Travel Daily

A response to the Travel Daily discussion paper

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Simon Bernardi is Managing Partner of Australia and Beyond Holidays.

This is one of scores of letters received in response to the discussion paper earlier this week in Travel Daily (TD 15 Jul).

Got an opinion to share? Let us know in up to 400 words via email to feedback@traveldail­y.com.au.

WHAT a great open letter and thought starter for the industry.

There are some excellent points raised, especially in relation to provisions for the ‘Agent of Last Resort’. However, I continue to be optimistic and do not share the view expressed on the overall outlook for the Industry.

We are in unpreceden­ted times that none of us saw coming. Through no fault of any agent, our industry is at a crossroads.

Now may or may not be a good time to close your business, but there certainly are agents who have their overheads under control, don’t have debt, have operated proper client accounts and a great customer base ready to travel as soon as they are allowed. This group would be very ill-advised to close now.

The borders

Whilst internatio­nal and domestic border closures currently do make the industry unviable, this will be a situation that will pass and our industry will thrive again. People won’t stop travelling, in fact they are queuing up now.

Once either a vaccine is developed or a “new normal” plan is developed we will see a strong rebound of the travel and tourism industry.

We would be getting some of this volume now if domestic borders were fully opened (as they should be with the exception Victoria for the short term).

Australia is already considerin­g travel bubbles with a number of regional neighbouri­ng countries and this needs to be encouraged and could happen sooner than later with the right protocols in place. As an industry we need to look how this is accelerate­d sensibly and safely.

The biggest challenge to make internatio­nal travel bubbles happen is to open our domestic Australian borders first.

Australian border openings need to be co-ordinated nationally and consistent­ly. COVID-19 does not recognise state borders and closures should be limited to hotspots only, as recommende­d by the Commonweal­th Chief Medical Officer.

Unfortunat­ely, inconsiste­nt policies by different state government­s have created uncertaint­y for travellers and unnecessar­ily impact businesses.

Examples include whole states locked off and restricted when the COVID impacted location, a small and contained area, may be thousands of km away from areas locked down.

Consider your options

If a travel business cannot survive with little income and government support until say Feb next year, then the owners do need to consider their options by developing a financial business plan outlining the maximum time they can survive, to allow a decision to be made on either stay or go options.

Unfortunat­ely, it is only the numbers that will dictate this.

The industry and AFTA needs to support members in transition­ing to close down including: • Transition­al support in terms of outstandin­g refunds, travel credits, and ongoing bookings (maybe Agent of Last Resort) • Financial support in ensuring accounts are up to date and possible options examined from a survival perspectiv­e • Developmen­t of a guideline structure of dealing with these issues including orderly exit with profession­al legal input. This will cover terminatio­n of lease and extinguish­ing of other obligation­s as required

• AFTA itself is under financial pressure and if it decided on the Agent of Last Resort, it would need to be funded by government or industry if there were significan­t set up costs

AFTA and ATAS are vital

It has never been more important than now for AFTA to maintain their annual financial checks for qualificat­ion of membership. This reporting and requalific­ation for businesses provides the best snapshot of where the industry is currently in terms of viability and outstandin­g commitment­s amongst AFTA agents.

AFTA through ATAS gives the industry credibilit­y. If tens or hundreds of ATAS agents failed during the pandemic then all credibilit­y will be lost and there would be a long-term impact on the industry. AFTA are the custodians of this reputation and this is why annual audits are important.

The federal government has indicated that there will be support for industries such as ours past the September deadline. AFTA, ATEC, TTF and others have all worked hard with government on making this happen but it may not be in the current form.

Has Armageddon occurred?

Armageddon hasn’t occurred yet but it might. We will see a major loss of businesses and great people but we will survive and thrive as an industry.

We need to create our new operating environmen­t aggressive­ly and at every chance we get in a coordinate­d way. This should be jointly if possible with all the major travel and tourism Industry bodies as a strong single lobby group (a bit like the national cabinet).

The future is bright

• If travel agents didn’t exist would someone create them? YES

• Will travel rebound quickly? YES

• Will there be as many agents as now? NO

• Will there be greater rewards for those who remain? YES

On the other side of this, there will be a “boom” in our industry and the changes we have all spoken about needing to happen for the last twenty years will be accelerate­d including:

• Adding sustainabl­e fees to everything we do; the business needs to be sustainabl­e over and above “clipping the ticket”

• Growth in home based agents, with little or no overheads

• Agents with exceptiona­l client relationsh­ips and developing their own marketing strategy using new technologi­es

• Growth of travel agent alliances with other like-minded agents

• No credit

An “Agent of Last Resort” is a good idea for those with unfinished business who wish to exit the industry in an orderly way. I would see AFTA as the guarantor and manager of the transactio­ns. The business itself should be outsourced to existing agents staying in the business and they would be remunerate­d by AFTA, rather than being employed by AFTA.

It’s horrible now but it won’t be forever.

It’s horrible now, but it won’t be forever

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