Abstract:
Purpose: This paper seeks to measure the satisfaction of religious tourists travelling to various
destinations in the Himalayas in order to identify the expectation-experience gaps and understand
the shift in motives of travel.
Design/Methodology: The satisfaction of religious tourists is examined using holiday
satisfaction [HOLSAT] model developed by Tribe and Snaith, (1998). The study analyzes the
expectation-experience gap using mean scores on 47 destination specific attributes for a sample
of 500 respondents.
Findings: The study finds a significant gap between the expectations and experience of
religious tourists traveling to sacred destinations in the Himalayas. The study also finds that
motives of religious tourists have shifted from purely religious to secular touristic motives.
Practical Implications: The results of the study reinforce the value of HOLSAT model as a
potential tool to measure and enhance the satisfaction of religious tourists, indicating the
attributes that can contribute positively towards tourist satisfaction.
Originality Value: Measuring the expectations and experience for the same set of respondents is
a unique contribution of this study. The study attempts to overcome limitations of the HOLSAT
model as discussed by Tribe and Snaith.
Description:
Malodia, Suresh; Singla, Harish (2017). Using HOLSAT to evaluate satisfaction of religious tourist at sacred destinations: the case of religious travelers visiting sacred destinations in the Himalayas, India. International Journal of Culture, Tourism and Hospitality Research, 11(2), IJCTHR-10-2015-0120–. doi:10.1108/IJCTHR-10-2015-0120