26 Casey Hanisko, President, Adventure Travel Trade Association
The ATTA is maybe the world’s best trade association. It’s a collective of over 1300 tour operators, specialty agents, hospitality businesses and general bon vivants and tourism boards, all whose day job is — adventure travel. Seriously. Where did the rest of us go wrong? At ATTA Casey has promoted travel itineraries like deep sea submersible trips and deep excursions into Brazil, Japan, and Namibia, among others, long before those activities and places topped Hot lists. Before coming to the Association, she worked in space voyaging (for chrissake!) at Zegrahm Expeditions.
Is adventure travel the last frontier of tourism? Well, since I started my career in space travel, my answer is no! Adventure travel is defined as the intersection of nature, cultural immersion, and an activity. I believe in the ever changing landscape of our experiences, and that adventure travel is what travel has always been about: challenging our minds and bodies in a way that is personal and unique. What are the new adventure travel trends? Blending land and sea routes together to create interweaving journeys in remote locations, taking travelers away from the travel hot spots. Biking and hiking continue to be top activities, as well as human powered and electric transportation that keep itineraries sustainable and climate friendly. Travelers want to consider their carbon footprint (Tomorrow’s Air is one solution we have for that.) Technology will be key to the future as a way to identify the best and least crowded paths, connecting with locals for experiences. What’s the most remote place you’ve arranged trips for, or worked with people who did? ATTA members offer trips to Antarctica and the North Pole, as well as to Everest and other remote mountain, desert, and jungle locations. These trips delve into remote locations with wild scenery and often thousands and thousands of animals. Small communities of indigenous people live nearby or in these locations, and are often running the travel businesses.
27 Vicki Freed, Senior Vice President, Sales, Trade Support and Service, Royal Caribbean
28 Petra Hedorfer, CEO, Germany National Tourism Board
29 Michelle Fee, CEO and founder, Cruise Planners
Her best advice for being a successful CEO is to hire employees who are smarter than you, telling Franchise, “I am not afraid to recruit someone who knows more than I do about a given topic. In fact, today we have the strongest executive team and home office team we have ever had because I put my pride aside and found the right people who can challenge me to get the best result and the job done.”
30 Sara Nelson, International President, Association of Flight Attendants
The International President of the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA-CWA) is responsible for representing 50,000 flight attendants around the world, across 20 different airlines. Sara, it’s powerful president, who is generally referred to as the most important flight attendant in the world, walked the walk before she controlled the talk, beginning her career at United in 1996. She started as an activist in her local AFA chapter and became Communications Chair for United in 2002, shepherding the company’s internal and external public relations during its very long bankruptcy struggles in the mid-2000s.
As International Vice President of AFA (a position she held from 2011 until her appointment to the top spot in 2014), she led the organization’s obviously very sensible No Knives Ever Again Campaign, which banned all knives from commercial planes in 2013, after the TSA inexpicably lifted certain restrictions put in place after 9/11.
She really believes in communication, telling The Cut “I’ll go into any room, because at the end of the day, the main purpose is to bring people together in the labor movement. You can’t do that if you’re not able to have conversations with people and have people believe that you’re actually interested in what they have to say. And the only way that you can do that is by challenging assumptions about who they think you are. Someone said about me, ‘I just love her because she looks like a Republican, but she’s a socialist.’ I will also tell you that there are rooms that are just very hard to get into, because there really are no women in those rooms. And that’s still an issue.”