Red Clay Perspectives

Master-planning Tourism:
The Secret Sauce to Destination Development

The Masterplan Mirage The Secret Sauce:
Accountability in Action
Context Is Everything
The Implementation Gap

Picture two destinations. Both have stunning coastlines, rich cultural heritage, and communities eager for economic opportunity. Both invest heavily in tourism masterplans, comprehensive documents outlining their path to becoming world-class destinations.

Five years later, one has transformed. New hotels thoughtfully dot the landscape, local artisans sell their crafts to engaged visitors, and young people have meaningful employment in the hospitality and tourism industry. The other remains largely unchanged, its masterplan gathering dust on the shelves in government offices.

What made the difference?

The Masterplan Mirage

Here’s what most people get wrong: they think having a masterplan guarantees tourism development. It doesn’t. A masterplan is simply potential energy – it needs the will and systems to implement it.

We have seen this pattern repeatedly across Africa and beyond. Destinations spend months crafting elaborate visions, complete with glossy renderings and ambitious timelines. Then they file the document away and wonder why transformation never comes.

The launch of the masterplan, whilst important, is not the destination; it is the roadmap. And like any roadmap, it only works when you actually start driving.

What Makes a Tourism Masterplan Actually Work

At its essence, a tourism masterplan is a strategic blueprint for destination evolution. The best ones span 10 years and capture not just where a destination wants to go, but precisely how it will get there, and most importantly, how it will know when it arrives.

For us at Red Clay, tourism development must improve the quality of life for host communities. If it does not create meaningful work, better infrastructure, and renewed pride in local heritage, then what has been the point of the tourism development efforts?

A robust masterplan addresses six critical areas:

  1. Tourism product development: What experiences will visitors have?
  2. Destination development: How will physical spaces evolve?
  3. Infrastructure: What foundational systems need upgrading?
  4. Human resources: How will locals be trained and employed?
  5. Marketing: How will the destination reach its ideal visitors?
  6. Risk management: What could go wrong, and how will you respond?

Why do most masterplans fail? They are not treated as actionable commitments.

The Secret Sauce: Accountability in Action

After working with destinations across multiple continents, we have identified what separates transformation success stories from expensive planning exercises.

The secret sauce isn’t brilliant strategy alone, although this matters too. No it is not stakeholder buy-in or adequate funding (although these are essential too).

The secret sauce is accountability: having specific targets and actually doing what you have committed to do.

Successful destinations create dashboards tracking concrete metrics: jobs created, visitor numbers, average spend, infrastructure projects completed. They report progress publicly, adjust course when necessary, and treat their masterplan as a living document that guides daily decisions.

Think of Google Maps. The app doesn’t just show you where to go; it tracks your progress, recalculates when you take a wrong turn, and updates you on arrival time. The tourism masterplan should work the same way.

The ‘secret spice’ in effective tourism masterplan development and implementation is accountability, knowing what you are responsible for and have committed to, doing it, and following up to monitor and ensure that targets are met.

Image Credit: Barnabas Sani/ Pexels

Context Is Everything

What transforms the Volta Region in Ghana won’t necessarily work in Ekiti State, Nigeria. While destinations can learn from each other’s experiences, each requires its own carefully calibrated approach.

This is particularly crucial for African destinations, where the temptation often exists to impose external models rather than enhance what already exists. The best masterplans enhance, rather than change a destination’s essence.

Consider the difference between these approaches:

  • Generic strategy: Build luxury resorts to attract international visitors
  • Context-specific strategy: Develop community-based eco-lodges that showcase traditional architecture while providing employment for local craftspeople and guides

One treats the destination as a blank canvas. The other recognizes it as a living, breathing community with its own strengths to build upon.

The Implementation Gap

Most destinations are better at planning than implementing. Beyond the launch of the masterplan is the hard, long work of tracking progress, adjusting strategies based on results, and holding stakeholders accountable for commitments.

Effective implementation requires:

  1. Strong governance: Someone needs to be in charge, with authority to make decisions and allocate resources
  2. Multi-stakeholder collaboration: Government, private sector, and communities must work together consistently, not just during planning phases
  3. Regular monitoring: Monthly or quarterly reviews, not annual check-ins
  4. Public reporting: Transparency creates accountability
  5. Adaptive management: The willingness to change course when data shows that progress is off track

The Policy Foundation

A masterplan requires a supportive tourism policy. Government needs clear frameworks for decision-making, streamlined processes for tourism investment, and consistent messaging about development priorities.

This policy foundation ensures that when private investors or development partners want to engage, they understand the rules and can move efficiently toward shared goals.

The five core requirements of effective masterplan implementation. Masterplans are living documents that can take a destination’s strengths and help them truly shine, but without these requirements, the masterplan risks remaining a document on the shelf

Image Credit: Red Clay

Making Destinations Sing

The best tourism masterplans work like a perfect spice blend, they enhance what is already there without overpowering it. They take a destination’s existing strengths and help them truly shine.

When done right, master-planning creates a virtuous cycle: better experiences attract more visitors, generating revenue that funds infrastructure improvements, creating jobs that keep young people in their communities, building pride that motivates further investment in local heritage and natural resources.

But “done right” means more than smart strategy. It means treating the masterplan not as a finish line but as a starting point. The moment when real work begins.

The question is not whether your destination needs a tourism masterplan. The question is how prepared you are to implement it. In tourism development, as in cooking, having the recipe is not enough. The magic happens when you actually turn on the heat.

Read this as a PDF

Prefer a formatted version? Download this edition of Perspectives as a PDF and receive future editions directly in your inbox

PDF Request Form (#3)

More Posts

Privacy Statement

At Red Clay, we respect your privacy and are committed to protecting the information you share with us. This statement outlines our approach to user data, confidentiality, and content featured on this website.

Use of Images and Media
Photographs, videos, and other visual materials displayed on this website are used strictly for illustrative and educational purposes. Red Clay does not claim ownership of all such images unless otherwise stated. All rights remain with the original creators or copyright holders. If you believe that your image or content has been used inappropriately, please contact us and we will promptly address the matter.

Confidentiality and User Data
When you visit our website, sign up for newsletters, or engage with us, we may collect limited personal information (such as your name, email address, or organisation). This information will only be used for the purposes you consent to—for example, responding to inquiries, sharing updates, or improving our services. We do not sell, rent, or disclose your personal information to third parties without your consent, except where required by law. All data is kept confidential and is handled with appropriate security measures.

Cookies and Analytics
Our website may use cookies or analytics tools to track general usage patterns, such as page visits and time spent on the site. This information is used to improve user experience and is not linked to personally identifiable data.

Your Consent
By using our website, you consent to the terms of this Privacy Statement. Updates to this statement will be posted here, and continued use of the website after changes are made will indicate your acceptance of those changes.

Contact Us
If you have any questions or concerns about this Privacy Statement or the use of your data, please reach out to us at: tourism at redclayadvisory dot com