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Larry sits down with Daniel Horsch, Senior Sales Director at Azira, for a wide-ranging conversation about what data can actually do for destination marketers when you stop chasing impressions and start asking better questions. Daniel describes Azira as "the Swiss" of the data world — neutral, flexible, and plugged in across channel partners, agencies, and direct clients — with geolocation data that's universal enough to translate across verticals but laser-focused on travel and hospitality.
The bigger thread here is intentionality. Daniel makes the case that DMOs are getting pulled past the old "heads in beds" scoreboard and into harder questions: Are visitors actually shopping? Eating? Staying longer? Coming back? He shares a sharp example from his pre-Azira days running marketing for a DFW destination, where data showed a nearby high-affinity market was only staying 1.5 days — prompting a budget reallocation to longer-stay markets that drove real economic lift. He and Larry also riff on the realities of AI as a "coworker, not a captain," the death of analysis paralysis, and why no Zoom call will ever replace a real conversation at an event.
Key Takeaways
By Larry Aldrich and Mady DudleyLarry sits down with Daniel Horsch, Senior Sales Director at Azira, for a wide-ranging conversation about what data can actually do for destination marketers when you stop chasing impressions and start asking better questions. Daniel describes Azira as "the Swiss" of the data world — neutral, flexible, and plugged in across channel partners, agencies, and direct clients — with geolocation data that's universal enough to translate across verticals but laser-focused on travel and hospitality.
The bigger thread here is intentionality. Daniel makes the case that DMOs are getting pulled past the old "heads in beds" scoreboard and into harder questions: Are visitors actually shopping? Eating? Staying longer? Coming back? He shares a sharp example from his pre-Azira days running marketing for a DFW destination, where data showed a nearby high-affinity market was only staying 1.5 days — prompting a budget reallocation to longer-stay markets that drove real economic lift. He and Larry also riff on the realities of AI as a "coworker, not a captain," the death of analysis paralysis, and why no Zoom call will ever replace a real conversation at an event.
Key Takeaways