Tourism Research Our Offerings and Capabilities

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Tourism Research Our Offerings and Capabilities

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... and extreme, fishing and hunting, skiing, sea and river cruising. ... Intensifying competition for vacations in the Caribbean, Central, and South Americas. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tourism Research Our Offerings and Capabilities


1
Tourism ResearchOur Offerings and Capabilities
  • Click to proceed

2
Table of Contents(You can click links below for
specific areas, OR simply page through the
presentation)
  • Our offerings in tourism research
  • Our capabilities in tourism research
  • Key challenges in tourism marketing that our
    research can address
  • How we differ from our competition
  • Do we cost a lot more?
  • A quick word about the VFR (Visit-Friends/Relative
    s) market
  • A quick word about Hispanic tourism
  • Selected Clients Tourism Development
  • Selected Clients Entertainment
  • Selected Clients Travel Lodging
  • Specific Research Services we deliver
  • Selected Tourism Case Studies
  • More on MarCom Effectiveness Measurement
  • Summary of Benefits We Offer
  • Our Contact Information and Research Team

3
Offerings in Tourism Research
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  • Visitor interviews.
  • Personal intercepts.
  • On-Site paper-and-pencil
  • On-Site electronic and wireless devices.
  • Mail-to and mail-back surveys.
  • Telephone interviews.
  • Questionnaires administered on the Web.
  • Attitudinal and Behavioral measurement and
    tracking.
  • Current visitors.
  • Potential visitors.
  • Destination community members and opinion
    leaders.
  • Tourism market segmentation. Segments based on
  • Demographics. For example, Visit-Friends-Relative
    s (VFRs) and Hispanics).
  • Source markets.
  • Purpose-of-travel and travel-related needs.
  • Drivers of visitor choices.
  • Choices of destinations.
  • Choices of activities at the destination.
  • New niche markets (for example, Extreme Sports).

4
Capabilities in Tourism Research
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  • Professional data collection, analysis and
    reporting.
  • Asking the right questions of the right audience.
  • A portfolio of data collection modes online,
    phone, and others, tailored to the target markets
    investigated.
  • Insightful analytics beyond the basic tabs
    revealing the complex structure of visitor
    preferences, behavioral patterns, visitor
    profiles, and trip planning characteristics.
  • Reports, tabulations, and travel model
    simulations to serve as decision support systems
    for tourism marketers.
  • Ethnographic and unobtrusive observational
    studies.
  • A truly multicultural approach to the study of
    target markets.
  • Understanding vital links between the culture of
    the destination community and the culture of the
    visitors.
  • Authentic what does it mean to visitors and
    to the community?
  • Heritage can it be communicated effectively?
    To whom?
  • Expertise in ethnic and other specialty tourism
    and destinations
  • Hispanic and other emerging tourist markets.
  • Ecotourism, culinary tourism, sport and extreme,
    fishing and hunting, skiing, sea and river
    cruising.
  • Event tourism, health recreation, childrens and
    youth tourism, business tourism.

5
Key Challenges in Tourism Marketing that Research
Should Address
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  • Evolving visitor demographics Gen X and Y,
    retiring Boomers, growing families, ethnic and
    country-of-origin group and family travel.
  • Increasing need for variety as well as security
  • Variety of experiences during the trip and on
    different trips.
  • Experiences available even if not necessarily
    pursued on a given trip.
  • Visitor security in using service providers /
    carriers as well as within the destination
    communities.
  • Intensifying competition for vacations in the
    Caribbean, Central, and South Americas.
  • New opportunities to serve tourism demand that
    has been pent-up since 9/11 but is now
    re-emerging rapidly across the US.
  • Revolutionized decision-making with Web-based
    information and booking services. This new
    buyers market is accompanied by
  • Weakened effectiveness of traditional convention
    and tourism sales and marketing strategies.
  • New cooperative buyer partnerships, travel
    aggregators, search engines, opportunities to
    cross-sell both markets and services (lodging,
    rental cars, organized tours).

