Can a group of people become a travel agent, with the purpose to get access to direct acess to professional travel resources?

11/18/2013 6:16:03 PM

Is it possible?

Depends on the legislation of the country you are living in. Get into contact with professional associations, chamber of commerce, or even a ministry like the “SPF Economie, PME, classes moyennes” in Belgium.

Does it makes sense

No. If your aim is to make sense out of the airfares, you can learn that by yourself. You don’t need to be a travel agent for that. The corollary is that if you become an agent, this does not necessarily imply that you everything about airfares. You will have to learn it too and acquire the experience and knowledge of professional travel agents.

If you want to be flexible knit your trips by yourself. The internet is magic and you won’t find better rates in an agency. There may be exceptions for more special trips or exotic destinations. But for these you can still rely on local agencies. Being an agent in Belgium won’t enable you to sort such issues.

11/18/2013 4:19:06 PM

You might already know that travel agents usually rely on providers. Travel agents are customers of these companies. These companies also have offers directly to companies, so that is probably what you are looking for. As far as I know, mostly large companies are customers, I suppose it is due to the cost of implementation, even though theoretically it should not be a problem.

But knowing that, another simpler solution would be to change travel agent : if you become a travel agent, you will have access to the same range of content (i.e. modes of transportation) as any other travel agent depending on how much money you can pay to extend your range. So a simple thing to do would be to ask your travel agent its provider, and whether it could provide more flexibility. Then go to the next travel agent and ask the same question. You will probably be able to find better, that’s what concurrency principle is supposed to stimulate.

Disclaimer : I work for one of these companies.

11/18/2013 2:34:45 PM

This is more complicated than you make it out to be. A travel agency needs certain permits and insurance. That costs money.

You’ll also be acting as a middle-man, taking payment and using those to purchase services from a third party (airlines, hotels etc.). Just handling the money is going to cost (credit card processing is quite expensive).

Then, some of those third parties may only do business with you on specific terms or even not at all as they have existing contracts with other agencies about providing them with the best rates etc. At best you (as a small time operator) will be buying at the same retail prices as end customers. That means that your customers will be paying more than that to cover all your costs as well. As many of your costs are going to be fixed, you’ll find it very hard to be competitive unless you’ve got a decent volume of business. This really is a game of economies of scale. I haven’t even mentioned employee salaries, office or IT infrastructure costs yet!

So, is it possible? Sure. Is it viable? I doubt it. You state that you are targeting those that want to spend as little as possible on travel expenses. So, the only way you’d manage this without running at a loss is to have a fairly large client base. Getting to that scale will be hard (if not impossible) as these are the most price conscious customers and may not properly value the time savings you would be providing.

You could, of course, set up a travel advice service that just outlines travel plans, including current prices, and lets the end user deal with booking the actual fares. I don’t know if there would be much call for that.

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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