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Author: Nhi Duong

Social Media Is the New Search Engine: Is Your Destination Showing Up?

Travelers don’t plan trips the way they used to. Before they open a browser, many of them open TikTok or YouTube, and start searching. If your destination isn’t showing up there, you’re missing them entirely.

This isn’t a future trend. It’s happening right now. Younger travelers in particular are using social media platforms as their primary travel research tool, searching “best things to do in [destination],” “hidden gems near [city],” or “weekend trips from Denver” directly in TikTok and YouTube search bars. The results they find shape where they go.

The destinations showing up in those results aren’t there by accident. They’ve made a deliberate strategic shift, one we call Social SEO.

What the Data Tells Us

We’ve been implementing Social SEO strategy for one of our travel destination clients over the past year. The results across three consecutive quarters speak for themselves.

2x

Total social reach

Q1 to Q3

440x

YouTube views growth

Q2 to Q3

+150%

TikTok video views

Q2 to Q3

Total social reach went from 2.9 million to 5.9 million. YouTube views jumped from roughly 6,300 in Q2 to 2.77 million in Q3. TikTok views grew from 200K to nearly 500K in the same period. These numbers reflect what happens when a destination stops broadcasting and starts being found.

The biggest driver wasn’t more content or a bigger budget. It was a smarter strategy; one built around how travelers actually search, not just how algorithms distribute.


Try This

Search your destination the way a traveler would

Open TikTok or YouTube right now and type in what a visitor might search to find your destination — “things to do in [your city]” or “best [experience] in [your region].” What you see in those results is your real competition. Here’s what to look for:

  • 01

    Is your destination showing up at all? If you’re not in the first several results, you don’t exist for that search, regardless of how good your content actually is.

  • 02

    Who is outranking you, and why? Look at the videos that do appear. Are they using text overlays? Specific location tags? Detailed captions? Those aren’t accidents, they’re the signals that pushed those videos to the top.

  • 03

    Note the search suggestions TikTok and YouTube offer as you type. Those auto-fill terms are exactly what real travelers are searching. They’re a free window into your audience’s intent — and a content calendar waiting to be built.


The Shift Is Already Happening, With or Without You

Social platforms have become the new search engines for an entire generation of travelers. TikTok has invested heavily in its search product. YouTube has always been the world’s second-largest search engine. Instagram now surfaces content based on keywords, not just hashtag follows. The destinations building for discoverability on these platforms are compounding their reach every month. Those that aren’t are losing ground they may not even know is slipping.

The good news is that Social SEO is a learnable, implementable strategy, and the window to get ahead of it, before it becomes table stakes in destination marketing, is still open. But it won’t be for long.

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TikTok’s New Local Feed Is Something DMOs Should Be Paying Attention To

TikTok’s New Local Feed Is Something DMOs Should Be Paying Attention To

TikTok recently rolled out a new feature called the Local Feed, and it’s something destination marketers should definitely have on their radar.

The idea is pretty simple. TikTok is starting to surface videos connected to the place a user is currently in or visiting. Instead of only seeing content from across the internet, people are now seeing videos about restaurants, activities, businesses, and experiences nearby.

For DMOs, this is a pretty interesting shift.

Most destination marketing has traditionally focused on inspiring someone to visit before the trip even happens. But the Local Feed opens up another opportunity — influencing what visitors do once they’re already in your destination.

And the best part? This isn’t a paid feature. There’s no extra cost to show up here.

Why This is Interesting for Destinations

The Local Feed still uses TikTok’s algorithm, which means people are seeing content that fits their interests.

So if someone tends to watch food videos, they might start seeing restaurants nearby. If they’re into outdoor content, they could see local hikes, parks, or scenic viewpoints.

That’s what makes this powerful. The content doesn’t feel like an ad. It feels like a helpful recommendation.

For smaller or mid-sized destinations especially, that’s a big deal. You don’t need the biggest marketing budget to show up here. You just need content that’s relevant and connected to your destination.

TikTok is Also Becoming More of a Search Engine

Another thing worth noting with this feature is how TikTok decides what content to show locally.

Captions, keywords, spoken words in the video, and even text on screen all help TikTok understand what your video is about and where it’s relevant.

In other words, TikTok SEO is becoming a real thing. When your content clearly signals the destination it’s about, TikTok has a much easier time surfacing it to people nearby.

Why This is Good for Visitors Too

From the traveler side, the Local Feed is honestly just helpful.

People are constantly looking up things like:

Where should I eat?

What should I do today?

What’s nearby?

Instead of searching Google or scrolling through a long list of recommendations, they’re getting quick, visual ideas from TikTok.

For destinations, that means more opportunities to highlight local businesses, experiences, and those hidden gems visitors might not find otherwise.

And when visitors discover more things to do, they tend to explore more — and spend more locally.

The Big Takeaway

TikTok keeps evolving as a discovery platform for travel.

The Local Feed is another example of how the platform is connecting people to places in a really natural way.

For DMOs that are already creating content about their destination, this feature just creates another opportunity to show up in front of travelers — especially when they’re already there and looking for something to do.

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