6
How We Differ from Our Competition
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What We Offer
7
Do We Cost a Lot More???
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NO! Our data is the same type collected in most
traditional visitor surveys. (We just collect it
AND analyze it better.)
Research needs to provide support your marketing
decisions. We guarantee this deliverable to you.
8
A Quick Word about the VFR (Visit-Friends/Relativ
es) market
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  • Among the most overlooked market opportunities in
    domestic tourism is the Visit-Friends/Relatives
    (VFR) market.
  • The VFR market is estimated to represent nearly
    50 of all domestic (and a large percentage of
    international) tourist traffic.
  • Traditionally, VFR is ignored by tourism
    marketers because it is assumed they visit only
    one destination at a time and spend less than
    other types of visitors.
  • Our capabilities uniquely address this market
    segment
  • 23 of VFR trips are for more purposes than just
    VFR. This segment spends significantly more on
    lodging, foodservice, attractions and
    facilities.
  • However, only detailed statistical profiling and
    data mining can easily uncover the full range of
    interests and needs among VFR visitors (see
    following page).
  • As the population ages, incomes grow, and kids
    less often accompany parents on VFR visits, VFR
    traffic will grow in size and economic value.

Bo Hu and Alastair M. Morrison (2001),
Tripography Can destination use patterns
enhance understanding of the VFR market?,
Journal of Vacation Marketing, 8(3)201-220.
9
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Source 2001-2002 National Transportation Board
Travel Study
10
A Quick Word about Hispanic Tourism
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  • Like the VFR market, it is important not to
    assume that the Hispanic tourism market is all
    the same.
  • Hispanic tourism is known to contain several
    different segments, each with its unique
    characteristics.
  • For example, on overnight trips, the Hispanic
    number-in-party differs dramatically depending on
    whether the travelers originate from more
    densely-populated areas (see graph on next page).
  • Over the next 10 years, Hispanic tourism will
    continue to grow in size, importance, and
    economic value.
  • Travel destinations that have a large Hispanic
    component (for example, San Antonio) tend to be
    the more popular ones among Hispanics themselves.
  • It is not clear, though, that city planners
    always recognize the cross-cultural impact of
    tourism development, even on the very markets
    they want to attract.
  • With the appropriate research, not only of target
    audiences but of community decision makers,
    tourist development can be made more attractive
    to Hispanic and other ethnic tourism segments.

Miguel de Oliver (2004), Marketing Latinos as
Development Policy, Latino Studies 2004, 2,
(395421).
11
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Number in Party From a Representative Sample of
7,633 Overnight Trips
Trips from Low-Population Density Areas
No difference for Non-Hispanics, but a large
difference among Hispanics.
Trips from High-Population Density Areas
Source 2001-2002 National Transportation Board
Travel Study
12
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Selected Clients Tourism Development
  • Texas Department of Economic Development
    Tourism
  • Las Vegas Convention Visitors Authority
  • Louisiana Office of Tourism
  • Vail Valley Tourism Convention Bureau
  • Virgin Islands Tourism Economic Development
    Department

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Selected Clients Travel Lodging
  • American Airlines
  • Southwest Airlines
  • Carnival Cruise Lines
  • Marriott International
  • La Quinta Inns

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Selected Clients Entertainment
  • Six Flags
  • Sea World
  • Lone Star Park (horse racing)
  • Houston Astros
  • Harrahs Casinos
  • Texas Motor Speedway (NASCAR)
  • State Fair of Texas

15
Specific Research Services We Deliver(click to
go to page)
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  • Qualitative
  • Quantitative
  • Consulting

16
Qualitative Research Services
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  • Back to Research Services List
  • Professional group as well as one-on-one depth
    interviews.
  • Strict standards of participant quality and
    familiarity.
  • Extensive experience conducting interviews with
    corporate executives and community opinion
    leaders.
  • Range of qualitative interview techniques.
  • Focus groups (on-site and e-focus).
  • One-on-one depth interviews.
  • Means-End / Laddering, Repertory Grids, Voice of
    the Customer.
  • See examples of report deliverables below.

