Seite - 53 - in Digital Entrepreneurship - Impact on Business and Society
Bild der Seite - 53 -
Text der Seite - 53 -
Organisationally, however, a decision has to bemade regarding whowill take
care of this “data infrastructure” and how it will be managed. This is the biggest
challenge. The goal is to create and provide valuable and readily available data
(Sommer 2018, p. 5). The formula is clear: the higher the quality, the greater the
valueof thedata is.However, the rapidpaceof this change requires a rapid change
in management that not every single tourist information office or every single
company or service provider can solve on its own. A central content architecture,
managedbyaDMO,canhelp to exploit andbundle thepossibilities of digitisation.
A technical embedding and linking of the content are necessary so that the
resources and content can be connected. Due to the decentralised content man-
agement that still prevails in many destinations, problems often appear, such as
duplication of content in different content silos or duplication of tasks and
responsibilities, aswell as deviations in content structures betweenorganisations in
the respective destination. To avoid this, the interface between thefields of action
must be ensured in order to achieve optimal effects (Dwif-Consulting 2017, p. 44).
TheDMOs of the federal states inGermany dealwith these developments in very
differentways.A federal statewhich deals intensivelywith content architectures is
Thuringia. This example is described below.
1.2 OpenData andDigital Content Architectures
as anOpportunity in Tourism: The Example
of theDestinationManagementOrganisation Thüringer
TourismusGmbH (TTG)
In Thuringia, the destination management organisation is currently developing a
central content architecture for tourism (ThüCAT), which should was completed
thisyear andhasbeenavailable as abetaversion since summer2019.Thegoal is to
create a database for all tourism-related content in Thuringia. This content should
be made available to all the stakeholders in Thuringia including tourist regions,
locations, service providers such as hotels and restaurants (Honig 2019). An
important goal is that the information can not only be obtained via thewebsite of
the respective institution,but it also reaches thecustomeronallotherchannels.This
means thatThüCATinformationflows to the traveller at all points and in all phases
of the customer journey (“Tourismusnetzwerk Thüringen”, n.d.). This is a project
that can only work by collaborating with all the organisations involved in the
creation of touristic offers. Technically, this is realised via a graph database,which
thenenables thepresenceof thedataondifferent channels,which in turnmeans that
the tourist canbeaccompaniedasmentionedonall the stagesofhisorher tour.The
semantic labelling and structuring of the data are carried out according to schema.
org models, in a format that is universally understandable and machine-readable,
which is a basic requirement for processing data by applications that are based on
AI.A“knowledgegraph” links awidevarietyof information suchas contact dates,
opening times and guided tours in such a way that the guest can get a compre-
hensiveand, if possible, targetgroup-specificor evenpersonalisedanswer to anyof
his questions (“Tourismusnetzwerk Thüringen”, n.d.).
Digital Entrepreneurship andAgileMethods… 55
Digital Entrepreneurship
Impact on Business and Society
- Titel
- Digital Entrepreneurship
- Untertitel
- Impact on Business and Society
- Autoren
- Mariusz Soltanifar
- Mathew Hughes
- Lutz Göcke
- Verlag
- Springer Verlag
- Ort
- Cham
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-030-53914-6
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 340
- Schlagwörter
- Entrepreneurship, IT in Business, Innovation/Technology Management, Business and Management, Open Access, Digital transformation and entrepreneurship, ICT based business models
- Kategorie
- International