According to a recent study by Grant Thornton, 483 000 foreign tourists will be attracted by the event, of which 151 000 will come from the rest of Africa. The research shows that the average soccer tourist will spend about a quarter of their budget on accommodation and nearly half on food, transport and entertainment. Given that foreigners are expected to bring in R8.5 billion, this represents more than R6.3 billion - a substantial sum provided the projected visitor numbers hold true.
With just over 400 days to go, this begs the question what can be done to maximise global visitor numbers and brand this event as a once in a lifetime opportunity - in the midst of the global financial crisis and a severe downturn in long haul travel?
A recent event that attracted almost two million visitors from more than one hundred countries amid freezing temperatures (-6oC, to be exact) in the country that originated the banking meltdown, holds important clues as to the power of causal branding.
On January 20, 2009, the entire world turned their attention to the inauguration of US President Barack Obama whose election campaign had attracted donations from more than two million individuals and mobilised close to one million volunteers.
Said Drew Hood from Midland, Tennessee, who drove more than 12 hours to witness the event. "We really wanted to come. It's a once-in-a-lifetime experience. As soon as Barack Obama was elected, I knew I wanted to go to DC."
Added Nisha Chauhan of London, England, who spent three days traveling by plane and bus to make it to the inauguration: "It's very exciting to be part of history and part of the huge celebration."
More than anything, it was the promise of change and the cause of building a better world that turned ordinary citizens from disillusioned bystanders to passionate activists.
Interestingly, causal branding is what enabled the past three hosts of the FIFA World Cup to go beyond merely staging a soccer tournament to enrolling their entire nation in collective mobilisation for good and fostering national cohesion.
Which national cause can South Africa tap into for 2010, in order to mobilise her people and attract as many visitors as possible? It was former President Nelson Mandela who summed up the task of causal branding when he said in his inaugural address in 1994 that “change needs unity of purpose. It needs action. It requires us all to work together to bring an end to division, an end to suspicion and build a nation united in our diversity.”