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Quantitative Research Services
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  • Back to Research Services List
  • Quantitative surveys and data mining provide a
    comprehensive picture of the market.
  • Can combine survey data with existing customer
    and market information.
  • Targeted surveys pinpoint the optimum market
    positioning.
  • Proprietary survey research is the only real way
    to build strategy that beats the competition.
  • Our first concern is always, What is the
    Competitive Set?
  • Data collection modes flexibly reach the right
    participants.
  • Person-to-person.
  • Telephone.
  • Mail.
  • Online.
  • Combinations of modes as needed.

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Quantitative Services (contd)
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  • Hard-hitting graphical representations of key
    findings benefits versus importance, strong
    versus weak drivers, perceptual maps for
    strategic planning, and others.
  • Banner tabs and other tabulations highlighting
    key findings.
  • Conjoint and Discrete Choice Models (including
    latent class and hierarchical Bayes).
  • Time-series analysis (ARIMA econometric models),
    to track market trends and capture substantive
    shifts in demand.
  • Market simulation and optimization of marketing
    strategies.
  • Full suite of software and hardware tools to
    handle large visitor databases and conduct
    analysis as needed.

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1. Support Consulting Capabilities
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  • Back to Research Services List
  • Acquiring, assessing, focusing, and summarizing
    industry reports and producing competitive
    profiles / summaries.
  • Market opportunity sizing by geographic,
    vertical, and demographic segment.
  • Marketing plan development and debugging.
  • Production of materials for senior-level
    presentations.
  • Research seminars for staff department
    managers, including
  • Building research programs collaboratively across
    the organization.
  • Database marketing models to enhance customer
    response rates.

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2. Strategic Consulting
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  • Back to Research Services List
  • Competitive intelligence gathering and reporting
  • Product / brand management and strategic
    positioning
  • Pre-IPO and other due diligence research
  • Litigation support
  • Risk assessment of new product launches and
    competitive strategies

21
Selected Tourism Case Studies(click to go to
page)
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  • Visitor A/A/U and Segmentation
  • Ad Campaign Development
  • Tourism Tracking
  • Tourism Development
  • Web Site Effectiveness

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Case Study Visitor A/A/U Segmentation
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  • Back to Case Studies List
  • Client Ski Resort.
  • Issues
  • Profile (A/A/U) of returning and potential
    visitors from out-of-region areas.
  • Measure effectiveness of print advertising.
  • Response to bundled lift, lodging and local
    entertainment packages at various discount
    levels.
  • Methodology Conjoint Analysis using hybrid
    online and mail survey data.
  • Applicability to client Profiling and
    segmentation of visitors for effective marketing
    campaigns.

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Attributes Importance
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  • Back to Case Studies List
  • Destination A
  • Ease of access to destination 67.1
  • Broad range of attractions 70.8
  • Wide range of lodging 69.5
  • Wide range of restaurants 58.3
  • Range of local shopping 34.5
  • Interesting local culture 63.2
  • Good destination for adults 69.9
  • Good destination for children 56.2
  • Cost of travel to destination 78.4
  • Safety of destination 67.4
  • Friendliness of locals 73.2
  • Nearness to other destinations 71.8
  • Overall assessment 82.7
  • Relative value for cost 58.6
  • Likelihood of return visit 88.4

Dominant
Vulnerable
Destination A Destination B Destination
C Destination D
Dominant
Vulnerable
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Case Study Ad Campaign Development
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  • Client State Tourism Department
  • Issues
  • Influence of the destinations brand on choice
    of competing vacation alternatives.
  • Brand re-positioning opportunities.
  • Key advertising messages, appeal and value
    linkage.
  • Methodology Laddering interviews.
  • Applicability to client Leverage how tourism
    offerings touch the highest values of travel
    decision makers and influencers.

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Cognitive Map Competing Destinations
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  • Back to Case Studies List

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Case Study Visitor Perceptions Tracking
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  • National Recreational Park consortium.
  • Issues How seasonal visitation changes in
    response to new attractions over time.
  • Methodology Econometric modeling of tracker
    survey data collected over five years.
  • Applicability to client More effective
    promotional timing, discounts, and ad scheduling.

