How to Use AI to Write Tour Descriptions That Double Your Sales
This is part four of our series on using AI in your tour business. Read part one here or watch the whole series here.
Most tour operators excel at creating unforgettable experiences. We know how to design the perfect route, find hidden gems, tell stories that bring places to life. But when it comes to writing about those experiences for our sales pages? That’s a different challenge entirely.
If you’ve ever stared at a blank screen trying to describe your tour, you’re not alone. Most of us don’t have backgrounds in copywriting or e-commerce. We didn’t necessarily grow up with careers in sales. And that’s exactly why AI represents such a massive opportunity right now.
The world’s copywriting expertise has been ingested and digested by large language models. The question is: how do you make that expertise work for you?
The Context Problem
Here’s what trips up most tour operators when they first try using AI for copywriting: they use generic prompts and get generic results.
Let’s say you run a street food tour in Vietnam. You ask AI to “write a bold promise for this food tour.” What you get back is something like “experience delicious local cuisine.” That’s not a promise. That’s a yawn.
But if you provide the right context—your business profile, your ideal target guest avatar, the specific desires and fears they have—and use a more specific framework, everything changes.
The same request, properly contextualized, might give you: “Taste the street food locals love without the fear of food poisoning, even if you’re not normally an adventurous eater.”
See the difference? One is generic. The other addresses exact desires, exact fears, and exact objections that your American visitor might have on that Vietnamese street food tour.
That’s not luck. That’s giving AI the right framework and the right context.
The Two Things You Need Before You Start
Before you can write effective sales copy with AI, you need two foundational documents:
First, your business profile. This is a 17 to 20 page document that gives your AI tool the context it needs about your business—your website content, your internal documents, what makes you different, your approach to guiding.
Second, your ideal target guest avatar. Every single one of your sales pages should focus on one ideal target guest. That’s how you get effective copy. That’s how these prompts deliver words that turn browsers into bookers.
If you have more than one ideal target guest, you might need different landing pages. A trolley tour marketed to international travelers needs different copy than the same tour marketed to locals for a holiday event. A tour sold to bachelorette groups highlights different aspects than the same tour sold to families.
If you try to upload two or three different customer avatars, these prompts simply won’t work. The copy will come out muddled and generic.
The 12 Essential Elements of an Irresistible Tour Description
Over the years, we’ve done thousands of workshops and website reviews. We’ve identified 12 essential elements that make tour descriptions work. The AI prompts we use address every single one of these elements.
Let me show you what this looks like in practice.
Magic Moments: Transporting Your Readers
Too many tour descriptions are dry and logistical. They’re bullet points—a hit list of the things you’ll see, the things you’ll do.
A great copywriter knows you need to get into the first-person perspective. You need to let people future-pace, which means allowing them to envision what the tour is going to be like. You want to describe what life is like now that they’ve bought your product, now that they’re in that experience.
Here’s a prompt that works: “I would like you to create a one paragraph tour description that describes some of the memorable moments guests will have on the tour. Use sensory words to describe what people will see, taste, smell, feel and touch during this tour. Also describe some of the positive emotions guests may feel during these experiences.”
Look at how Old San Juan Walk and Taste Food Tour used this approach: “As you meander along the cobblestone streets and sun-drenched plazas, your passionate local guide brings centuries of history to life. Sip rich Puerto Rican coffee made with love, crunch into a just-fried empanada from a family-run cocina. Sample traditional pork dishes, handcrafted chocolates, and, yes, perfectly poured piña coladas in the city where they were born.”
That’s copy that gives you chills. They could have started with “We’re going to meet here, then go here, and this hotel has a great view.” Instead, they transported you using first-person senses and emotions.
Here’s another example from a Provence to French Riviera tour: “Beauty may be what first brought pleasure seekers to this rocky shore, but southern France is something you indulge in with all your senses—the song of cicadas, the scent of lavender farms, the beating sun of the trail broken by a plunge into a sea cove, or maybe that first juicy bite of a cool apricot. Wild Provence, the chic Riviera—from beginning to end, it’s a feast.”
Features and Benefits That Actually Scan
While it might be tempting to write long paragraphs about all the amazing things your guests will see and do, it creates too much work for people to read. Especially on mobile devices.
How do you create punchy one-liners that break up text and communicate value quickly?
Here’s the prompt: “I need 10 features and connected benefits for our tour sales page. Each feature should be bolded in three to five words in length. The connected benefit should be two sentences in length, and use ‘you’ and ‘your’ language to draw in our ideal target guest.”
Are you going to use all 10? No way. But you want lots to choose from.
Look at how this worked for the same Old San Juan tour:
Eat Your Way Through History In just three hours, you’ll explore San Juan’s most iconic flavors, from street food classics to hidden culinary gems. Every stop reveals a piece of Puerto Rico’s soul.
Guides Who Feel Like Old Friends Our team is warm, knowledgeable, and passionate about Puerto Rican culture. Expect good stories, big laughs, and the kind of genuine hospitality that feels like family.
Support Local With Every Bite From women-owned eateries to small-scale artisans, your tour directly supports local makers, chefs, and communities who keep Puerto Rico deliciously authentic.
Even if someone just skims, they get the value. And notice how that last one about supporting local businesses—that surfaced because of the context provided about the ideal target guest. It’s important to them. It may not be important to everyone, but it’s important to the people this tour is trying to reach.
Pattern Recognition: AI’s Superpower
AI is really good at pattern recognition. It’s really good at taking something and modeling or emulating it.
If you see tour copy you absolutely love—whether it’s from a competitor, an ad, or a brochure—you can ask AI to model it for your own tour. You can screenshot it, upload it, and ask AI to recreate that style and approach for your experience.
But you’re only going to succeed if you provide that context about who you are, your products, and your ideal target guests.
Translation: The Overlooked Opportunity
AI translation abilities across multiple languages, with accurate cultural context and great linguistic sense, are now remarkably good. And they’re only getting better.
If you’ve been trying to translate your tours into other languages, or you’ve considered it but found it expensive or difficult, you now have an opportunity. You can take these sales pages and translate them into one other language, or dozens of other languages.
Why This Matters for Your Bottom Line
Your sales pages are one of the biggest levers in your business, especially if you’re hoping to drive more direct bookings or get better return on your ad spend.
If you can increase your conversion rate—meaning increase the number of people who take a step forward with you versus the total number of visitors—that will have a massive impact across your tour and activity business.
And if you bring these same best practices to your OTA listings, you can stand out in crowded marketplaces. You can better articulate what makes you different, what makes you better, or why your approach is different from others that might appear similar at first glance.
This is an incredibly good use of your time.
Where to Get the Prompts
All of these prompts are available in the Tour Business AI Lab, a free community for tour and activity operators who are interested in AI, looking for best practices and proven prompts, and willing to share wins and learnings with fellow operators.
Head over to guestfocus.com/ai to join the private Facebook group and WhatsApp community, where we host live events and create content specifically for tour operators using AI to save time and drive revenue.



