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‘#We’re staying!’ as eTravel strikes optimistic note

23 Oct 2019
Comments | 0

ALTHOUGH eTravel has

seen a flat year in

terms of figures, with

negative growth of 0,5%, there

is nothing flat about eTravel

ceo, Garth Wolff’s, prophecies

about the future of travel and

tourism in South Africa, or his

outlook for the SA economy.

Speaking at the eTravel

Forum Gala Dinner at the

Indaba Hotel on October

12, Garth said the last five

years had been tough but he

believed that the country was

at the bottom of a negative

cycle. eHolidays had had 5%

growth and the independent

wholesale consultant business

was up by an impressive

16,3%.

eTravel broke through the

R1bn turnover barrier in 2017,

grew it to R1,16bn in 2018

and despite a small fall-back

to R1,156bn in 2019, Garth

forecasts it’s now on course

for R1,175bn in 2020. He is

particularly proud of the fact

that the administrative staff

have had 15 years of salary

increases.

Commissions payable

to eTravel ITCs were being

budgeted at 81% in the short

term, said Garth.

An exciting development

is the eTravelConnect app,

keeping ITCs connected with

their travelling clients, allowing

them to give clients real-time

information and updates and

allowing clients to contact their

ITC when necessary. Garth

promised that this would take

eTravel ITCs to new heights of

after-sales service.

On the outlook for South

Africa, Garth sees signs of

confidence in the economy

such as the Leonardo, the

tallest building in Africa, where

an 80 sqm apartment sells

for R5,2m. He said with such

demonstrations of confidence

in the economy, Sandton

looked set to become the

financial capital of Africa. He

said the impunity of the

Zuma era was

now over,

the rot

was

being cleared out and the

net was closing. President

Ramaphosa’s focus on

rebuilding an ethical

foundation for SA and

revitalising the economy was

now in force, but recovery

would take years and years,

said Garth.

Garth has great faith in

South Africa in the long run,

and believes that inbound

tourism has the potential to

be much more of a foreign

revenue earner than it is.

His inbound venture, Blue

Canyon Private Game Reserve,

is forging ahead with the

establishment of the Blue

Canyon Wildlife Foundation,

an NPO that incorporates

an anti-poaching unit and is

designed to protect rhinos and

all wildlife of the reserve.

Even though we are all in

hard times right now, Garth

remains optimistic. “#I’m

staying! Be the change you

want to see,” he affirmed. 

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