My Tours Aren't Selling — What to Actually Do (The No-BS Guide)
If your tour departures are empty, you don't have a marketing problem—you have a trust or friction problem. Here is how to diagnose and fix it.
If your tour departures are empty and your booking notifications have gone silent, you don’t have a marketing problem—you have a product-market fit or a trust problem. Most operators respond to a slump by lighting money on fire with Meta ads, but if the foundation is broken, more traffic just means more people seeing a product they don't want.
When I was building my business from $35 to $10M, I realized that "not selling" is usually the result of three specific friction points: your offer is generic, your friction to purchase is too high, or you’re asking for a marriage on the first date. Here is exactly how to diagnose the stall and restart the engine without a guru’s "magic" funnel.
1. Audit Your "Value-to-Price" Ratio
Price is rarely the reason a tour doesn't sell, but "value parity" is. If you are selling a "3-hour walking tour of Madrid" for $60 and 40 other operators are selling the same route for $40, you aren't more expensive; you are just less logical to the consumer.To fix this, you have to move away from selling "time and geography" and start selling "access and outcomes." People don’t pay for a 4-hour van ride; they pay to avoid the line at the Alhambra or to find the one vineyard that doesn't allow tour buses.
How to re-evaluate your value: 1. Search your own keywords: Look at the top three results. If your landing page looks exactly like theirs but costs more, you are invisible. 2. Add a non-monetary "Hook": If you can’t lower the price (and you shouldn't), you must increase the perceived value. This could be a proprietary PDF guide sent instantly upon booking or an exclusive tasting that isn't available to the public. 3. The "So What?" Test: Read your tour description. For every sentence, ask "So what?" If your description says "We use Mercedes Sprinters," the "So What" is "You’ll have extra legroom and AC that actually works in 40-degree heat." Sell the benefit, not the feature.
2. Eliminate the "Analysis Paralysis" on Your Booking Page
I see operators lose 40% of their potential revenue at the checkout stage. If your tour isn't selling, it might be because the actual act of buying is a chore. High-growth businesses thrive on removing friction.Check your booking flow right now. If a customer has to fill out 12 fields of information (including their secondary emergency contact's shirt size) before they even get to the payment screen, you are killing your conversion rate.
The checklist for a high-converting booking page:
- Mobile-First Design: 70% of in-destination tours are booked on a thumb-sized screen. If your "Book Now" button is hard to hit, you’re losing money.
- Real-Time Availability: If you have "Request to Book" instead of "Instant Confirmation," you are losing to the competitor who allows the guest to finish the transaction in 30 seconds.
- Social Proof in the Flow: Don't just have a "Reviews" page. Place a 5-star quote right next to the "Pay Now" button to reinforce the decision at the moment of highest anxiety.
- Transparent Pricing: Never hide taxes or booking fees until the final screen. There is nothing a traveler hates more than a $99 tour turning into a $124 tour at the very last click.
3. Leverage "The Gap" Between OTAs and Direct
If your Viator or GetYourGuide listings are stagnant, it’s often because you’re playing their game by their rules. The OTAs want a commodity; you want a brand.If their platform isn't moving your product, use the "Billboard Effect" differently. Instead of trying to win the price war on Viator, use your OTA presence as a teaser. Make sure your brand name is prominent and searchable. Travelers are savvy; they will find your website to see if there is a "Direct Booking Perk."
What a "Direct Perk" looks like:
- Free cancellation up to 12 hours (versus the OTA’s 24).
- A complimentary hotel pickup that isn't offered on third-party sites.
- A "Small Group Guarantee" (e.g., max 8 people on your site, but the OTA listing allows up to 15).
4. Fix Your Social Proof Strategy (Beyond Tripadvisor)
If your tours aren't selling, you might have a "Trust Deficit." In 2024 and 2026, a Tripadvisor badge isn't enough. People want to see "Proof of Life." They want to see that other people—people like them—were on your tour yesterday and had a great time.Steps to build an aggressive trust engine: 1. User-Generated Content (UGC): Stop posting professional stock photos. Post a shaky, 10-second vertical video of a guest laughing or a guide telling a story. It’s authentic and converts better. 2. The "Review Recency" Rule: A 5-star review from 2022 is a red flag. It suggests the business might be defunct. You need reviews from the last 14 days. 3. Video Testimonials: When a guest tells you they had the time of their life, ask them: "Can I record you saying that for 15 seconds on my phone?" These snippets are gold for Instagram and your landing pages.
5. The "Reverse Engineering" Method for Low Volume
If you are getting traffic but no sales, the problem is on the page. If you aren't getting traffic at all, you need to go where the intent already exists. Stop trying to create demand; harvest it.- Partner with Concierges: Go to high-end hotels near your tour start point. Don't just give them a flyer. Give them a reason to care—a commission or a free "fam trip" so they can actually recommend you with conviction.
- Google Maps Optimization: For local tours, your Google Business Profile is more important than your website. If you aren't in the "Local Three-Pack," you don't exist for people searching "Tours near me."
- Niche Communities: If you run a photography tour, are you active in photography forums or Facebook groups? Don't spam; provide value. Answer questions about the best lighting spots in your city. The sales will follow the authority.
The No-BS Reality Check
In my experience, when an operator says "my tours aren't selling," they are usually waiting for the world to find them. The "build it and they will come" model died ten years ago. Today, you win by being 10% more specific and 20% easier to book than the guy next to you.| Issue | Immediate Fix | Long-term Play | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | High Bounce Rate | Simplify the page layout and add a "Book Now" at the top. | Implement heatmapping (like Hotjar) to see where they drop off. | | No Traffic | Run a $10/day highly-targeted Google Search campaign. | Build a long-term SEO content moat around your niche. | | Cart Abandonment | Remove 50% of the questions in the booking form. | Set up an automated "recovery" email for abandoned carts. |
What I’d Do Next
Fixing a sales slump requires an outside perspective. When you're in the weeds of daily operations, it's impossible to see the "leaks" in your bucket. I’ve helped dozens of operators find an extra $1M+ in revenue just by tweaking their offer structure and conversion path.If you’re doing over $500k in revenue but you’ve hit a ceiling—or worse, a floor—we should talk. I don't do "consulting calls" to talk about feelings; I do strategy sessions to find money.
Book a strategy call here to find out why your tours aren't moving: https://gonzalo10million.com/#contact-form