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Visitors to Attractions and Association Group
visitors (e.g. Boy Scouts) are less cost
sensitive than the average adult visitor.
When working with longitudinal data especially
multi-year visitor surveys it is vital to
control accurately for inflation in travel costs
over time.
  • Back to Table of Contents
  • Back to Case Studies List

Each point represents one time period.
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Each tourist destination within the State can
easily have different feeder markets and visitor
types.
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Value-for-money and travel budgets are among the
most important visitation drivers.
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Case Study Product Design Bundling
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  • Client Gaming Attraction (casino)
  • Issues Determine best combination of lodging,
    perks, and entertainment options
  • Methodology
  • Choice task with potential features and prices
    administered to customers and survey panel
    respondents in an online interview
  • Latent class analysis derived market segments,
    each with unique price sensitivity, attribute
    drivers, and MarCom opportunities
  • Applicability to client Identification of best
    features and pricing plans as well as how to
    communicate them

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Product Concepts
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Conjoint/choice Model Full Effects Design
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Case Study Web Site Effectiveness
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  • Client State Tourism Department
  • Issues
  • Effectiveness of Web site for stimulating or
    contributing to selection of State as a
    destination.
  • How data on click-through links correspond to
    visitor interests and behaviors.
  • Methodology
  • Sample of site registrants participated in short
    online interview in exchange for sweepstakes
    offers.
  • Behavioral measures Duration of visit,
    transportation, group size, travel budget, major
    attractions visited.
  • Client Deliverables
  • Cost-effectiveness of MarCom investments in
    banner ads and direct mail offers.
  • Relative attractiveness of key attractions based
    on Web site photos and descriptions.
  • Compute ROI of marketing effort based on
    visitor spending and frequency of travel.

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More on MarCom Effectiveness Measurement
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  • Unique tools to measure
  • Awareness and interest in the destination,
    depending on whether currently visiting, recently
    visited, have never visited, or visited in the
    past.
  • Each groups sources of awareness, ad recall
    levels, and linkages to perceived benefits.
  • Evaluation of destination likeability
  • Multiple ratings combined to provide strongest
    measure of visitor preferences ratings include
    visit intent, uniqueness of the destination,
    value for the money, expected and past
    satisfaction.
  • Align these measures with visitor demographic and
    behavioral profiles most likely to visit within
    upcoming time horizons.
  • Project visitation by time period and benefit
    segment.

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More MarCom Effectiveness Measurement (cont.)
  • Unique tourism marketing research tools also
    measure
  • Relative favorability in positioning against
    competition, based on ratings of competing travel
    alternatives using point allocation and discrete
    choice tasks
  • Competitive positioning analysis extracts
    dimensions along which the client has (a)
    stronger equity and (b) opportunities to
    reposition or expand positioning to the target
    markets
  • Credibility of the promise to deliver exactly the
    benefits offered
  • Specific positioning statements are evaluated for
    perceived information value and claim credibility
  • Message elements having the greatest impact are
    identified, catalogued, prioritized, and aligned
    to benefit segments.

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Summary of Benefits We Offer
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  • Insightful findings consistently coupled with
    actionable strategies
  • Powerful analytic tools to maximize the strategic
    value of data to the client
  • Team of experienced analysts and consultants with
    strong skill sets in tourism research
  • Scalable resources and nimble response to client
    needs
  • Proven ROI in market research, analysis, and
    consulting expenditures
  • Faster, more cost-effective turnaround than
    competitors
  • Quick response to unexpected changes in project
    scope, goals, and client business needs

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Our Contact Information
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  • Morgan Analytics, Inc.
  • 2600 Avenue K, Suite 205
  • Plano, TX 75074
  • Office_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _(972) 516-0696
  • Fax_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (972) 516-0695
  • info_at_morgananalytics.com
  • www.morgananalytics.com
  • Tourism Research Team Profiles (click to go to
    profile)
  • Mike Morgan, President / CEO
  • Tim McDonough, V.P., Product Development
  • Marta Kindya, Director, Marketing and Business
    Development
  • Robert Newman, Nexus Business Information
  • Rafael Hernandez, Hispanic Research Consultants

