Before you commit to another content calendar.
Before you decide you “should” be on TikTok.
Before you burn out trying to keep up with Instagram trends…
Pause.
Because the problem isn’t that you’re not doing enough marketing. The problem might be that you’re marketing in the wrong place.
In this conversation with Caroline Langdon, founder of Impact Media House, we explored something that may seem obvious but is rarely practiced: not every social media platform is right for your business. And for travel advisors, especially those pouring energy into platforms where your ideal client doesn’t even spend time, it is one of the fastest paths to exhaustion without ROI. Let’s fix that.
The Biggest Marketing Mistake Travel Advisors Make
Most advisors don’t lack effort. They lack clarity.
It’s easy to assume your audience behaves the way you do. If you love Instagram, you assume your clients are there. If your peers are on TikTok, you assume you need to be too. But assumptions are not strategy. Instead of asking, “Where should I be?” ask, “Where are my buyers already showing up?”
Your real audience reveals themselves through behavior. Look at who is:
- Booking with you
- Sending DMs with specific questions
- Saving your content
- Clicking your links
- Referring their friends
That data matters more than follower count ever will.
If you’re marketing to “everyone who travels,” you’re marketing to no one. People don’t hire you because they love travel. They hire you because they want less stress, better experiences, insider access, or logistical confidence.
When you understand that, your messaging sharpens. And when your messaging sharpens, your platform choice becomes clearer.
Does Niching Down Actually Limit You?
There’s a lot of noise online right now saying you don’t need to niche. That you are the niche. But here’s the practical reality for travel advisors: specificity builds trust faster.
When someone searches for a “family travel advisor for Europe” or a “luxury Asia specialist,” they’re not looking for someone who does everything. They want expertise. They want reassurance. They want someone who has done this before, many times.
Niching doesn’t eliminate opportunity. It positions you. You can still book outside your specialty. But when your marketing consistently reinforces a specific lane, you become easier to find, easier to trust, and easier to refer. And that translates into revenue.
Social Media Platforms for Travel Advisors: Who Lives Where?
Now let’s break down the platforms, not from a trend perspective, but from a behavioral one. Each platform serves a different psychological purpose.
Instagram: Your Visual Resume
Instagram has quietly become the first place people check after receiving a referral.
It’s where potential clients go to evaluate your vibe. Your professionalism. Your aesthetic. Your credibility.
If your feed is outdated, inconsistent, or inactive, it creates doubt, even if you’re an exceptional advisor.
Instagram works best for relationship-building. It’s aspirational and visual. It allows you to show behind-the-scenes planning, trip recaps, client wins, and personal moments that humanize your brand.
And yes, stories matter more than most advisors realize.
They don’t have to be polished. In fact, they perform better when they aren’t. Casual check-ins, quick updates, or resharing a property you love keeps you visible. Stories disappear in 24 hours, which means they are not the place for perfectionism. They are the place for presence.
In terms of content types, you don’t need to choose between reels or carousels. Reels tend to expand reach. Carousels tend to drive saves and authority. The smart move is using both and tracking what resonates most with your audience.
Instagram builds trust. And trust drives bookings.
Facebook: Community Still Wins
Facebook may not feel trendy, but it remains powerful, especially for audiences between 30 and 60.
The real opportunity isn’t necessarily in your personal feed. It’s in groups.
Community-based conversations, referrals, and question threads create organic visibility. When someone asks for hotel recommendations or itinerary advice, that’s your moment to provide value first and subtly open the door to working together.
Hard selling in Facebook groups often backfires. Generosity converts better.
When you give thoughtful answers and real insight without immediately pushing your link, you position yourself as the expert people remember.
TikTok: Discovery, Not Loyalty
TikTok excels at discovery. It’s where people search for quick answers.
“3 days in Rome.”
“What not to do in Paris.”
“Best time to visit Greece.”
The platform rewards clarity and speed. Short, digestible itineraries. Comparisons. Myth-busting. Budget versus luxury contrasts.
You can grow quickly on TikTok. But the community aspect is weaker. One viral video does not guarantee consistent visibility.
If you use TikTok, you need a next step. Direct viewers to your Instagram, your email list, or your website. Otherwise, you’re building attention without ownership.
TikTok inspires. It doesn’t necessarily convert on its own.
Pinterest: Planning Mode Activated
Pinterest isn’t really social media. It’s a search engine.
Users are planners. They’re saving ideas for future trips. Creating boards. Comparing options.
This platform works exceptionally well for long-term visibility. If you already create blog content, destination guides, itineraries, and packing lists, Pinterest can quietly drive traffic back to your site for months.
It’s not about daily engagement. It’s about searchability and sustained discovery.
For advisors who enjoy educational content and visual inspiration, Pinterest can become a powerful backend traffic source.
LinkedIn: The Underrated Authority Platform
LinkedIn often gets overlooked in the travel industry, but it shouldn’t.
It’s ideal for positioning yourself as an expert. Travel trends. Industry insights. Lessons from client experiences. Corporate retreat planning. Even personal reflections with a professional takeaway.
The platform has evolved. It’s no longer just corporate updates and resumes. Personality-forward content performs well, especially when paired with a clear lesson.
And the barrier to entry is low. Posting once per week already puts you ahead of the majority of users.
If your audience includes business owners, executives, or higher-income professionals, LinkedIn may be more valuable than you think.
You Don’t Need to Be Everywhere
Here’s the part that should feel relieving: you do not need to master every platform. Trying to maintain Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, Pinterest, and LinkedIn simultaneously is a recipe for burnout, especially when marketing competes with client management, itinerary building, and operations.
The strategy is simple:
Choose the platform where your buyers actually spend time.
Choose the platform you can show up on consistently.
Then repurpose strategically to one secondary channel.
Simplicity is sustainable. And sustainable wins.
Final Takeaway
If your marketing feels heavy, it might not be because you’re bad at it. It might be because you’re trying to show up in the wrong room. When you align your platform with your audience’s behavior, marketing stops feeling like guessing. It starts feeling intentional. Focused. Measurable. That’s when the ROI shows up.
If this conversation sparked clarity for you, listen to the full episode for deeper insights. And if you’re ready to organize your backend systems so marketing doesn’t feel chaotic, explore the ClickUp Business Hub Templates to streamline your workflow and support consistent content execution.
Your business doesn’t need more noise. It needs an aligned strategy.





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