stop saving for travel workshop

Passports, Profits and Pixie Dust

458: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me About the Travel Industry: Overcoming Gatekeeping, Scarcity Mindset, and Finding Your People

Published on

Don’t miss the full episode:

If you’ve ever felt like everyone else knows something you don’t…

If you’ve ever asked a question in a Facebook group only to be met with sarcasm…

If you’ve ever wondered whether you belong in this industry because it feels more competitive than collaborative…

I want you to know something.

You’re not alone.

When I first became a travel advisor, I imagined an industry filled with people who loved travel, loved helping others, and genuinely wanted to see everyone succeed.

And while those people absolutely exist (I’ve been fortunate enough to meet many of them), I also discovered another side of the industry that no one warned me about.

The gatekeeping.

The negativity.

The scarcity mindset.

Today I want to share what I wish someone had told me years ago—and hopefully save you some frustration along the way.

The Industry Isn’t Perfect—And That’s Okay

I’ve been in the travel industry for nearly seven years now.

During that time, I’ve met incredible mentors, supportive colleagues, generous educators, and lifelong friends.

I’ve also encountered people who seemed more interested in protecting information than helping others grow.

Whether it was being excluded from Facebook groups because of my host agency, watching advisors publicly criticize one another online, or hearing experienced professionals refuse to offer even the smallest piece of encouragement, I’ve seen firsthand that this industry isn’t immune to negativity.

But here’s what I’ve learned:

Those people do not represent the entire travel industry.

They’re simply the loudest voices sometimes.

Scarcity vs. Abundance: The Real Difference

After years in entrepreneurship—not just travel—I realized this isn’t really a travel industry problem.

It’s a mindset problem.

There are generally two ways people approach business.

An Abundance Mindset

People with an abundance mindset believe:

  • There are enough clients for everyone.
  • Helping someone else doesn’t hurt their own success.
  • Collaboration creates bigger opportunities.
  • Sharing encouragement costs nothing.

These are the advisors who answer questions, celebrate wins, recommend suppliers, share resources, and genuinely want others to succeed.

Ironically, they’re often the ones with thriving businesses.

A Scarcity Mindset

On the other hand, scarcity says:

  • If someone else succeeds, I lose.
  • If I share my strategy, someone will steal it.
  • There’s only room for a handful of successful advisors.
  • Everyone else is competition.

When someone operates from scarcity, everything becomes guarded.

Questions feel like threats.

Success feels limited.

And instead of building relationships, they’re protecting imaginary territory.

One Podcast Answer I’ll Never Forget

Recently, I listened to a podcast featuring an advisor who had built an incredibly successful niche business.

At the end of the interview, the host asked a simple question:

“What advice would you give someone who’s just getting started in this niche?”

Her answer surprised me.

She said:

“Don’t call me.”

She explained that she wasn’t interested in sharing her secrets and that people needed to figure it out themselves.

That answer stuck with me—not because I expected her to hand over years of expertise for free, but because there were countless ways she could have encouraged someone without giving away her entire business model.

She could have suggested:

  • Do your market research.
  • Stay consistent.
  • Find your ideal client.
  • Build relationships.
  • Serve people well.

Encouragement doesn’t cost anything.

And sometimes it’s exactly what someone needs to keep going.

The Best People Are Usually the Quiet Ones

One thing I’ve discovered is that the most generous people aren’t always the loudest.

They’re quietly answering questions.

They celebrate your wins.

They introduce you to helpful connections.

They collaborate instead of compete.

Those are the people worth finding.

I’ve been incredibly fortunate to build relationships with advisors who freely share ideas, celebrate success, and genuinely want others to win.

They’re proof that this kind of community exists.

You just have to find your people.

Five Ways to Rise Above the Negativity

1. Stop Looking for Validation

Not everyone has to understand your business.

Not everyone has to approve of your goals.

Your job isn’t convincing people.

Your job is serving clients and continuing to grow.

