The United States made US$134.4 billion (NZ$168,608 billion) off international tourism in 2010, when a record 60 million tourists came to visit, according to figures from the US Commerce Department.
But the majority of those visitors came over the border from Canada and Mexico, including day trippers. Only six per cent came from Britain, five per cent from Japan, three per cent from Germany and two per cent from France.
The United States also trails France as the premier tourist destination - and it's nowhere near tapping the full potential of the Asian market, after just 1.45 million Chinese and Indian visited last year.
Mindful that tourism already counts for 2.8 per cent of gross domestic product and 7.52 million jobs, Washington sees the industry as a relatively fast and easy way to snap the economy out of its post-recession blues.
"The growing middle class in Asia is driving a lot of this," said Evans at the Corporation for Travel Promotion's not-yet-fully-furnished offices in downtown Washington.
One hurdle has little to do with image, and everything to do with bureaucracy - a byzantine US visa application procedure that can take weeks to complete, including fingerprinting and interviews at an embassy or consulate.
Under a visa waiver scheme, most Western Europeans - plus Japanese and Australians - can avoid the byzantine process, but they still need to pay $14 to enter the United States.
"If we institute a smarter visa policy, we can create 1.3 million US jobs" and add US$859 billion to the economy by 2020, Roger Dow, chief executive of the US Travel Association, representing the travel and tourism industry, has said.
Legislation passed in March 2010 set up the Corporation for Travel Promotion - which is renaming itself Brand USA - to spearhead marketing efforts which historically have been fragmented among individual states and businesses.
Central to that message is a pixelated "USA" logo, unveiled on Monday in London and a world away from the Stars and Stripes, that is meant to represent what the corporation calls "the United States of Awesome Possibilities".
"It is not about patriotism, flag-waving or chest-beating," says the corporation in a capsule explanation of the design. "It is meant to be welcoming, unexpected and inclusive."
Full-fledged marketing campaigns are scheduled to begin in March next year, tailored to each market and focusing on the great outdoors, urban excitement, culture and "indulgence".
"We have to rekindle the romance with the United States," Chris Perkins, chief marketing officer at the Corporation for Travel Promotion, told AFP.
"It pains me, as a proud American, but we're viewed as arrogant and brash, and we've never been out there saying: 'Please come'."
- AAP