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Incentives, Meetings and Events, Tips

5 Things Most Companies Forget When Planning an Incentive Trip

If you’ve ever planned (or tried to plan) an incentive trip, you already know: it’s not as simple as picking a sunny destination and sending an invite.

There are a lot of moving parts — strategy, logistics, timing, expectations, and about 200 invisible details that can make or break the experience.

The truth is, most companies don’t get incentive trips wrong because they don’t care — they get them wrong because they overlook the small things that make a huge difference.

After producing programs across North America and beyond, here are the five things we see companies forget most often — and how to get them right.

1. Starting Too Late

We get it — calendars move fast and suddenly it’s six months before your trip. But here’s the thing: by then, the best destinations, rates, and venues are already gone.

The sweet spot for incentive planning is 9–12 months out. That gives you the lead time to negotiate contracts, secure ideal flights, and actually align your program with company goals (not scramble to make whatever’s left work).

When you start early, you plan strategically. When you start late, you plan reactively.

Early planning isn’t just about logistics — it’s about ROI.

2. Forgetting the “Why” Behind the Trip

It’s easy to get caught up in the what: where to go, what to do, what to serve. But the real question is why you’re doing it in the first place.

Every program should tie back to a clear business objective — whether that’s increasing sales, boosting retention, or deepening loyalty.

If you can’t connect the trip to measurable outcomes, you risk creating a beautiful experience that doesn’t actually move the needle.

Before you choose a destination, ask yourself:

“What do I want people to think, feel, and do when they get home?”

That answer should drive every decision you make.

3. Underestimating Logistics

It’s the least glamorous part of incentive planning — but also the most critical.

Rooming lists, flight manifests, transfers, dietary restrictions, time zones, check-in flow… these aren’t details. They’re the foundation.

When logistics run smoothly, participants barely notice them — and that’s exactly the goal. But when they don’t, the whole experience can unravel.

That’s why we build logistics plans like event blueprints — every detail, every contingency, accounted for. It’s the difference between a good trip and an unforgettable one.

4. Overcomplicating the Itinerary

The instinct is to fill the schedule — “We’re in paradise, let’s make the most of it!” But the best incentive programs balance structure and space.

People want connection and adventure — but they also want downtime. They want to breathe.

We always design itineraries with a rhythm: high-energy experiences balanced with moments to rest, reset, and reconnect. That’s where the magic happens — not in the nonstop schedule, but in the space between it.

The most memorable moments are often the ones you didn’t overplan.

5. Measuring the Wrong Metrics (or None at All)

This is the one almost everyone forgets.

You can’t prove ROI if you don’t track it.

Incentives aren’t about attendance — they’re about outcomes. Did sales grow? Did engagement improve? Did loyalty increase?

We help clients measure success with both hard and soft data:

  • Pre- and post-trip performance
  • Employee surveys and sentiment
  • Retention rates and sales results

The best part? Once you can show the numbers, it’s a lot easier to get next year’s budget approved.

Planning an incentive trip is part art, part science — and the real impact comes from how well you balance both.

When you start early, lead with strategy, simplify the experience, and measure what matters, your program becomes more than a trip — it becomes a business tool.

Because at the end of the day, the goal isn’t just to send people somewhere beautiful.
It’s to bring them home changed.

💡 Want to see what goes into designing a high-performing incentive program? Check out our 2026/2027 Incentive Trends Report for a deeper look at what’s shaping the future of travel-based motivation.

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