2. Curate Your Environment

If a Facebook group constantly leaves you discouraged…

Leave it.

Mute notifications.

Unfollow negativity.

Protect your mindset.

The content you consume every day shapes how you show up in your business.

3. Focus on the Helpers

As Mr. Rogers famously said:

“Look for the helpers.”

That’s just as true in entrepreneurship.

For every negative voice, there are dozens of people quietly lifting others up.

Spend your time with them.

4. Ask Better Questions

Instead of asking someone to reveal their entire business strategy, try asking:

  • What would you do differently if you were starting today?
  • What’s one mistake you wish you’d avoided?
  • What’s one lesson that changed your business?

People are often much more willing to share wisdom than hand over an entire blueprint.

And honestly?

Relationships matter.

When you build genuine connections, those conversations happen naturally over time.

5. Become the Person You Needed

This might be the biggest lesson of all.

If you wish people were more encouraging…

Be encouraging.

If you wish people answered questions…

Answer questions.

If you wish the industry felt more welcoming…

Help create that culture.

You don’t change an industry by complaining about it.

You change it by modeling something better.

Don’t Let Gatekeepers Define Your Future

If you’re new to the travel industry—or if you’ve simply had some discouraging experiences—I hope you’ll remember this:

Someone else’s scarcity doesn’t have to become your mindset.

There isn’t a secret vault of information only a select few have access to.

Successful travel businesses are built on surprisingly simple principles:

  • Consistency
  • Relationships
  • Visibility
  • Trust
  • Follow-up
  • Excellent service
  • Showing up again and again

That’s the formula.

Not hidden secrets.

Not exclusive Facebook groups.

Not gatekeeping.

You Don’t Have to Learn Only From Travel Advisors

One of the biggest reasons my business has grown is because I stopped limiting myself to only learning from people in travel.

I’ve learned marketing from real estate professionals.

Sales from business coaches.

Systems from online educators.

Customer experience from entirely different industries.

Sometimes the best ideas come from outside your own niche.

If you think of yourself as a business owner first—and a travel advisor second—you’ll start seeing opportunities everywhere.

Final Thoughts

The travel industry is full of amazing people.

It’s also full of imperfect people.

Don’t let a handful of negative experiences convince you that there’s no room for you.

There is.

Keep learning.

Keep serving.

Keep showing up.

Keep finding your people.

And most importantly…

Be the person who opens doors instead of guarding them.

Because that’s how we build stronger businesses.

And that’s how we build a better travel industry together.

Connect with Lindsay

Travel Advisor | Agency Owner | Business Coach

Helping travel advisors build profitable businesses with confidence, systems, and strategy—without burnout.

Website: At Last I See The World Travel

Loved This Episode?

If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with another travel advisor or entrepreneur who could use the reminder that success is not a limited resource.

The more we choose collaboration over competition, the stronger our industry becomes.

Related Posts

From Main Street to Millionaire Mindset: Starting the Year with Confidence & Clarity

There’s something magical about the beginning of a new year. Not in a “new year, new you, hustle harder” kind of way—but in the way that gives you permission to pause, reflect, and intentionally decide who you’re becoming next. In Episode 433 of the Passports, Profits, and Pixie Dust Podcast, we’re talking about how to…

Read More
The Passports, Profits and Pixie Dust Podcast Episode 71- The 3-3-3 challenge

The 3–3–3 Visibility Challenge That Can Explode Your Direct Sales Business Today’s blog is a fun one—and a little bit of a challenge Because if your visibility has been… meh.Or your social media is feeling a little stale.Or you’ve been meaning to “show up more” but haven’t… This challenge is for you. Listen to the…

Read More
455: The REAL Reason Travel Advisors Aren’t Getting Leads

If you’ve ever found yourself saying: Friend, you’re not alone. These are some of the most common frustrations I hear from travel advisors. And while it’s easy to blame the algorithm, the economy, or the latest social media changes, the truth is that most of the time the problem isn’t the algorithm. It’s visibility. It’s…

Read More