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NSW small business cancels Ivan Milat-themed ghost tours after backlash

ย  A small business that specialises in ghost tours has cancelled an Ivan Milat-themed ghost tour in Belanglo State Forest in NSW in the face of widespread criticism. Goulburn Ghost Tours in regional New South Wales had marketed the late-night $150 tour on its website as an โ€œextreme terror tourโ€ and promoted it with lines […]
Renee Thompson
Renee Thompson
NSW small business cancels Ivan Milat-themed ghost tours after backlash

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A small business that specialises in ghost tours has cancelled an Ivan Milat-themed ghost tour in Belanglo State Forest in NSW in the face of widespread criticism.

Goulburn Ghost Tours in regional New South Wales had marketed the late-night $150 tour on its website as an โ€œextreme terror tourโ€ and promoted it with lines such as โ€œcome with us to Belanglo where Ivan Milat buried the bodies of his victimsโ€ and โ€œonce you enter Belanglo State Forest you may never come outโ€.

While the business had been running the tours since late June, community backlash mounted this week, including from NSW Premier Mike Baird and the families of victims killed by the serial killer.

In an interview on Channel Tenโ€™s The Project last night, Goulburn Ghost Tour spokesperson Louise Edwards said the idea behind the tour had been partly a โ€œsocial media projectโ€ to help find the family of one of Milatโ€™s victims as well as a project โ€œto show people that Belanglo is much more than what most people think that it is, itโ€™s a beautiful recreation reserveโ€.

Under questioning from The Projectโ€™s hosts about the sensitivities of the marketing, Edwards said the tourโ€™s aim was โ€œfocusing on particular groups who want to come on ghost tours, so thatโ€™s how we marketed itโ€.

โ€œIn hindsight, the foresight in the marketing is definitely not up to scratch,โ€ she said.

Yesterday the company cancelled the tour and pulled down its website and Facebook page.

When SmartCompany checked the website this morning, a message to the public suggests the company will be back at some stage: โ€œHang tight, we are now looking for a tour with out [sic] such an extreme responseโ€.

Janey Paton, director of marketing and PR company Belles & Whistles, told SmartCompany the tour company โ€œobviously overstepped the lineโ€.

Paton says it should serve as a reminder that small businesses need to have โ€œcareful considerationโ€ when developing marketing ideas.

โ€œIt sounds like they didnโ€™t put much thought and research into the marketing phase,โ€ she says.

โ€œThey took it a bit too far given such tragic events did occur, thereโ€™s a fine line between a historical exciting tour and scaring the hell out of your customers.โ€

Having to close down your small businessโ€™ website and relaunch could be a costly exercise in the long run, Paton says.

โ€œI think itโ€™s important to have a crisis management plan up front, but perhaps because of their lack of planning, possibly they wouldnโ€™t have done that,โ€ she says.

โ€œHopefully they do their market research before they relaunch, before they revisit strategy and donโ€™t make the same costly mistake.โ€

Paton says the message on the companyโ€™s website indicating it would look to put on another tour was an important thing for the business to do if they wanted to recover from the incident.

โ€œIf they didnโ€™t say that, theyโ€™d probably have to be starting from scratch, people will think theyโ€™ve shut down completely,โ€ she says.

Patonโ€™s advice to other small businesses that find themselves at the centre of such a controversy is to be upfront about the mistakes.

โ€œItโ€™s important to be transparent and upfront about, yes this has happened, apologise if they think itโ€™s necessary and come up with a solution,โ€ she says.

SmartCompany was unable to contact Goulburn Ghost Tours.

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