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Tourism idea: cell phone tours

Zedler Mill
Audio tours at tourism destinations are nothing new. Museums have been handing out little headsets for years. But all kinds of new technologies are available.

Now that every visitor is carrying a cell phone, you might as well make use of it. Here’s an example from Zedler Mill, in Luling, Texas.

There is a welcome sign at the main entrance, and then smaller signs at particular points of interest. Visitors dial a phone number, then press a number for a particular stop. The audio plays, and they can walk around as they please. Each sign gave instructions to rewind, pause, etc. It even has a way to leave feedback for the destination. (I hope they’re doing something with that!)

Cell Phone audio tourCell phone audio tour

I tried it out, and it worked slick. It was well-implemented. And I saw other people use it, too.

How have you used audio in your destination?

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Becky McCray wearing long braids and a professional outfit smiles as she stands on a rural downtown street with twinkling lights in the background.

Becky started Small Biz Survival in 2006 to share rural business and community building stories and ideas with other small town business people. She and her husband have a small cattle ranch and are lifelong entrepreneurs. Becky is an international speaker on small business and rural topics.

Published: March 6, 2012

8 Comments

  1. We run a smaller historic museum in Vermont and have been using guidebycell.com as our cell tour operator. They are easy to work with, the setup was a breeze and their prices are quite affordable compared to a couple of the others that we talked with. However, overall it seems that most visitors like the novelty of it for the first stop or two but get bored quickly or don’t have the attention span to listen for more than a few minutes. We are considering not renewing this summer because the interaction and interest level just isn’t what we thought it would be.

  2. This is such a helpful discussion! I’m glad you’re sharing your real-world experiences.

    How could we make the audio more engaging or more useful, so people would listen for more than a few stations?

  3. Agreed – everyone seems to have a cell phone these days. But why not take it a step further and also record short video tours on You Tube and put signage throughout the museum or historical site with a QR code that will link to the You Tube video? If the video also includes closed captioning to it should help get extra SEO juice but more importantly make the information accessible to those with hearing difficulties. This way people that don’t have a smart phone can call in and people that do have a smart phone get something a little extra special.

    Just a thought.

  4. Wow, Meilee, that’s a great option! It costs NOTHING to maintain and most cell phone users have smart phones. In another year it will probably be over 90% with smart phones. Someone can host their own virtual tour on Youtube accessible by QR codes and save a ton of money. Sure the cell phone tour companies provide more analytics and more options as well as just audio tours, but I think the use of smart phones, QR codes, youtube etc can really help a lot of institutions do their own smart phone tours without paying exhorbitant fees! thanks so much!

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