The role of digital marketing in promoting sustainable tourism during COVID-19 in Lusaka, Zambia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51867/ajernet.7.2.75Palavras-chave:
COVID-19, Digital Marketing, Lusaka, Sustainability, Tourism Promotion, ZambiaResumo
The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically altered the global tourism industry. This crisis has highlighted how dependent tourism businesses were on face-to-face interactions, physical travel arrangements, and conventional marketing methods. Because of these dependencies, the industry became highly vulnerable to sudden disruptions. In Zambia, the situation was extremely hard in Lusaka, which is the country's main center of administration, trade, urban tourism, and business travel. Measures such as restriction of movement, bans on gatherings, and social distancing severely reduced the visibility of the destination and the weakening of the relationship with potential tourists. Consequently, many tourism businesses ended up operating at reduced capacity, while some even closed down. This research, based on dynamic capabilities theory with the help of PESTEL analysis, examined how tourism companies digitally discover opportunities and change their marketing practices after COVID-19. It also looked at which digital marketing means are being used to motivate destinations and promote business resilience and continuity. A convergent parallel mixed-methods design was used, aiming at 230 stakeholders including tourism operators, digital marketers, policymakers, and domestic tourists. 119 materials were validly returned based on purposive and convenience sampling. Quantitative data was statistically analyzed by descriptive statistics, cross-tabulations, correlation, and regression analysis in SPSS, whereas qualitative data underwent thematic analysis. The results pointed out that during the pandemic, digital marketing turned out to be a critical survival and adaptation tool. Over 70% of the people surveyed reported using online platforms to keep up their visibility and customer interaction. Facebook was at the top of the list with 78%, then WhatsApp with 72%, and Instagram with 61%. Approximately 72% said that they communicated and engaged with the market better, and 68% stated that digital marketing helped to make their business more resilient during the crisis. But only 35% took advantage of advanced tools like analytics, influencer marketing, and virtual tours, which suggests limited digital proficiency. The share of those incorporating sustainability messages into their digital content was below 40%. The main problems were the expensive data, as indicated by 76% of the respondents; lack of digital skills, by 64%; and unstable internet connectivity, by 58%, among others. The article's final decision is that although digital marketing has played a major role in improving visibility, engagement, and short-term resilience, it is still not a sufficient gear for long-term, sustainable tourism development because of structural, financial, and skills-related barriers. It is also imperative to ensure better digital capacity, upgrade internet infrastructural facilities, and put in place sustainability strategies to meet the needs of a better tourism sector in Zambia and resilience-building outcomes.
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Direitos de Autor (c) 2026 Andrew Katete, Annastasia Chileshe Mulenga

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