Sunday, July 17, 2016

Eight Ways to Attract Affluent Clients


Saw this article in Travelmarket Report, and just in case you missed it.
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Eight Ways to Attract Affluent Clients
by Monique Burns / 

This is the first of two parts.

“I don’t intend to marry for money,” a wag once quipped. “I’ll just hang around rich people till I fall in love.”

That sounds like the words of a cold-hearted gold-digger. But there is an underlying truth. Just as you find fishermen congregating around fishing holes or bowlers meeting up at local alleys, you’ll find upscale clients sharing special interests with other well-heeled types.

Here’s advice from the pros on how to attract high-end clients.

1. Offer top-shelf vacations
You won’t impress well-heeled clients with mass-market cruises and tours. By and large, affluent clients want highly personalized luxury vacations. Contact upscale cruise and tour operators and let them know you cater to a high-end clientele.

To familiarize yourself with their products, take specialist courses and fam tours offered by luxury tour operators and suppliers.

2. Advertise high-end products
Using personal contacts to attract the affluent market is very helpful. But a direct approach works well too.

“When we first started out, we advertised high-end products like river cruises in our newspaper ads,” said Chris Tichy, co-owner of The Vacation Center, which has offices in Southington, Conn., and Coventry, R.I., and is affiliated with The Affluent Traveler Collection. “As time went on, these clients referred us to other clients.”

Also consider placing ads in professional journals, business magazines and university alumni magazines.

3. Join a luxury travel consortium
Some consortia specialize in affluent clientele or have departments catering to agents selling high-end trips.

“Being part of The Affluent Traveler Collection has been very helpful to us, “said Tichy. “We do reach out to luxury suppliers, but The Affluent Collection always reaches out to us.

“Its marketing arm is fantastic. The direct-mail pieces it sends are of tremendous benefit, it offer amenities to our clients, and it puts together exclusive fam trips.”

4. To the manor born?—take advantage of those contacts
Whatever you’re selling, it helps to know how to reach your clientele. For some luxury agents, it’s business as usual.

“Growing up, I got to travel much of the world with my parents and grandparents, staying in the best hotels, so handling high-end clientele is very comfortable,” said Robert Romano, CTC, of Fugazi Travel, a San Francisco-based Ensemble agency.

Ansley Thomas, an Atlanta-based agent for SmartFlyer, a Virtuoso agency in New York, said, “I was raised in a very normal family but I went to private school in Atlanta as well as a good college, so I have a very good network.”

If you were born into wealth or attended exclusive schools, don’t be shy about approaching contacts. Ask relatives and friends for leads to well-heeled friends and associates.

5. Mix with the elite
If you were not to the manor born, all is not lost.

By attending events and frequenting places wealthy clients frequent, you’ll quickly become part of the club. “You don’t necessarily become their best friend, but you’re in their circle and they trust you,” said Thomas.

“I know an agent who didn’t have a network,” Thomas added. “She started going to bridal shows and on high-end cruises. She’s a phenomenal producer now. She worked her way into a luxury clientele without a natural network.”

6. Cultivate similar interests
Wealthy clients often are patrons of the arts.

Romano said it’s natural for him and his family to “go to the theater, symphony and opera, to old stand-bys and new restaurants,” frequented by friends and associates who just happen to be well-heeled.

You can go to some of the same places. You’re not social climbing, you’re trying to find the right match for your luxury products.

Many upscale clients also enjoy expensive sports like golf, yachting or riding. Learn to play those sports, attend fundraisers and other functions at your local golf or country club, and go to regattas, golf championships and polo matches.

7. Get involved with charities
High-end clients often are interested in charities. “Many wealthy people volunteer for or deal with charities,” said Romano, who works with charities himself.

Also consider donating to charities your clients support. “I have a client whose dad passed away many years ago from ALS, so we always do a donation at a certain time of year as a remembrance,” Romano said.

8. Keep in touch with middle-class clients—they may have become more affluent
It doesn’t matter whether you sell your high-end vacations to old money or new money. The client who bought the mass-market cruise 10 years ago might now have a higher income.

Chances are he wants to experience the finer things in life or introduce his children to them. Suggest that clients trade up from mass-market cruises to chartered yachts or from basic two-star hotels to posh five-star establishments. 

Saturday, July 16, 2016

Romance is the perfect match for the U.S. Virgin Islands

U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS PARTNERS WITH MON CHERI BRIDALS TO PROMOTE ROMANCE







U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS  - The United States Virgin Islands, one of the premier Caribbean destinations for romance, has partnered with leading wedding dress manufacturer Mon Cheri Bridals to bring weddings and honeymoon experiences to paradise.

The partnership, which was brokered by www.MarryCaribbean.com, is aimed at gaining a greater share of the highly sought-after, recession-proof romance market.

"As the official bridal manufacturer for the United States Virgin Islands, bringing exposure to the Territory as a choice destination for weddings and honeymoons is of pivotal importance," said Stephen Lang, CEO of Mon Cheri Bridals. 

Lang recalled attending the 2014 St. Croix Bridal Symposium where meetings with Department of Tourism officials led to the cementing of this partnership, developed to boost business on St. Croix, St. John and St. Thomas.

"Romance continues to be a perfect match for the USVI. Greater accessibility to our islands, coupled with no need for a passport for U.S. citizens, makes this a key market for the Territory," said Beverly Nicholson-Doty, Commissioner of Tourism for the U.S. Virgin Islands.

According to Jacqueline Johnson, CEO of Global Bridal Group and www.MarryCaribbean.com, the romance business generates more than $100 billion annually in the United States.

"The 2015/2016 bridal market in the U.S. is expected to see more than two million weddings," said Johnson, who revealed that the overwhelming majority of Americans believe that destination weddings are more fun.

According to a Northstar study, among those who have had a destination wedding, 76 percent believe these events are far less stressful than traditional ceremonies.

"With the Caribbean enjoying about 30 percent of the destination weddings market, the U.S. Virgin Islands is well poised for growth," added Johnson.

Elements of the partnership include engagement with premium bridal stores across the United States, digital promotions, location shoots, an on-island conference as well as television exposure. 

For more information about the United States Virgin Islands, go to VisitUSVI.com, follow us on Twitter (@USVITourism) and become a fan on Facebook  (www.facebook.com/VisitUSVI). When traveling to the U.S. Virgin Islands, U.S. citizens enjoy all the conveniences of domestic travel - including on-line check-in - making travel to the U.S. Virgin Islands easier than ever. As a United States Territory, travel to the U.S. Virgin Islands does not require a passport from U.S. citizens arriving from Puerto Rico or the U.S. mainland. Entry requirements for non-U.S. citizens are the same as for entering the United States from any foreign destination. Upon departure, a passport is required for all but U.S. citizens.  
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