By Balakmen Suting
Introduction
In an era defined by the smartphone and the social feed, the way people discover, plan, and experience travel has undergone a profound transformation. Gone are the days when a printed brochure or a travel agent’s recommendation was the primary gateway to a holiday destination. Today, a traveller in Nairobi or Mumbai can discover a hidden highland trail in the Khasi Hills, read peer reviews, book accommodation, and navigate their journey, all from the palm of their hand, in real time.
At the heart of this revolution lies a marketing framework known as SoLoMoan acronym for “Social, Local, and Mobile”. Originally coined in the context of retail and e-commerce, SoLoMo has rapidly become one of the most powerful tools available to the global tourism industry. Its principles align perfectly with modern traveller behaviour, making it not simply a marketing trend but a strategic imperative for tourism businesses, destination management organisations (DMOs), and hospitality providers alike.
This article examines what SoLoMo Marketing is, how each of its three pillars operates, and how it is uniquely driving the promotion of stunning, nature-centric destinations like Meghalaya.
What Is SoLoMo Marketing?
SoLoMo Marketing refers to a modern, integrated marketing approach that combines the power of social media, location-based targeting, and mobile technology to reach consumers at precisely the right place, at precisely the right time, with precisely the right message. The concept emerged from the convergence of three dominant trends in consumer behaviour and digital technology:
- Social: The explosive growth of social media platforms like Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and Facebookwhich have become primary channels through which people share experiences, seek recommendations, and interact with brands.
- Local: The capacity of digital technologies to determine a user’s geographical location with high precision, enabling local homestays and tour operators to deliver hyper-targeted content, offers, and information relevant to the user’s immediate surroundings.
- Mobile: The near-universal adoption of smartphones as the primary device through which people access the internet, consume content, navigate terrain, and make purchasing decisions at any hour and in any location.
Together, these three pillars form a mutually reinforcing framework. A tourist browsing Instagram (Social) sees a stunning, viral reel of the crystal-clear waters of Umngot River in Dawki. Their GPS data identifies that they are already within Northeast India or arriving at the Guwahati airport (Local). A push notification from a local Khasi tour group then arrives on their phone offering a guided trek or a boating experience at a discounted rate (Mobile). The result is a seamless, context-aware customer journey that feels intuitive rather than intrusive.
The Three Pillars of SoLoMo in Tourism
- Social: The Power of Shared Experiences
Tourism has always been inherently social. People have long shared travel stories with family and friends, but the digital age has amplified this instinct to an extraordinary degree. Today, a single photograph posted on Instagram, a short video on TikTok, or a glowing review on TripAdvisor can reach thousands or even millions of potential visitors within hours.
For remote destinations, harnessing this social dimension is the ultimate equalizer. Research consistently shows that travellers place greater trust in user-generated content (UGC)photographs and reviews shared by fellow travellers than in traditional advertising.
> The Meghalaya Context: Consider how destinations like the Double-Decker Living Root Bridges of Nongriat or the cascading Krang Suri Falls rose to international fame. It wasn’t through billboard advertisements, but through millions of organic, awe-inspiring social media posts by backpacking influencers.
> Destinations capitalise on this by actively encouraging guests to tag their experiences, collaborating with travel content creators, and building vibrant communities around hashtags like#ExploreMeghalaya or #AbodeOfTheClouds. Hashtag campaigns and user-generated content features on official tourism pages are all expressions of this social dimension.
- Local: Targeting Customers Where They Are
The Local component of SoLoMo is what gives it particular potency in the tourism context. Unlike many consumer goods, tourism is fundamentally a place-based experience. A traveller’s needs, interests, and purchasing behaviour shift dramatically depending on exactly where they are at any given moment. Location-based marketing technologies including GPS, geofencing, and location-aware advertising platforms allow businesses to deliver highly relevant communications to travellers based on their precise physical location.
A visitor arriving in Shillong can receive tailored boutique hotel or cafe suggestions. A tourist walking through Mawlynnong (Asia’s Cleanest Village) can receive notifications about nearby local community-led homestays. Beyond individual business promotion, the Local pillar plays a vital role in destination management. Tourism authorities can use location data analytics to understand visitor movement patterns identifying which attractions are undervisited, where crowding occurs (such as bottlenecking at certain viewpoints in Sohra/Cherrapunji), and how tourists navigate a region.
Furthermore, Local Search Optimisationensuring that a small, rural homestay or a local guide appears prominently when a nearby traveller searches for “food near me” or “trekking guides” on Google Maps Is critical. In an age when travellers make spontaneous decisions on the go, appearing at the top of a local search result can be the single most important marketing outcome for a small indigenous entrepreneur.