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Mike MorganPresident / CEO Morgan Analytics
  • Back to Table of Contents
  • Back to Research Team List
  • Experience
  • Morgan Analytics, Inc.
  • M/A/R/C Research V.P., Analytic Services
  • Sprint Business Database Marketing and Primary
    Research Groups
  • Savitz Research Center Marketing Science
    Consultant / Director
  • Cornell University Asst. Professor of
    Marketing, School of Hotel Management
  • Ten years of hospitality management experience
  • Knowledge Areas
  • Buyer Judgment/Decision/Choice Processes and
    Segments
  • Pricing Theory and Models
  • New Product Acceptance and Growth Models
  • Hospitality Distribution Channel Analysis and
    Modeling
  • Education
  • Ph.D., Marketing, University of Texas at Dallas
  • M.S., Marketing, University of Texas at Dallas
  • B.A., University of Texas at Austin

37
Tim McDonoughV.P. Product Development Morgan
Analytics
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  • Experience
  • Statistical Consulting
  •         Morgan Analytics, Inc.   
  •         McDonough Heritage President / CEO
  •  Airline Database and Operations Management
  •         American Airlines
  •         Saudi Arabian Airlines
  •         Litton Aero Products (Northrup-Grumman)
  • Knowledge Areas
  •          Economic, Econometric, and Statistical
    Testing and Modeling
  •         CRM, advanced visualization and
    non-parametric analyses
  •          Neural nets, CART, CHAID, SAS Enterprise
    Miner, and S-PLUS
  •          Political and sociological data sources
  •          Consumer data vendor products (Acxiom,
    Experian and Claritas)
  • Education
  •          Ph.D., Political Economy, University of
    Texas at Dallas
  •          M.S., Economics and Management Science,
    University of North Texas
  •          B.S. Electrical Engineering, University
    of Hawaii

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Marta KindyaDirector Marketing Business
Development Morgan Analytics
  • Back to Table of Contents
  • Back to Research Team List
  • Experience
  • Nexus Business Information Dir. Marketing
    Business Development
  • Navia Consulting Principal Consultant -
    technology, healthcare, pharma
  • Gartner Group Principal Analyst Latin America
  • NYNEX/ATT/Bellcore Market analysis and
    forecasting
  • Ten years of other management experience
  • Knowledge Areas
  • Business Development, channel strategies,
    international marketing
  • Latin American and European markets
  • Forecasting, pricing and new product design
  • Education
  • M.B.A., International Business, Pace University,
    New York
  • B.S., Metallurgical Engineering, Polytechnic
    University, New York

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Robert NewmanPresident
  • Back to Table of Contents
  • Back to Research Team List
  • Experience
  • Nexus Business Information President and
    Director of Research
  • Gartner Group, Research Analyst, Latin America
  • NYNEX, Development Consultant
  • Ten years of other management experience
  • Knowledge Areas
  • Marketing Strategy
  • Buyer behavior
  • Pricing and promotions
  • Advertising effectiveness
  • Travel and Tourism Marketing
  • Education
  • Ph.D., Marketing, University of Texas at Dallas
    (ABD)
  • M.S., Marketing, University of Florida
  • B.A., University of Texas at Austin

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Rafael HernandezManaging Director
  • Back to Table of Contents
  • Back to Research Team List
  • Experience
  • Manager of Marketing Research for
    Exxon-Mobil
  • Director of Marketing for Fiesta Mart
    Supermarkets
  • Director of Ethnic Marketing for Nash
    Finch
  • Knowledge Areas
  • Hispanic Marketing Research
  • Hispanic Marketing Strategy
  • Branding Strategies and Development
  • Hispanic Tourism Marketing
  • Education
  • M.B.A., Marketing, The Ohio State
    UniversityB.S., La Salle University, Mexico
    CityProfessional Moderator Certification, Burke
    Institute
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