How Online Workshops Can Fill Your Tours (Even When Social Media Isn't Converting)
This is the third of our Multi-Day Marketing series. Be sure to check out the first of our series here, and subscribe to our YouTube channel to tune into the whole series here.
Your social media posts get likes, comments, and shares. Sometimes. Your Instagram stories show beautiful destinations and happy guests. But your content and intermittent engagement isn’t translating into actual bookings for your multi-day tours. Sound familiar?
The disconnect happens because multi-day tours are big decisions. People need multiple touchpoints with you before they’ll trust you with their vacation time and money. Social media creates awareness, but it rarely closes high-ticket sales on its own. (And often social media is hit or miss, as we’ve discussed before.)
That’s where online workshops come in, and many tour operators are completely missing this opportunity.
Why Online Workshops Work for Tour Operators
Online workshops let you deliver value and build trust at scale. Instead of trying to nurture leads one Instagram comment at a time, you’re connecting with dozens of potential guests simultaneously in a format that’s highly leveraged but still personal.
The real purpose here isn’t just education. It’s your ability to collect email addresses and contact information. It’s a way to build community and develop that trust and rapport. And what’s often overlooked is that workshops give you a legitimate reason to have a special offer.
Unfortunately, online workshops and webinars are underutilized by tour and activity operators. We encourage members in our coaching program to start thinking about doing these monthly, or at least quarterly if monthly feels too ambitious.

This fits perfectly with our VIP Marketing Method™ methodology. In these online sessions, you’re going to deliver value—not deliver a 30 or 45-minute sales pitch for an upcoming trip. You’re going to hit that intimacy because we’re having real engagement and community building. It’s a brand new way to connect with your audiences.
Maybe people are following you on Instagram or getting inspired by your emails. But we need to add a new channel where we can develop trust and rapport while inviting them to take action.
Keeping the Technology Simple
You don’t need fancy tech to get started. The super simple approach is to use Zoom’s built-in registration page and do manual follow-ups. Since the pandemic, people of all ages are familiar with Zoom and how to register for meetings. You honestly don’t need any other technology than that.
For a slightly more advanced setup, you can create your own registration page that collects additional contact information like phone numbers. You could ask two or three qualifying questions after registration. And you could automatically integrate that process into a CRM or email service provider, set up automated email and SMS reminders, and potentially even have an automated replay.
Big picture: don’t let tech stand in the way. Start simple. You can always upgrade your tech stack later as you get more comfortable running these workshops.
Choosing Irresistible Workshop Topics
The bigger challenge is coming up with a topic that’s going to be irresistible to your ideal target guests. Just like with lead magnets, we want to think about pain killers.
- What are some challenges and frustrations that are driving people crazy in your audience?
- How can you help them out?
- What unique expertise could you bring to bear to make their lives easier?
We strongly encourage leveraging AI to help you come up with ideas. Think about the top 10 challenges your audience faces, the top 10 desires they’re hoping to achieve, and the top 10 objections they have. All of this is fantastic fodder for an upcoming workshop.
A Real-World Example
Chelsea and her team at Heart of Travel had a 2025 Travel Trends webinar. They knew a lot was in flux, so they asked their audience:
“If you’ve been wondering, is it safe to travel to Latin America in 2025? What destinations should you prioritize? How will political and economic shifts affect my plans? We’ve got you covered.”
They promoted an upcoming Zoom session on the future of travel in Latin America. After people registered, they were invited to submit questions to help shape the webinar through a simple Google form. They asked what travel questions were on people’s minds, where they were looking to travel, and what was currently stopping them from booking a trip.
This gave them a fantastic way to meet their leads and address concerns from people who may have always wanted to go to Guatemala, Colombia, or Peru but were nervous. They provided authority and domain expertise while being a reliable source of truth.
Getting People to Register
How do you get people to register? Send information and a registration link to your existing email list and push it across all your marketing channels. This is a great way to get Instagram followers onto your email list. You can also run paid ads or leverage it across other communities and forums where your ideal target guests spend time.