- Mobile: The Traveller’s Constant Companion
The smartphone has fundamentally redefined the travel experience at every stage of the customer journey from initial inspiration through planning, booking, on-trip navigation, and post-trip sharing. Industry data consistently shows that the majority of travel-related searches now occur on mobile devices, and a growing proportion of bookings are completed on smartphones.
The Mobile pillar of SoLoMo encompasses the full range of strategies and technologies that leverage this reality. Beyond mobile-optimised websites, modern destinations are introducing dedicated mobile tools.
[ Inspiration]➔ [ Localized Discovery]➔ [ In-Destination Mobile Booking]
(Social Feeds) (Geofenced Ads) (Meghalaya Tourism App)
A prime example is the Meghalaya Tourism App ecosystem, which allows users to book e-tickets for tourist spots, access real-time safety advisories, and seamlessly check entry details directly on their phones. Push notifications allow timely, personalised communications offering a serene boating experience as a traveller relaxes near Umiam Lake, or alerting a visitor to a flash discount at a traditional Khasi or Garo kitchen they previously browsed online. As 5G connectivity continues to expand across hilly terrains, the possibilities for immersive, real-time mobile tourism experiences will only deepen.
Why SoLoMo Is Uniquely Suited to Tourism
While SoLoMo principles are applicable across many industries, tourism possesses a set of characteristics that make it an especially natural fit for this marketing approach:
- Emotionally Driven & High-Involvement: Travellers spend considerable time researching destinations, seeking peer validation through social media, and reading reviews. The Social element directly serves this behaviour, providing the peer-generated social proof that travellers crave.
- Intrinsically Location-Dependent: The product being sold whether it is the mist-covered valleys of Laitlum Canyons, an ancient cave system in Jaintia Hills, or a cultural festivalis inseparable from its physical setting. The Local pillar ensures that marketing communications are anchored in geographic reality, reducing the friction between inspiration and action.
- Real-Time, Space-Defying Exploration: A traveller does not sit at a desktop computer when they need directions to a nearby living root bridge or want to check a monsoon weather update. They are moving, exploring, and deciding in real time with a smartphone as their primary tool. The Mobile pillar meets them exactly where and when they need assistance.
The Benefits of SoLoMo for the Tourism Sector
The adoption of SoLoMo strategies offers tourism stakeholders from individual local homestay owners under the Chief Minister’s Meghalaya Homestay Mission to state tourism boards, a comprehensive set of measurable benefits:
- Reaching the Right Audience at the Right Time: Serves highly relevant messages to individuals who are most likely to convert whether that is a millennial digital nomad looking for a workcation spot in the hills or a family researching heritage tourism.
- Increasing Local Visibility and Foot Traffic:For community-run eco-resorts, local taxi operators, and handicraft artisans, local search optimization translates directly into cash flow from travellers already in the area.
- Delivering Personalised Offers:A traveller who has previously searched for adventure activities online can receive targeted push-notification offers for cliff jumping or caving experiences when they arrive in the Shnongpdeng or Sohra region.
- Driving Grassroots Sales and Economic Growth: Real-time offers delivered at the moment of highest intent drive direct revenue to local communities, bypassing heavy reliance on massive, distant corporate travel agencies.
Challenges and Ethical Considerations
As with any data-driven marketing approach, SoLoMo comes with important challenges. The collection and use of location data raise legitimate concerns about consumer privacy, meaning DMOs must comply with local data protection regulations.
Furthermore, over-reliance on the “Social” aspect can lead to over-tourism at delicate ecological hotspots (like fragile root bridges or pristine waterfalls), requiring strategic location-based intervention to disperse crowds. There is also the question of ‘digital equity’. In rural or remote pockets of highlands, local communities may lack steady smartphone penetration or internet bandwidth. A balanced approach that blends digital SoLoMo campaigns with traditional community-led hospitality ensures that grassroots stakeholders are never left behind.
Conclusion: Embracing the SoLoMo Opportunity
SoLoMo Marketing represents one of the most significant strategic developments in the history of tourism promotion. By integrating the social nature of travel, the geographic specificity of destination experiences, and the ubiquity of the smartphone, it offers a framework for engaging travellers with unprecedented precision.
The modern traveller is social, local, and mobile. For regions looking to build a sustainable, future-ready global brand where nature, culture, and digital convenience intersect mastering the SoLoMo ecosystem is no longer just a useful tool; it is a strategic necessity.

























