THE FOSTER FILES

WE CAN TALK ABOUT IT: Fees, value, and the confidence to explain both

By MIKE FOSTER/ Few topics create as much quiet discomfort among travel advisors as fees. It’s not because advisors don’t believe their work has value. Most do. The discomfort comes from something subtler: uncertainty about how to describe that value in a world where information feels free, tools feel powerful, and clients sometimes arrive convinced they already know the answers.

THE FOSTER FILES – A DAY IN THE LIFE 2026: Travel advisors at a crossroads

By Mike Foster/ As we dive deeper into the themes introduced in my last column (and series opener), I want to share a practical vision of the near future. We are standing at a crossroads: AI is already part of our daily lives, and by 2026 it will be far more ubiquitous in the workflows of travel professionals. 

A DAY IN THE LIFE, 2027: When focus starts to pay off

In 2026 Ethan had decided to stop trying to be everything to everyone. He built a narrow lane – small-ship and rail journeys for active, mid-life couples – and promised himself two things: to keep learning and to use technology only when it served his judgement. Twelve months later he’s busier, calmer, and clearer than ever.

THE ROLE WE INHERITED: And the one we’re growing into

By Mike Foster/ If you’ve been in the travel industry long enough, you know what it feels like to carry out a role that keeps growing in every direction. One moment you’re unravelling a schedule change, then answering a late-night text, then explaining a loyalty perk, then reviewing cancellation terms, then sourcing a boutique hotel that still has the right room type in the right week.

THE FOSTER FILES: Chasing the perfect sale, and why it doesn’t exist

By Mike Foster/ If you’ve been in travel long enough, you’ve probably dreamed of the “perfect sale.” Mine? One delightful human who buys the same $10-million trip every year, loves every minute, and never needs me to leave a bottle of cheap wine in the room. At a 15% commission, I’m good with one sale a year. Easy, right? 

THE FOSTER FILES: The client who taught me to say no

By Mike Foster/   After nearly five decades in the travel industry, I’ve learned that sometimes the most profitable word in your vocabulary is “no.” But it took me years to understand that saying no to the wrong opportunities isn’t limiting your business – it’s focusing it. 

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