Whether you’re all-in on entrepreneurship or simply love selling travel without the whole business-building hustle, one truth applies to everyone in this industry: Your data and dollars are the heartbeat of your business. If you’re not protecting them, everything you’ve worked for is at risk.
Here are five ways to stay in control, regardless of which host, platform or tech stack you use.
1. Separate Your Identity from Your Host Agency
Your host agency is not your business; it’s one of many tools you use to build it.
Even if you’ve had a long, successful relationship with a host, remember: It’s a business decision, not your identity. Hosts offer higher commission splits, community and supplier support, but they shouldn’t hold your entire business.
Advisors who rely exclusively on their host’s errors and omissions (E&O) insurance, customer relationship manager (CRM), email tools and data systems are making a risky move. In fact, relying on your host’s E&O insurance can be catastrophic; the policy may have a sky-high deductible and be shared among thousands of advisors, meaning it could hit the coverage limit and be unavailable when you need it.
Make sure your data is in a platform you control — not your host. Share only what your host needs to pay you, and nothing more.
2. Know What You Really Need From a Host
If you’re operating independently with a large host, you’ve taken on full responsibility for your business. Be clear about what you expect from that host.
My host has many benefits, but for me, it comes down to two primary things:
- Money: high commission splits and clear, on-time payments
- Influence: enough volume to get support from suppliers when needed
Everything else — insurance, branding, technology, training — is really our job to figure out.
You should be choosing tools and education based on your business goals, not your host’s offerings. If you prefer to skip all the decisions about your tech stack, a smaller, more hands-on host with a built-in system might be a better fit.
3. Own Your Client and Financial Data
If your host platform went offline today, could you still run your business?
Whether you use a CRM or just a spreadsheet, your data should live in a system you control. That includes:
- Client details
- Bookings and commission info
- Confirmation documents (no need to complicate this; just don’t delete these emails so you can search if needed)
Store your data in tools such as Tern,TravelJoy, a spreadsheet or a project manager — whatever works best for you. Back it up weekly. Set a reminder, export your records and keep them safe in cloud storage.
4. Don’t Put Everything in One System
All-in-one systems promise convenience, but create risk.
If your CRM includes client data, email marketing and itineraries, one outage can bring your whole business to a halt.
TravelJoy and Tern offer fantastic CRMs with integrated itinerary builders. I recommend you also keep your client contact info in a separate email marketing system (think: Flodesk,Kit,Mailchimp, etc.) or database. If your CRM goes down, you can easily send out an email blast to let clients know there may be delays.
It’s a little more setup, but do future-you this small favor. If you ever need it, you’ll be so grateful.
5. Plan for the Worst So You Can Run at Your Best
Tech hiccups are inevitable. Platforms go down, systems update or data gets lost. You don’t have to be paranoid, but you do have to be prepared.
At minimum, make sure you:
- Export your CRM data weekly.
- Archive — don’t delete — emails with trip documents and confirmations.
- Keep a backup of client contact info outside your main CRM.
- Obtain your own E&O insurance.
You’ve worked hard to build this business; don’t let someone else’s tech decision wipe it all away.
Final Thoughts: You Are the Business
Your host agency, your CRM, your marketing platform — those are all tools. But the business? That’s you.
When you treat your data and dollars as your most valuable assets, you set yourself up for growth, resilience and freedom. Take the time now to back things up, build smart systems, and step fully into your role as a business owner.
After all, the heartbeat of your business belongs to you, and no one else.