Site icon Everything PR News

From Hidden Gems to Must‑Visit — Antigua & Barbuda and VisitEngland Show How Digital PR Can Elevate the Unexpected

cruise ship travel

cruise ship travel

Every once in a while, a destination that isn’t always in the headline becomes impossible to ignore — not because of budget, but because of smart storytelling, digital finesse, and relevance. Two such places are Antigua & Barbuda in the Caribbean, and the North York Moors in England. Their recent PR moves reveal how telling stories well, digitally and locally, can shift perceptions, reframe expectations, and even drive footfall where strength felt modest.

The Hidden Gem Problem

Places like Antigua & Barbuda, or remote regions like the North York Moors, often face a double bind:

Digital PR allows them to fight above their weight — if done well.

Case Study A: Antigua & Barbuda: Social Media Meets Authentic Caribbean

Antigua & Barbuda’s tourism board has recently shifted heavily toward digital PR and social storytelling. Key elements:

What’s working:

Case Study B: VisitEngland & the North York Moors Accessibility Project

England’s tourism boards (VisitEngland etc.) have been more associated with classic destination marketing, but their “Accessible North York Moors” campaign shows how niche, values‑led stories canwin big in digital PR.

Key elements:

What’s working here:

Shared Lessons: Elevating the Unexpected via Digital PR

From both Antigua & Barbuda and North York Moors (and similar campaigns elsewhere), several lessons emerge:

  1. Lean into what makes you different — even if unconventional
    Whether it’s culture, landscape, diaspora ties, or accessibility, embracing uniqueness (versus trying to mimic major destinations) gives you a voice.
  2. Tell human stories, not brochures
    Feature people: locals, travelers, community members. Show what daily life is like. What it feels like to arrive somewhere unfamiliar. The small moments often resonate more than sweeping vistas.
  3. Use digital to reduce the distance in imagination
    Platforms like TikTok, Instagram Reels, short‑form video or stories allow you to show tiny slices of experience: a dance, a local meal, a hike near sunset. These build desire because they feel attainable, visceral.
  4. Make it accessible in every sense
    Accessibility isn’t just about wheelchair ramps; it’s about cost transparency, helpful guides, seasonal advice, transport, language, realistic expectations. Digital PR that includes such information reduces friction and builds trust.
  5. Partner with non‑traditional voices
    Diaspora communities, local small businesses, micro‑influencers, content creators who have niche but passionate followings. Their endorsements often feel more trustworthy than polished adverts.
  6. Leverage earned media + awards
    When a campaign wins awards or gets recognition, those become PR boosts. Use them toamplify. Media coverage about the campaign itself adds legitimacy back into the message.
  7. Segment content / message by audience
    People traveling from Canada may care about different elements (flight time, visa issues, safety) than those from Europe or Asia. Tailor by platform, tone, visuals, and considerations relevant tosource market.

Risks & What Could Go Wrong

What This Means Going Forward

Conclusion: It’s Not about Being the Biggest, but Being Believable

You don’t need the biggest budget or the most famous landmarks to make a travel destination memorable. What you need is clarity of story, emotional resonance, and digital savvy. Antigua &Barbuda and the North York Moors show that places off the beaten track — or those stereotyped or neglected — can become so compelling they feel essential.

Travel digital PR done well isn’t about imposing a destination; it’s about inviting people — gently, emotionally, imaginatively — into its world. When you do that with honesty, with strong visuals, with real people, with inclusive messages, you not only get visitors — you get advocates.

For all the places that feel hidden, remote, or under‑valued: your stories matter. Tell them well. Use digital channels to connect, not just to broadcast. Show the human scale, the quirks, the surprises. Let people imagine themselves there — then help them get there.

Exit mobile version