Search Travel Market Report

mainlogo
www.travelmarketreport.com
U.S.A.
English
Canada
English
Canada Quebec
Français
  • News
  • Packaged Travel
  • Cruise
  • Hotels & Resorts
  • Destinations
  • Retail Strategies
  • Air
  • River Cruise
  • Training & Resources

Cruise Fams Have Never Been More Important, Part Two

by Richard D'Ambrosio  October 19, 2016

This is part two of a series on cruise fams. For part one, click here.

For cruise-selling travel agents, cruise fams are essential to staying current and growing their businesses. But the cruise fam landscape has changed. While cruise ship inspections and training-oriented fams have become more plentiful, full-fledged immersive fam cruises are rare.

Ship inspections and training fams are effective, but they’re not quite the same as the full cruise experience.

“It’s different. When you take four or five days or a whole week to experience a ship, you get a feel for the little things that you can sell to a client,” said Craig Satterfield, a CLIA elite cruise counselor with Sure Cruise and Cruise Travel Outlet, Las Vegas, and author of “Confessions from the Cruise Scholar,” a book about his 35 years selling cruise travel.

“I like to give clients information no one can get off a website or a brochure. Even if I don’t take a fam, if I take a cruise with my family, I’m looking for the details I can sell later.”

Carnival’s agent offerings
Carnival schedules what it calls “Seminars at Sea,” multi-day, rep-guided educational trips; it hosted 16 of those in 2015.

Carnival scours advance reservations to find ships where as many as 20 cabins might go unsold and plans these events, for which agents can register on the Carnival agent website. Carnival currently has an eight-night sailing in November to the Southern Caribbean, for example, priced at $706 for an interior stateroom and $1,187 for a stateroom with a balcony. A Carnival rep attends the full cruise, and agents receive training, get to go behind the scenes to view the ship’s operations, and attend typical guest activities and events.

Carnival encourages agents to bring someone with them. “We would love two agents from one office,” said Vicki Tomasino, regional vice president for Carnival’s Western U.S. sales, who heads up CCL’s travel agent fam program. “We know people’s experiences are better when they cruise with someone they know.”

For bigger occasions, like the introduction of a new ship, Carnival hosts larger fams with a celebratory atmosphere. Carnival’s Vista will start sailing from the U.S. this fall, so agents will be invited on fams departing from Miami and New York, Tomasino said.

Agent fams also are often held when ships are relocated to a different ports. The Carnival Breeze and Sunshine recently moved, and the company treated their arrival at new ports like inaugural sailings.

River cruise fams are more selective and intimate
Because river cruise lines have smaller ships, they need to be more discriminating. Richard Hickey, sales director for Scenic Cruises’ southeast region, said the line hosts two invitation-only fams a year, one in March or April, and then one in late November/early December.

“We look for agents who want to partner with us and support us, are passionate about river cruising and want to sell luxury,” said Hickey. “We have five or six members of our sales team on board to engage with the agents and go on the tours with them.”

Most of Scenic’s ships hold 169 passengers, so Scenic will invite about 100 agents and/or guests for these fams. Scenic typically highlights its eight-day Danube cruise between Nuremburg and Budapest on fams. The company also has hosted agent-only fams for inaugural sailings, excluding paying passengers.

Because Scenic is still building its brand in the U.S., its sales team invites both agents who currently book with the line and those who book river cruises with its competitors.

Fam rates too
Scenic also offers two different agent fam rates for eight-day sailings. There is a 20% discount for reservations made beyond 120 days; if an agent books closer in, the company charges $499, plus port charges and taxes, and $999 for a non-agent companion.

“It’s a popular program,” Hickey said. “But it’s hard for us to find the space.”

Agents are encouraged to take the Scenic specialist course prior to signing up for a fam rate. The program provides a general overview of the company, destinations, itineraries, land tours, and educates agents on Scenic’s all-inclusive concept. Agents take an exam at the end of the course.

If a travel agent closes a sale on Scenic within the first six months of taking a fam trip, the line will send them a $100 gift card per person booked.

  
  
Related Articles
Azamara Rolls Out New ‘Anything Azamara’ Hotline as Trade Support Expands
Royal Caribbean Builds Luxury Momentum With Beach Clubs and New River Product
A World Cruise, Your Way: Oceania Unveils 17-Segment 2027 Program
AmaWaterways and Mandarin Oriental Partner for Pre- and Post-Cruise Program
Four Seasons Yachts Launches Michelin-Starred Chef-in-Residence Program Ahead of 2026 Debut
Explora Journeys Announces Exclusive Prelude Sailing for Explora III
“Dream Big:” Pat Probert & Mary de Almeida Sell Bob Family Travel to Fellow Advisors Craig & Marsha White
Silversea Expands Its Experiential Footprint With Record 2027–2028 Voyage Collection
Crystal Sets Timeline for First New Build in 25 Years
Sail Croatia Adds MS Contessa and Mid-Week Sailings to 2026 Explorer Cruises

MOST VIEWED

  1. Princess Cruises Adjusts Future Deployments in Response to Customer Research
  2. Black Friday Travel Deals: Sales & Promos Roundup for 2025
  3. Norwegian Cruise Line Reverts Back to “Free at Sea”
  4. 2025’s Black Friday Cruise Promotions
  5. U.S. Flight Cancellations Surge as FAA’s 10% Cut Escalates Amid Government Shutdown
  6. 9 New All-Inclusive Resorts in the Caribbean and Mexico Opening in 2026


TMR Subscription

Subscribe today to receive daily in-depth coverage from all corners of the travel industry, from industry happenings to new cruise ships, hotel openings, tour updates, and much more.

Subscribe to TMR

Top Stories
Norwegian Cruise Line Reverts Back to “Free at Sea”
Norwegian Cruise Line Reverts Back to “Free at Sea”

Free at Sea includes amenities valuing over $2,000 in savings.

Cunard Unveils 110 New Itineraries for 2027/28
Cunard Unveils 110 New Itineraries for 2027/28

Itineraries include visits to 97 destinations in 47 countries between October 2027 and May 2028.

Explora Journeys Unveils New Visual Identity, Enhanced Website
Explora Journeys Unveils New Visual Identity, Enhanced Website

Each Journey page has been reimagined to offer a comprehensive, one-glance view of key sailing details.

Azamara Cruises Launches Travel Advisor Hotline
Azamara Cruises Launches Travel Advisor Hotline

The hotline connects new-to-Azamara agencies and advisors with a trained contact center team ready to assist with “anything Azamara.”

Great Lakes Region Expecting Record Cruise Growth in 2026
Great Lakes Region Expecting Record Cruise Growth in 2026

In 2026, seven cruise lines and 10 cruise ships will offer Great Lakes sailings.

Scenic Group Launches Wine-Themed Group Amenity Program
Scenic Group Launches Wine-Themed Group Amenity Program

The program offers two tiers of benefits, depending on how big the group is.

TMR OUTLOOKS & WHITE PAPERS
View All
Advertiser's Voice
Explora Journeys Unveils New Asia Sailings
About Travel Market Report Mission Meet the Team Advisory Board Advertise Syndication Guidelines
TMR Resources Calendar of Events Outlook/Whitepapers Previous Sponsored Articles Previous This Week Articles
Subscribe to TMR
Select Language
Do You Have an Idea Email
editor@travelmarketreport.com
Give Us a Call
1-(516) 730-3097
Drop Us a Note
Travel Market Report
71 Audrey Ave, Oyster Bay, NY 11771
© 2005 - 2025 Travel Market Report, an American Marketing Group Inc. Company All Rights Reserved | Terms and Conditions
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Manage cookie preferences