Search Travel Market Report

mainlogo
www.travelmarketreport.com
U.S.A.
English
Canada
English
Canada Quebec
Français
Menu
  • News
  • Packaged Travel
  • Cruise
  • Hotels & Resorts
  • Destinations
  • Retail Strategies
  • Air
  • Training & Resources
  • Luxury Travel Report

Travel Advisors Are Getting Pickier About Clients

by Marilee Crocker  June 21, 2021
Travel Advisors Are Getting Pickier About Clients

Photo: Shutterstock.com. 

After a year of working tirelessly for little or no financial return, travel advisors are getting pickier about who they’ll take on as new clients and bolder about turning away existing clients.

Given the recent surge in travel, that might seem like a no-brainer. But even before phones started ringing again this spring, advisors were re-examining their priorities and reassessing their choices.

Suffering through the pandemic caused many advisors to decide that life was far too precious to waste doing work they don’t love or serving clients who don’t appreciate them and selling travel that yields low pay.

“I’m going to work with people I enjoy. If a name comes up on caller ID that makes me cringe, that’s just not one I’m going to work with anymore. It’s not any fun when the times get tough and we’re working for nothing,” said Shari Marsh of Cruise Holidays, Raleigh, NC, back in February.

Catherine Addé, an independent affiliate of TravelStore in Pasadena, CA, said she too is getting choosier about clients, in part because of how long it takes to service and book trips in the current environment.

“I am shedding clients who are problematic – shoppers and those who have demonstrated that they do not value me, my time, my professionalism. I am shedding the discount vacations and the three-night cruises. Maybe they’ve been with me for 20 years, but they complain, they moan, and I only make $1.95.

“It’s okay to turn away business if somebody is a bully if they’re causing you stress. It’s okay to be selective,” Addé said.

It’s almost as if she and other advisors have completed a values-clarification exercise. “During the pandemic, you realized that it’s not worth the stress, that life is short. You’re seeing people getting sick and dying. It’s like, Am I going to sweat the small stuff? Is it worth this commission?”

Getting smart about business
Haley Davis, owner of Destinations HD, Kansas City, KS, said that after eight years of working around the clock to build her business, often at the expense of her own health, the pandemic strengthened her resolve to focus only on the destinations and types of trips she loves.

It’s a transition she’s been working on for three years. “While I’d been good about my initial changes, it wasn’t until working even harder, for free, as I canceled and postponed trips that it started to sink in that I needed to make a bigger change. I need to take care of myself before I end up in the hospital or my life passes me by.”

Davis said she’s begun turning down last-minute bookings as well as three- to four-night budget trips and traditional cruises. “I no longer feel it’s worth the added stress and nonstop work to try and fit them in. I want to play the smart game. I know I will lose some sales, but it will be worth it.”

Davis isn’t just refusing new customers that don’t match her ideal client profile; she’s also turning away existing clients who don’t fit the bill. She simply tells them that she has a new business focus, informs them of her specialties, and then refers them elsewhere.

Fees help qualify customers
Some advisors are weeding out undesirable business by implementing fees for the first time or charging existing fees more uniformly.

“The quickest way to figure out if somebody is a shopper is to let them know of our planning fee. You can tell immediately,” said Anita Bornemann, president of Professional Travel Service in Kirkland, WA.

“Sometimes we have fallen into the trap where a new client calls you, gets all the information and then goes down the street for a $10 difference, or goes online, taking all the research you did. We don’t have time to do that anymore, nor should we have ever.”

Professional Travel Service is also charging fees more consistently than in the past, Bornemann said.

After a year in which advisors spent most of their time undoing the previous year’s bookings, all without pay, asking customers to pay for their services seems only fair, advisors said.

“As much as I love helping people, I have to get compensated for my time,” said Michele Dreiding, owner of Here To The Moon Travel in Stratford, CT.

While Dreiding didn’t charge fees before the pandemic, now she too finds that mentioning fees on an initial call helps her screen new customers. “Adding service fees is a way to qualify somebody or turn away business. It’s a way to differentiate who you’re going to work with.”

