Tour Guiding: A Fun
Profession That Can Make a Difference

(ARA) - Travel today seems to be the “birthright” of most
Americans and although the economy has changed dramatically,
people are still traveling.
The most recent example was the historic presidential
inauguration of Barack Obama, which brought over 2 million
people to Washington, D.C. with enough motor coaches to stretch
76 miles. These same tour groups not only went to the nation's
capitol but toured neighboring historic sites as well, filling
hotels to capacity, eating at restaurants and shopping for
souvenirs.
This past year brought record numbers of foreign visitors to
the United States. Australians and the Brits top the list of
tourists but tour guides speaking French, Italian, Dutch,
German, Spanish, Chinese, Russian and Farsi were needed to
speak their native tongue to foreign visitors.
Tour guides are usually the first person a tourist meets when
they visit any country. It is not by chance that most countries
train the brightest most articulate people to be their
“ambassadors of goodwill” to visiting tourists. Tour guides
possess inherent traits such as compassion, empathy and a
strong desire to make a difference in the lives of all those
they encounter. They embody the “Yes We Can” attitude that is
turning our country around with their unshakable optimism.
The commanding General of the Allied Forces in World War II,
who later became our nation’s 34th President, Dwight D.
Eisenhower, called for “increased visits by citizens of one
country to another to give each the fullest opportunity to
learn about the people of other nations.” Eisenhower believed
that in the long run people would do more to promote peace and
understanding than our governments. Eisenhower’s remark, “the
passport to peace is travel,” resonates more today than ever
before in our history.
“Travel is the greatest university in the world”, says Ted
Bravos, cofounder of the International Travel Management
Institute (ITMI), a state certified school for training tour
guides since 1976. “It teaches us about cultures, stereotypes,
prejudice and helps us realize that we are but one small part
of a very diverse and connected world.”
Tour guiding can be both personally and financially rewarding.
A certified tour guide earns approximately $200 per day plus
gratuities and expenses.
Freelance tour guiding is a perfect fit for entrepreneurial
individuals, small business owners, people in transition or
people with a flexible lifestyle. Tour guiding blends well with
other vocational interests or pursuits. Schedules can be custom
tailored to coincide with summer vacations, weekends,
child-care hours or even around another job.
If you enjoy showing visiting friends and family around your
own city, your country or around the world, Bravos suggests you
consider doing it professionally. ITMI has been conducting
intensive 15-day training programming for people to become tour
guides and tour directors for over three decades. Students
learn about the tour industry through practical “hands-on”
experience in the field and five days training aboard a touring
motor coach including a two-day overnight fieldtrip where they
actually perform the role of a tour guide and tour director.
The Institute also provides free lifetime placement
assistance.
You can view a free 90 minute on-line Tour Guide/Tour Directing
video by visiting the ITMI Web site at www.itmisf.com, e-mail
travel@itmisf.com or call (800) 442-4864 to learn more about
tour guiding and tour directing.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
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