or supplier backup. What professional responsibility was neglected?
Systems-based feasibility and risk evaluation (due diligence).
A team ignores municipal authorities until one week before the event. Explain one operational risk created.
Permit delays or denial, increasing legal and reputational risk.
A city with limited airport connectivity is chosen for a 1,000-person international congress. Identify the misalignment.
Event scale exceeds access and infrastructure capacity (Systems A + C).
A venue has sufficient space but insufficient restrooms for peak attendance. Identify the affected system and type of issue.
System C – Basic services capacity limitation under peak pressure.
A team lists 12 attractions but fails to justify how they support the event concept. What should be corrected?
Shift from listing to analytical selection aligned with the event objective and target audience.