Because travel is once again hot and she’s slammed with requests, Dreiding also has grown comfortable telling prospective new clients that she’s overwhelmed with business right now.

It also helps to stay focused on selling the products and services in her business plan, she said. “Keeping that end goal in mind gives you more confidence to turn business away.”

  0
  0

MOST VIEWED

  1. Power Outage in Spain and Portugal Causes Major Travel Disruptions, Including at Madrid Airport
  2. 5 Things I Liked About Norwegian Aqua – and 4 I’m Not Sold On
  3. Testing the Waters with Dori: Do Travel Advisors Actually Dislike Viking?
  4. Beaches Ocho Rios Resort to Close Doors in May 2025
  5. How Pope Francis’ Funeral Will Impact Travel to Rome and Vatican City
  6. Using a Phone on a Cruise Ship Will Cost Thousands: Urban Myth or Reality?


  1. TTC Tour Week Returns with 9 FAM Trips Scheduled for November
  2. Travel Advisor Appreciation Month Offers Not to Be Missed
  3. Booking on Grandma’s Budget: How Grandparents Are Driving Multi-Gen and Skip-Gen Travel
  4. Sandals Has ‘Strong Interest’ in Bringing Beaches to St. Vincent & the Grena
  5. The Best Hotels to Book in Portugal & Spain: Roundup From an ALGV FAM 
  6. Vanessa McGovern Lands at Global Travel Collection
TMR Subscription

Subscribe today to receive daily in-depth luxury coverage, analysis of luxury news, luxury trends and issues that affect how you do business. Subscribe now for free.

Subscribe to TMR

Top Stories
Headquarter Happenings: Gifted Travel Network Hosts 3rd Annual Symposium on Avalon Poetry II
Headquarter Happenings: Gifted Travel Network Hosts 3rd Annual Symposium on Avalon Poetry II

GTN is keeping its momentum going in the luxury space by offering coaching and partnership opportunities to its advisors.

The Top 11 Hottest Adventure Tours of 2025 (So Far)
The Top 11 Hottest Adventure Tours of 2025 (So Far)

Top tour operators talk their best-selling products for 2025.

4 Qualifying Questions Travel Advisors Should Ask Clients with Autism
4 Qualifying Questions Travel Advisors Should Ask Clients with Autism

Advice for selling accessible travel to neurodivergent customers, from the experts.

Gifted Travel Network on Trevello Deal: ‘Philosophy Was So Aligned’
Gifted Travel Network on Trevello Deal: ‘Philosophy Was So Aligned’

Though GTN was not looking for a buyer, Trevello’s new compensation model and common ideals helped seal the deal.

Travel Guard Releases Enhanced Self-Service Tool for Travel Advisors
Travel Guard Releases Enhanced Self-Service Tool for Travel Advisors

The enhanced version features a more intuitive, self-service experience.

InteleTravel Acquires Tickitto, Adding Ticketed Events & Experiences to Brand Portfolio
InteleTravel Acquires Tickitto, Adding Ticketed Events & Experiences to Brand Portfolio

The acquisition gives advisors booking access to tickets for concerts, NFL games, F1 races, and more.

TMR OUTLOOKS & WHITE PAPERS
View All
industry spotlight
https://img.youtube.com/vi/TVZhtAkFzW8/0.jpg
How ALG Vacations Is Redefining Travel Advisor Appreciation in 2025
Advertiser's Voice
We Celebrate YOU
About Travel Market Report Mission Meet the Team Advisory Board Advertise Syndication Guidelines
TMR Resources Calendar of Events Outlook/Whitepapers Previous Sponsored Articles Previous This Week Articles
Subscribe to TMR
Select Language
Do You Have an Idea Email
editor@travelmarketreport.com
Give Us a Call
1-(516) 730-3097
Drop Us a Note
Travel Market Report
71 Audrey Ave, Oyster Bay, NY 11771
© 2005 - 2025 Travel Market Report, an American Marketing Group Inc. Company All Rights Reserved | Terms and Conditions
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Manage cookie preferences