They Don’t Know How It Works: The Case for Educating Your Clients (Before You Lose Them)
Here’s the truth, friend: most clients aren’t trying to make your eye twitch. They’re not texting you at 11:47 PM because they hate boundaries. They’re not ghosting you because they want to ruin your week. They’re not price-shopping you because they don’t respect your expertise.
They just don’t know how this works.
No one ever told them.
And as much as I’d love to believe that my “Travel Fairy Godmother” reputation precedes me — that clients simply know that I don’t get paid until they travel, or that I’m not secretly on Disney’s payroll (if only) — I’ve learned that most of the world still thinks we wave our magic wands and get an automatic commission from the cosmos.
The Myth of the “Bad Client”
There’s a moment every new travel agent faces: the heartbreak of your first ghost.
You’ve spent hours quoting, dreaming, polishing a proposal so beautiful you could cry — and then… nothing. Silence. The abyss.
Cue the drama. “They used me!” “They wasted my time!” “People are the worst!”
Or — hear me out — maybe they just didn’t know.
Maybe they thought your service worked like Expedia: free help, instant quotes, click to book.
Maybe they thought you were on retainer by the cruise line.
Maybe they didn’t understand that you only get paid if they actually book with you.
Ignorance and malice are not the same thing. And most of the time? It’s ignorance.
That’s not a “bad client.” That’s a confused one. And confused people don’t buy — they bolt.
Education Is Hospitality, Not Hand-Holding
Think about it: when you walk into a fancy restaurant, they don’t assume you know the tasting-menu flow. They walk you through it.
When you book a spa treatment, they tell you where to hang your robe and which direction to lie on the table.
Why? Because hospitality is education. It’s anticipating confusion before it becomes frustration.
Travel is no different.
When a client fills out my form, I send a “How This Works” infographic. It explains that I don’t charge them directly, that I get paid by suppliers after their trip, and that my job is to make the planning process easier, not more expensive.
Do I have a few boundary-violators? Of course. (Hi, Tammy. Yes, I got your text at 12:06 AM about sandals vs. wedges for Santorini. No, I’m not answering until morning.)
But most of my clients are wonderful once they understand the rhythm — because I’ve taught them how to work with me.
Boundaries Are an Act of Grace
You can’t be everyone’s on-call travel hotline. You also can’t blame people for calling if you never said the line was closed.
That’s why I believe boundaries are part of gracious hospitality — not the opposite of it.
When you set expectations upfront (“I respond during business hours,” “discussion groups aren’t recorded,” “if you text at 11 PM, you’ll get a reply in the morning”), you’re not being cold. You’re being clear.
And clarity is kindness.
Your clients will thank you for it, and you’ll thank yourself when you’re not answering cruise-line questions while brushing your teeth.
Why I Don’t Charge Fees (Yet)
Ah, the eternal travel-agent debate: to fee or not to fee.
Listen, I get it. We work hard. We deserve to be compensated for our time.
But here’s the thing — I built Travel with Grace & Joy on, well, grace and joy.
I believe in the power of hospitality to win clients for life. I believe in teaching before billing.
And when I was new — when my business was built on referrals, not a viral TikTok funnel — I found that a well-timed conversation and a little client education went further than an invoice.
Do I think fees have their place? Absolutely.
But I also know that in my business, kindness converts better than confrontation.
And honestly, if I can teach someone how this works and keep them coming back year after year, that’s a longer-term profit than a one-time planning fee.
My model is simple: educate with generosity, set boundaries with grace, and serve with joy.
It’s not passive. It’s powerful.
The Travel Fairy Godmother Philosophy
If you’ve ever heard me talk about being a “Travel Fairy Godmother,” it’s not just about the pixie dust — it’s about the teaching.
I don’t just book your trip; I show you how to travel smarter.
I don’t just plan the magic; I explain the spells.
And when I see that little lightbulb go off — when a client says, “Ohhh, that’s how travel agents get paid!” — it’s better than any commission email.
Because I know that client will never ghost another agent again.
And maybe, just maybe, they’ll text a little earlier next time.
The moral of the story:
If you want better clients, teach them how to be better clients.
Education isn’t weakness — it’s leadership in disguise.
It’s what separates the order-takers from the trusted experts.
It’s what turns strangers into repeat travelers.
And it’s how I keep doing what I love — with grace, and with joy.