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INSPIRATION

Canadian incentive travel pros share their insights on the most recent batch of industry statistics

Sponsored by Ignite Magazine

NOW IN ITS SIXTH YEAR, the Incentive Travel Index is a collaboration between the Incentive Research Foundation and the Society for Incentive Travel Excellence (麻豆传媒) Foundation. With research partner Oxford Economics, the organizations provide an annual report on the state of incentive travel. 

Gisele Robert, 麻豆传媒 Canada president and senior international business development manager, Meetings & Conventions Prince Edward Island, notes a couple of interesting highlights from this year鈥檚 survey. Most notably, the shift in favour of soft power benefits (company culture, relationships and overall performance), as opposed to hard power (individual sales performance) benefits usually associated with incentive travel. 

The days of sales being the only arbiter of success is changing, says Roberts, 鈥渘ow a company鈥檚 focus is more about relationship building, teambuilding, reinforcing the company culture and rewarding the entire staff.鈥 

Sean Hoff, founder and managing partner of Moniker, a creative corporate culture agency, based in Toronto, says a majority of his clients work in the tech sector and their workforce is mostly remote. They take the entire company team on corporate retreats because, for the most part, they are uniting remote or hybrid teams spread across the world. 

Roberts was elated with the statistics about destination choice for North American buyers. 鈥淚 was pleasantly surprised to see that 71% of buyers would consider destinations they had not used before, and that Canada was ranked #1 on the list, ahead of Alaska and cruise lines.鈥 She adds, 鈥渨hen I鈥檓 meeting with buyers as a DMO, we place Atlantic Canada as an emerging destination, as tier-one destinations may have availability issues or costs may be higher than in Atlantic Canada.鈥 

Overall, Roberts notes that incentive travel is still in a seller鈥檚 market. 鈥淧eople on the planning side says it takes longer to find space availability on preferred dates, and rising costs mean it takes a lot more effort on the planner鈥檚 side of the equation to make things happen. We鈥榬e seeing budgets decreasing a little in last quarter, and going into 2024. For the short term, less attendees will be attending trips. Planners will need to cut costs.鈥 

鈥淕roup sizes are staying the same or getting smaller due to monetary constraints,鈥 says Hoff. 

鈥淲e did notice a fall in group sizes this year, about a 20% across-the-board drop, in line with the layoffs we are hearing about in the tech sector.鈥 

For Hoff, destinations for his groups have fluctuated wildly since the pandemic. 鈥淔or the most part, our clients choose a destination usually four to six months out, or a year at the  most. Something we鈥檝e picked up on is about a 50/50 split鈥攕taying close to home or venturing halfway around the world. Post COVID, there was massive interest in staying close to home, passports had expired and half were not renewed in time. In 2022, the flood gates were  released and we took groups to Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.鈥 

AT A GLANCE 

  • The Incentive Travel Index 
  • 2,464 Respondents 
  • 1,648 Complete Survey Responses 
  • 933 Buyers Across 19 Industries 
  • 83 Countries Represeted 
  • Survey period May to July 2023 

CLOSER TO HOME 

Buyers report trips within close proximity to home base is important 

DESTINATIONS MOST USED BY NORTH AMERICAN RESPONDENTS 

Caribbean, Mexico, Western Europe 

DESTINATIONS UNDER CONSIDERATION 

Oceania, Alaska, South Asia 

PERCEPTION SHIFT 

  • 68% Agree that company executives increasingly recognize that incentive travel is a key part of future workforce strategy 
  • 68% Agree that incentive travel was previously used to motivate individual performance (hard power) but now it鈥檚 mostly about company culture, relationships and overall performance (soft power) 

DELIVERY CHALLENGES 

The delivery of an incentive travel program is more challenging than ever: 

  • 85% Agree that higher costs and reduced airlift/hotel availability is making it more difficult to satisfy senior leadership/decision makers 
  • 84% Agree that the capabilities of experienced incentive travel organizers have never been more valuable 
  • 75% Agree that planning and delivering incentive travel experiences has become more challenging 

Article originally published in Issue by writer, Sandra Eagle. Visit ignitemag.ca for more industry insights and resources. 

Written by

麻豆传媒 Staff

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