Why Your Website's Homepage Isn't Your Real Shop Window Anymore
Picture this. A travel agent spends a weekend refreshing their website. New hero image, updated copy, a slick colour palette. It looks brilliant. But their Google Business Profile still shows a phone number from two offices ago, their last TripAdvisor review is from 2022 and their Instagram hasn't been touched since a Maldives post that got nine likes. The homepage might be perfect, but the first impression most clients actually see is the one nobody designed.
For years, travel agents have been told their website is their shop window. And it was. When someone typed your name into Google and clicked through, your homepage did the heavy lifting. That's no longer how most clients find you. The window they're looking through has moved, and if you haven't followed it, you're losing enquiries you never even knew existed.
Your clients start their journey somewhere else
Research from the travel industry shows that the average journey from first thinking about a holiday to actually booking takes around 71 days. Roughly half of that time is spent gathering inspiration and the other half comparing, researching and narrowing down options. During those weeks, your potential client is scrolling Instagram reels, reading Google reviews, scanning TripAdvisor ratings and asking friends in WhatsApp groups. According to Barclays' 2025 UK travel trends report, 38% of British consumers now research holidays on social media before they book anything at all.
That's a lot of touchpoints before anyone visits your website. And here's the part that matters most for independent agents. A Birdeye study found that 86% of all Google Business Profile views come from category-based searches, things like "travel agent near me" or "holiday deals Bournemouth." The person searching has no idea who you are. They haven't heard your name, seen your logo or read your About page. They're comparing you to every other listing on the screen, and the listing itself is doing the selling.
The new shop window has multiple panes
Think of your digital presence less as a single shop window and more as a row of them, each facing a different street. One is your Google Business Profile, which shows up in Maps and local search. Another is your review presence across TripAdvisor, Trustpilot and Google Reviews. Then there's your social media footprint on Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn. And increasingly, there's a new pane altogether: AI-generated search answers from the likes of Google's AI Overviews, ChatGPT and Bing Copilot, which are pulling information from all of those sources and presenting it directly to the searcher.
Each of these panes tells a story about your business. The problem is that most small travel agencies are only actively managing one of them, their website, while the others quietly tell a story of neglect. A Google profile with three photos and no opening hours. A TripAdvisor page with a handful of reviews and no management responses. A Facebook page last updated for a competition in November. None of these things are hard to fix, but when they're left unattended they create a gap between how good your agency actually is and how good it looks to someone discovering you for the first time.
What a neglected profile actually costs you
The numbers paint a clear picture. A Statista survey found that 87% of consumers use Google to evaluate local businesses. Separate research across Google, TripAdvisor and Booking.com suggests that 92% of travellers read online reviews before making a booking decision. When your potential client searches "travel agent" and your competitor's listing has 85 five-star reviews, fresh photos and a complete description while yours has a generic Maps pin and silence, the comparison does the damage before your website ever gets a chance.
It's not just about vanity. Businesses with fully completed Google Business Profiles are 2.7 times more likely to be considered reputable by consumers, and verified profiles appear significantly more often in search results. For a small travel agency competing against OTAs with enormous marketing budgets, that free visibility is worth its weight in gold. Ignoring it is the equivalent of having a beautiful showroom behind a locked, unmarked door.
Taking control of every window
The good news is that none of this requires a big budget or a marketing team. It requires consistency and a bit of intention. Start with your Google Business Profile. Make sure your name, address, phone number and opening hours are accurate. Write a proper description that includes the destinations and services you specialise in. Upload recent photos of your team, your office and, if you can, happy clients on their trips. Respond to every review, positive or negative, because potential clients read your responses just as carefully as the reviews themselves.
Move on to your review strategy. Most satisfied clients won't leave a review unless you ask them. A simple follow-up email or text after a booking, with a direct link to your Google or TripAdvisor page, can transform a trickle of reviews into a steady flow. Volume matters, but so does recency. A business with 200 reviews from three years ago is less compelling than one with 40 reviews from the last six months.
Social media doesn't need to be a full-time job. Pick one or two platforms where your clients actually spend time and commit to posting regularly, even if that's just twice a week. Share destination tips, behind-the-scenes moments and client testimonials. The goal isn't to go viral. It's to look alive and active to someone who checks your page after seeing your name elsewhere.
Finally, keep an eye on how AI search tools are representing your business. Google's AI Overviews and tools like ChatGPT pull from publicly available sources, including your website, reviews and social profiles. The more consistent and detailed your information is across all of these channels, the more likely you are to show up accurately when a potential client asks an AI assistant to recommend a travel agent.
Your website still matters, but it's not where the story starts
None of this means your website is irrelevant. Far from it. A strong website remains the place where clients dig deeper, explore your packages and ultimately make an enquiry. But it's no longer the first chapter. For most of your future clients, the first chapter is a Google listing, a review, a social media post or an AI-generated answer they didn't even have to click to see.
The agencies that will win the next wave of bookings are the ones that show up everywhere their clients are already looking, not just behind one window they hope people will walk past. Your shop front has more glass than it used to. Time to make sure every pane is worth looking through.




