How to Pitch Travel Agents and DMCs Cold and Win Contracts: The No-BS Framework
Scaling a tour business requires moving beyond OTAs. Here is how to professionally pitch DMCs and travel agents to secure high-volume, high-margin contracts.
Most tour operators approach DMCs (Destination Management Companies) and travel agents like they’re begging for a favor. They send a generic PDF brochure, ask for a "quick chat to explore synergies," and then wonder why their emails are ignored.
If you want to move from $100k to $1M+, you need volume, and travel trade partners are the fastest way to get it without doubling your ad spend. But these people are busy, risk-averse, and highly protective of their clients. To win a contract, you have to stop selling "experiences" and start selling "reliability."
Here is my framework for cold pitching and winning B2B contracts in the travel industry.
1. Do Not Pitch Until You Have the "Trade Trio" Ready
The quickest way to get blacklisted by a high-end travel agent is to lack professional infrastructure. Before you send a single cold email, you must have three things in place. If you don't, you’re wasting your reputation.First, you need a Net Rate Sheet. This is not your retail price minus 10%. This is a clear, spreadsheet-style document showing your tiered pricing for the next 18–24 months. Agents often book a year in advance; if you can’t tell them what a tour costs in June of next year, they can’t sell it.
Second, you need Public Liability Insurance. Most DMCs won't even reply if you don't carry a minimum of $1M–$5M in coverage, depending on your region. Have the certificate ready to attach.
Third, you need formatted B2B descriptions. Write your tour copy in the third person, without your branding, so the agent can copy-paste it directly into their client proposals. This is "white labeling" their workload, and they will love you for it.
2. The Research: Finding the "Right-Sized" Partner
Stop pitching the biggest DMCs in the world (like Abercrombie & Kent) if you only have two vans and three guides. They won't take the risk on you. Instead, look for boutique agencies that specialize in your specific niche or geography.1. LinkedIn Mining: Search for "Product Manager," "Contracting Manager," or "Inbound Specialist" at agencies in your target markets (e.g., US-based agents selling Spain). 2. Trade Association Directories: Look at lists from USTOA (United States Tour Operators Association) or ATTA (Adventure Travel Trade Association). 3. Ghosting the Competition: See who the top-rated luxury hotels in your city are recommending. Ask the concierge which DMCs book their VIP guests. Those are your targets.
3. The 3-Step Cold Outreach Framework
When I was scaling, I didn't send mass blasts. I sent 10 highly targeted emails per week. The goal isn't to get a signature on a contract; it's to get a 10-minute Zoom call.Your email structure should follow this exact logic:
- The Hook: Acknowledge a specific niche they serve (e.g., "I saw your recent itinerary for high-net-worth families in the Douro Valley").
- The Problem/Solution: Identify a gap in the current market. Maybe the big operators are too rigid, or they don't offer private access to X location.
- The De-Risk: Mention your insurance, your current response time (e.g., "we answer all inquiries within 4 hours"), and your 5-star direct-to-consumer track record.
4. Winning the Contract: The Onboarding Phase
If they reply and ask for more info, you are in the "audition" phase. This is where most operators fail because they get lazy with the paperwork. To win the contract, you must demonstrate that you are easier to work with than their current provider.- Speed is your best marketing: If an agent asks for a quote, reply in under 60 minutes. In the B2B world, the fastest responder usually wins the booking, even if they are 10% more expensive.
- The Site Inspection: Offer a "FAM" (Familiarization) trip or a site inspection. If they are local, take them on the tour. If they are international, offer to host their lead agent next time they are in town. You aren't selling the tour; you're selling the fact that your guides are punctual, clean, and professional.
- Negotiating Terms: Most DMCs will ask for 30-day payment terms. If you are just starting, this can kill your cash flow. I suggest offering a 2% discount for "payment at time of booking" or "payment 7 days prior" until you have built 6 months of trust.
5. Avoiding the "Low Margin Trap"
Travel agents usually want 10% to 20% commission (or the equivalent Net Rate discount). DMCs may want up to 30% because they are reselling to other agents.If your margins are thin, you shouldn't be pitching the trade. You must price your B2B offerings by working backward from your desired profit, not by discounting your retail price.
What a healthy B2B margin looks like: 1. Direct Cost: $40 (Staff, fuel, food, tickets) 2. Overhead: $10 (Software, insurance, office) 3. Net Rate to DMC: $100 4. Agent Surcharge/Retail Price: $130 - $140
If you can't make at least 40% gross margin on a Net Rate, you don't have a B2B-ready business; you have a hobby.
6. Maintaining the Relationship (The "Ghost" Strategy)
Once you win the contract, the real work begins. Agents are terrified of two things: their client having a bad time, and you "stealing" their client for a direct booking next year.To keep a contract for life:
- White-label everything: Your guides should not hand out business cards with your website on them. They should say, "We are glad to host you on behalf of [Agency Name]."
- The Positive Feedback Loop: Every time a guest mentions how great the tour was, take a screenshot of that specific feedback and email it to the agent. "Hey [Name], your clients the Millers had a blast today. Thought you'd like to see their comment about the lunch spot." This makes the agent look like a hero to their boss.
What I’d Do Next
Winning B2B contracts is about systemizing your reliability. If you can prove you’re the safest, fastest, and most professional option in your city, you’ll never have to worry about the Viator algorithm again.If you’re doing $500k+ and want to build a real B2B engine that brings in consistent, high-ticket group bookings without you personally sending every email, we should talk. I’ve survived the transition from "guy with a van" to "company with 100+ partners."
Book a strategy call here to see if we can scale your B2B department.