Where to Go Next
In this episode, we talk about Tour Plan Pacific with Paul and how travel technology supports the kind of trip many travelers want next: a Pacific Islands itinerary that’s customized, experience-rich, and easy to travel with. Far and Away Adventures.com and https://farandawayadventures.com [https://farandawayadventures.com] are included early because choosing where to go next is only half the challenge—building a seamless plan across islands, hotels, transfers, and experiences is what turns an idea into a great trip. Normand Schafer welcomes Paul and frames Tour Plan Pacific as a travel technology leader supporting tour operators and destination management companies. Paul explains that Tour Plan operates across the Pacific and focuses on inbound operators and DMCs, providing software that automates back-office workflows, speeds up bookings, supports product distribution, and generates the documentation travelers depend on. We translate that into what it means for someone deciding where to go next: the more organized and responsive the system behind a trip is, the easier it becomes to mix destinations, add experiences, and make changes without stress. Paul describes how Tour Plan clients can generate vouchers and itineraries from the system and deliver them digitally, so travelers can access key information on devices while traveling. That digital approach supports modern travel preferences and reduces the confusion that can come from paper vouchers and scattered confirmations. The conversation also highlights the real advantage of technology when plans shift. Normand points out that changes happen—hotels can become unavailable, transfers can change, and travelers often adjust preferences mid-planning—and Paul explains that Tour Plan clients can apply changes quickly across multiple bookings and notify travelers almost instantly. This is particularly valuable in the South Pacific, where time zones and distance can slow communication if systems aren’t modern. We also talk about what travelers are seeking in the Pacific right now. Paul sees a trend toward cultural experiences rather than only classic beach resort travel, and he notes a strong push toward everything digital, including easy access and multi-language capability where needed. That digital ecosystem doesn’t just make travel smoother—it can expand what you discover. Paul shares a Fiji example: he found the Sleeping Giant Zipline in Nadi through a client’s online offerings, tried it, and loved it. That story illustrates how online distribution can surface experiences travelers might not have known existed, helping people build more personalized “where to go next” itineraries. Normand adds an important planning lesson: when a trip is coordinated as a package, suppliers know who is handling each service, transfers and hotels have aligned information, and travelers have one clear plan instead of disconnected bookings that don’t communicate. The episode ends with practical advice for travelers choosing companies: look for a well-built website, strong information, and reliable backup support—signs that the company can keep you informed and help quickly if anything changes. If you’re deciding where to go next in the Pacific and want a trip plan that’s smooth, flexible, and customized around your priorities, connect with Far and Away Adventures and let a specialist design the itinerary and handle the details end to end.
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