Destination Sunday: The Flip Side of Posting Daily
Why content volume won’t save your destination
The Story
Last week, I scrolled through a destination’s Instagram feed.
Thirty posts in thirty days.
Sunrises. Sunset. Another sunset. A blurry event flyer. A reel of someone holding scissors at a ribbon-cutting.
I thought: If I’m this bored scrolling, imagine being a traveler deciding where to go.
That’s when it hit me. Posting daily isn’t marketing. It looked like copy–paste on repeat.
The Myth
Conventional wisdom says: “Post every day. The algorithm rewards consistency.”
So destinations flood the internet with content. But here’s the truth: daily posting doesn’t build destinations. It builds noise.
The Pain of Posting Daily
Let’s do the math. One post a day = 365 posts a year.
Even if you only spend an hour on each, that’s nine full work weeks gone. Nine weeks of staff time poured into filler content.
What’s the ROI? Two likes, one from your mom and one from a bot.
Meanwhile:
Your feed is cluttered. Guests scroll past, numb.
Your team is fried. Burnout from chasing content calendars instead of guests.
Your message disappears. The more you post, the less anyone remembers.
Daily posting ≠ marketing. Daily posting = digital hamster wheel.
The Flip Side
Quality beats quantity. Always.
One great story told well will drive more bookings than 300 throwaway posts.
Proof: Less, But Better
Leavenworth, Washington didn’t blast daily ads to compete with Seattle. They leaned into their Bavarian theme and programmed a few unforgettable rituals: Oktoberfest, Maifest, and the Christmas Lighting Festival.
That’s it. Not 365 random posts. Just a handful of consistent, story-rich events promoted with intention.
The result? 2–3 million visitors a year. Guests didn’t come because they saw a sunrise post on Instagram. They came because they remembered the story.
A Simple AI Play
Here’s how to cut the noise and zero in on what actually works:
Collect your last 20 posts — screenshots, links, whatever’s handy.
Drop them into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini.
Use this simple prompt:
“Act like a traveler deciding where to visit. Review these posts and tell me: • Which ones would inspire a trip, and why? • Which ones are just filler? • How could the filler be improved?”
Cut the filler. Double down on the winners.
The result? Content that’s leaner, sharper, and designed through the eyes of your future guests.
Why It Works
Travelers don’t remember daily filler. They remember:
The quirky story they retell at dinner.
The photo that made them say, “I want to be there.”
The tradition that turns into an annual trip.
That’s what drives loyalty and bookings. Not “day 187 of daily posts.”
👉 The Flip Side: Posting daily doesn’t build destinations. Stories, rituals, and purpose do.
If you want to keep burning nine weeks a year shouting into the void, don’t subscribe.
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