Traveolla Holidays

Stories

Why we stopped selling group tours

The economic case, and the philosophical one.

The Traveolla Team·19 November 2025·2 min read
Why we stopped selling group tours

What we noticed

By 2021, our group-tour customers were consistently less happy than our private-trip customers. Feedback scores: 3.8 vs 4.7. Repeat rate: 8% vs 41%.

The three reasons

1. Group tours reduce to the median

The itinerary has to work for everyone — so it works optimally for no one. 30-year-olds feel rushed. 60-year-olds feel exhausted. The 45-year-old in the middle thinks it was okay.

2. The incentive structure is wrong

Group tours are margin-driven. Our incentive was to fill seats. That's not the same as designing a great trip.

3. It wasn't our strength

We're good at listening. Group tours don't need listening — they need logistics. Different skill set.

The decision

In 2022 we shut down group. Kept a small team, went all-in on private. Revenue fell 35% that year. By 2024 it had recovered and then some.

What we lost

  • A solo-traveller community that we valued.
  • Young travellers on tight budgets.

What we gained

  • Clarity. Every trip we take on, we own from brief to return.
  • Customer attachment. We now know our travellers' names.
  • A clearer brand: we design trips, not tours.

Group tours remain a perfectly valid product — Wanderon, Capture A Trip, and Kesari do them well. We just don't.

Ask about private trips.

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