Another powerful approach is joint venture partnerships. Instead of reaching out to say, “Can you sell my stuff?” you can come bearing gifts. You’re offering to deliver value to a specific type of person, and you’re pretty sure you can collaborate to bring value to a potential partner’s community.
If you’re trying to reach seniors, you could partner with seniors groups. Trying to reach cyclists? Partner with cycle clubs around the world. What about wine clubs? There are tons of ways to leverage joint venture partnerships and online events to grow your list.
Workshop Length and Structure
People often ask about the appropriate length for these workshops. We’re recommending content that’s between 20 and 30 minutes, though it depends on your niche and who you’re trying to reach. This gives you extra time for other important elements.
We highly recommend having time for interactivity and Q&A. This gives people peace of mind that you’re actually alive, gives them the opportunity to ask questions specific to their situation, and lets you showcase your expertise, kindness, and warmth.
The Special Offer Component
Here’s a common mistake we want you to avoid: you don’t have a special offer for attendees.
The key to this workshop strategy is having some kind of offer that’s going to expire. It’s your opportunity to add urgency, create fear of missing out, and have a clear call to action.
Think of this as the soft sell that accompanies what is predominantly a value-focused workshop. This offer should ideally be only for people who registered for the workshop, and it should be time-bound. The special offer should be tied to taking the next step in the sales funnel – ideally getting their deposit in within 48 hours or perhaps within the next week.
The special offer could be a workshop attendee discount, early access to trip availability, or some other value-added experience like entry into a draw for a free upgraded room. One of our coaching members, who does women’s golf trips, offered a free swing clinic with the local golf pro – but only for folks who registered before the deadline.
You don’t always have to give discounts to have effective promotions.
Best Practices for Your Workshop Flow
Make a mention of your special offer at the start of the webinar – less than two minutes, just one or two sentences. Let people know what the special offer is and how they can take action, or tease it to keep them engaged. You never know when people might need to leave early.
Think about bookending your special offer. Hint at it at the beginning for one minute max, really tight. Then after your core content, after you’ve delivered value but before the Q&A, make that longer soft sell. Clarify how the offer works and make sure the link is shared in the Zoom chat or on screen.
Do this before the Q&A so you’re inspiring people to take action. If they need to leave early, they’ll still have heard the offer. The questions and answers can then be related to that special offer and upcoming trips.
Following Up for Maximum Impact
Avoid making it feel like they have to purchase right there in that moment – that feels high pressure. However, getting them to take the next step in the sales funnel before a tighter deadline is entirely appropriate.
You could say something like:
“This special offer will be available until Friday, June 19. If you have any questions, we encourage you to use this link to book a call with our team so we can get those questions answered and you can still take advantage of this special offer.”
That way you have a primary call to action (make a booking) and a secondary one (book a call with your team).
A lot of folks who register won’t have come live, so we want to extend that offer to all registrants. This is where follow-up makes a big difference. Send an email follow-up and at least one or two reminders before the promotion ends.
That deadline gives you a reason to email a couple more times. If you can collect phone numbers for SMS, you can send two or three text messages between the workshop end and deadline. Text messages have significantly higher open rates.
If you want to keep it low-tech and you’ve got phone numbers, that’s a great opportunity to call everybody who registered the following week. Make sure they heard about the special offer, clarify it for them, and ask if they have any questions.
Start Now
If you’re not leveraging online workshops and events – simple Zoom meetings where you can deliver value, build intimacy, reach people in a brand new way, and have a reason for a special offer – start doing it now. This is recommended no matter what niche you’re in for multi-day tours, activities, and experiences.
This isn’t only a powerful way to engage with your existing list. A free workshop where the primary benefits are value-focused will help you grow your email list faster than many other strategies. You just have to shift your mindset away from these being sales presentations to delivering genuine value.
When you do that, you’ll find that workshops become one of your most effective tools for converting social media followers into paying guests.



