USA TODAY US Edition

How to spot tainted travel advice

- Christophe­r Elliott Christophe­r Elliott is a consumer advocate and editor at large for National Geographic Traveler. Contact him at chris@elliott.org or visit elliott.org.

Check your sources. That’s not just a cardinal rule of journalism but also of travel planning. Make sure you get your travel advice from someone knowledgea­ble and unbiased.

Whom can you trust? The holiday travel planning season is in full swing, and shoddy advice surrounds you. Guidebooks, blogs and businesses are all too willing to tell you where to go and what to buy, but their advice can be influenced by freebies, bonuses or outright incompeten­ce.

“Most of the so-called great advice is actually pretty terrible,” says Kelsey Tonner, founder of the Be a Better Guide Project, a site that helps train tour guides.

Superlativ­es are a tip-off in his line of work. “If someone breathless­ly tells you about an amazing experience or a special place and is pushing you to book on the spot, there’s a pretty good chance they are getting a commission, kickback or helping out a friend,” he says.

Where are the victims, then? Fair question. In fact, there are thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of casualties of the tainted advice out there — and they don’t even know it. They have no idea their trip could have been so much better if they’d listened to the right source.

Terrible advice about credit cards may be the biggest prob- lem. Many blogs that claim to be written by travel “experts” are actually online ads that try to tempt you to sign up for a specific card.

Often they promise big bonuses by instructin­g users about an ethically dubious practice called manufactur­ed spending. Here’s how the trick works: You sign up for a card, then buy items only for the bonus points you collect with each purchase. You then return or liquidate the merchandis­e, pocketing the points. If done carelessly, this questionab­le strategy for collecting miles could put you deep into debt, not to mention beholden to your chosen loyalty program.

Tim Winship, who publishes the site Frequentfl­ier.com, says the shills behind these sites receive hundreds of dollars for each card they sell, which dictates their editorial agenda.

“So much of what now passes for travel advice on the Web is compromise­d by these writers’ financial self-interest,” he says.

The Federal Trade Commission requires bloggers to disclose their affiliate relationsh­ips, but the cleverest credit card shills have figured out a way around this. They reveal these ties in much the same way tobacco companies publish warnings on a carton of cigarettes: in plain view but in an unmemorabl­e font they know the reader won’t notice.

Stuart McDonald, who pub- lishes a respected travel blog called Travelfish.org, says an honest disclosure commands the same attention as the editorial content. In his site’s case, he recently redesigned his pages to give the warnings more prominence, denoting each link with a dollar sign next to it.

“Affiliate links need to be disclosed to the reader, so they know what they’re doing,” he says.

Tainted tips for personal enrichment are just one source of bad advice. Another is garden-variety incompeten­ce. That’s the kind of travel advice Paula Miller got from her community bank before she visited Paris recently. She wanted to know if her debit card would work in France. A bank representa­tive said it would not and advised her to bring lots of cash on her trip and exchange it. Turns out the card worked and she wasted her money on a pointless exchange.

“Incredible ignorance from supposedly trained profession­als,” says Miller, an educator from Kitty Hawk, N.C.

Part of the problem is us. Somewhere along the way, American travelers lost their healthy sense of skepticism and began believing anyone with the word “expert” in their title. They didn’t bother asking themselves how much these experts really knew or how they earned a living.

In Miller’s case, the community bank may not have been the most authoritat­ive resource about the compatibil­ity of her debit card’s network overseas.

When bloggers refer to themselves as “travel experts” or “thought leaders,” who are we to question them? “Americans defer to experts,” explains Michael Brein, a psychologi­st who specialize­s in travel issues. “If they say they’re a guide or an expert or licensed or whatever, we tend to be too trusting and too readily willing to accept or take their word for it.”

Perhaps we’re reluctant to offend someone. One of the fastest ways to tick off a travel agent is to ask what his or her commission is on a cruise or all-inclusive vacation. Want to question the credibilit­y of a guidebook author? Ask how many of the hotels reviewed offered “free” accommodat­ions in exchange for a favorable mention.

Maybe it’s time to start asking these questions. If you don’t, the next casualty of this bad travel advice could be your vacation.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States