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Luxury Travel

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Luxury Travel

In The Press

This weekend we were featured in the Daily Star Sunday, Sunday Mirror, Irish Sunday Mirror, and the Sunday Express.

Text reads: 

“Copenhagen from £359pp: a three-night B&B getaway in the four-star Absalon Hotel includes flights from Bristol for departures in October.
Customers can donate 5% of their holiday price to a UK-registered charity of their choice. Book at charitable.travel.
Prices are correct at time of publication”

Text reads:

“SPAIN
– Costa Dorada from £568pp: Seven nights on all-inclusive at the three-star Hotel Best Mediterraneo in Salou comes with flights from Birmingham on August 1 and transfer. Customers can donate 5% of their holiday price to a UK-registered charity of their choice. www.charitable.travel

Click here to see this deal!”

Our founder and CEO, Melissa Tilling appears in TTG this week with a guest article!

You can read the article here!

By Robin Searle

Water aid charity Just a Drop and social enterprise Charitable Travel have extended the deadline for people to take part in the Just a Drop Dash – a fundraising initiative launched in partnership with Wendy Wu Tours.

The Just a Drop Dash encourages participants to run, walk, ramble or hop 100km – the same distance as a popular hiking route from Banteay Srei into the Phnom Kulen National Park in Cambodia, finishing at Angkor Wat.

Those who take part before August 31 and raise a minimum of £100 will be entered into a draw to win a holiday for two to Cambodia and Vietnam, courtesy of Charitable Travel and Wendy Wu Tours. Every additional £100 raised through JustGiving pages will qualify for an extra entry into the prize draw.

Read the full article on Travel Weekly here, or to read more about the Just a Drop Dash and Charitable Travel 100k Challenge, click here!

By Juliet Dennis

The Pacfic Asia Travel Association (Pata) UK & Ireland plans to target further expansion as it announces three new members.

The UK & Ireland arm of the association has announced the addition of new social enterprise and travel agency Charitable Travel; luxury hotel group Santrian Resorts and Villas in Indonesia; and Cape Panwa Hotel Phuket, Thailand. It now has 26 members.

UK & Ireland chairman Chris Crampton said: “We are delighted to welcome new members, especially during these uncertain times.

Read the full article in Travel Weekly here!

by Sophie Short.

A new type of travel business has launched – Charitable Travel is a social enterprise with the clear aim of ensuring travel is a force for good, helping holidaymakers combine their travel planning with support for charities in the UK and around the world.

Charitable Travel has a unique business model; the first nationally available Community Interest Company (CIC) social enterprise in the travel industry, it is a not-for-private-profit travel agency, which provides customers with the opportunity to book a holiday to anywhere in the world and donate a proportion of the holiday price to a UK registered charity of their choice through a platform partnership with JustGiving.

The concept is simple, Charitable Travel sacrifices travel agency commission. Therefore, when customers book a cruise or a holiday, they convert 5% of the total price of their trip into a donation to a charity of their choice through the dedicated JustGiving webpage. Empowering customers to share the pleasure that a holiday brings by supporting local communities both at home and abroad.

Read the full article on Social Enterprise Mark here!

We’ve been featured in the Telegraph! Click the link below to read the full article!

Launching a business is a tricky process. It is not just a case of knowing your market, but also knowing the moment to unleash your plan on the public. When is the right time, and when is wrong? Many – even without a degree in economics – would say that setting up a travel project when a virus has shut down the planet probably comes under “wrong time”.

“Yes, some people have said to me, ‘what are you doing launching in the middle of a pandemic?’,” Melissa Tilling laughs. “I suppose it’s a good question – but, well, I think this is exactly the time that we should be launching. There might not be very much demand for travel right now, but we are going to be ready when the resurgence occurs. Not just to sell travel, but to help charities that have probably never needed help more.

Link to article on The Telegraph website here.

Charitable Travel’s founder, Melissa Tilling’s interview with Women In Travel CIC for their segment, Inspirational Women In Travel.

This week for our Inspirational Women In Travel blog, we sat down to chat with Founder and CEO of Charitable Travel, Melissa Tilling. We wanted to get to know her, and understand the steps she has taken to be successful. Take a look at what she had to say!

1. What inspired you to work in the travel industry?

At school I wanted to be a teacher, architect or maybe an astronaut but the thought of the travel industry never crossed my mind, even at 16 years old when I went on my first holiday to Spain without my parents.

2. How did you begin working in the travel industry and what was your first role?

Having studied computer science and explored for a while on a sailing boat I ‘fell into travel’ applying for a temporary job, joined Intasun Holidays in 1987 selling holiday flight seats, and never looked back!

3. How did you get to where you are in your career today?

In general being in the right place at the right time – so maybe luck, but also making my own luck being powered along by an unwavering tenacity, a capacity for far too much hard work, saying ‘I can’ rather than ‘Can I’? getting involved and being thirsty to learn and a love of making something out of nothing.

4. What is your most memorable moment creating Charitable Travel?

That eureka moment in September last year when I finally joined all the dots in my thinking to create a unique model of social enterprise and giving that coupled travel and tourism with the ability to support myriad great causes.

5. You launched your new business in the middle of a pandemic, what drove you to do that?

I launched at probably the worst time our industry has ever seen driven by an unshakeable need to be ready deliver our social purpose, to help charities fundraise by capitalising on the undoubted post-lock-down bounce-back in travel demand when our unique method of customers giving at no extra cost when they book travel.

6. What has been the biggest challenge you’ve encountered with the creation of Charitable Travel, and how did you overcome it?

The biggest challenge has been to launch a social enterprise of such complexity whilst ensuring it appears an effortless experience to customers and partners, with limited budget, drawing together a preparedness by business partners to join me in innovation for the sake of altruism.

7. Describe a typical day at work in 100 words?

At my desk by 7.30am because early is when I do my best work. Agreeing with the team the needs of the day. Drinking too much black coffee. Persuading my cats not to walk on my keyboard. Meeting charity and tourism partners and the media, these days by Zoom, to agree activity and action plans. Implementing our promotions and being all over social media driving home the message.

8. Which qualities were most important to you as a leader in pursuing this project?

Humility – no one owes us anything and we need to earn commitment, self-awareness – to know when I’m being too demanding, communication – at every encounter listen then speak then listen again; and realise the power and the danger of the written word especially on email; humour – laughing at myself and taking the joy from every moment; and tenacity – by the bucket load.

9. What would you say to aspiring women travel entrepreneurs?

Back yourself, you know you have reserves of strength and determination even when you feel weak. Be crystal clear about your vision, write it down and revisit that, and let that vision drive you forward BUT listen, remain humble, communicate, ask for help, learn and be prepared to evolve to maximise on new information and a changing environment.

10. What is your vision for the future of travel and tourism?

I believe the industry will evolve and become ever more thoughtful about the destinations, people and environment we depend on for our wanderlust. We are at a transitional time where the quest for holiday gratification at any expense will be overtaken by questioning the sustainability of the travel product we are both selling and buying and this will shape our choices.

11. How do you relax when not working?

I used to travel travel and travel again, now I am happy pottering about at home with not much to do. Loving my cats, holding my friends and family dear and experiencing that lifelong rollercoaster relationship with fitness and food, always trying to do better. Oh, I do like to strum a guitar now and again and have country music as a guilty pleasure.

To read the article on the Women In Travel website, click here.