This
is what you become
instantly!
An independent Contractor
For Bobbie Sylvester, every day is Independence Day. Sylvester sets her
own work hours at Red Carpet Travel in Midvale, Utah. She markets her services
as she likes, pursues the referrals she deems worthwhile, sells her own
choice of products and wastes no times with walk-ins. Her agency owner
offers encouragement, support and no interference.
The trade off, from the agency point of view: Sylvester is paid only by
commission. "If I don’t crank I don’t get a payday" The
setup should sound familiar. Independent contractors have been in the business
for years. Sylvester has worked this way since 1986. Suddenly, though,
she has company – lots of it. Analysts say the new, commission-capped
economy of travel distribution network has sparked nothing less than a
wholesale shift to independent agents.
"Independent contractors are the way to go. You don’t pay them
unless they produce, and that concept has become more important than ever
in our industry," says consultant John Dalton, of Sewickley, PA. "I'm
running into an awful lot of owners who are looking at getting their people
from outside. It’s getting bigger and bigger, and it will continue
to grow."
To be sure, there is one disadvantage for owners" an agency simply
is worth less in a sale if a significant portion of its business is controlled
by independents. "If you're looking at selling and you have independents,
it is a drawback," agrees Dalton. The counter argument: "if you’re
not looking at selling, it’s a wonderful source of income.
Many owners clearly agree. An ASTA survey last summer found that nearly
a third of the agents in ASTA-affiliated agencies were independent or outside
contractors. "It's an obvious trend that’s taking place, one
that’s even required ASTA to initiate a new membership category for
outside sales agents," says Steve Loucks, ASTA’s public relations
director. In the first year, 550 independents signed up.
There has been even bigger growth at outside sales support network, a
trade group in Jupiter, FL, for independent agents. Founded in late 1990,
OSSN had 2,400 members by 1994 – and 4,200 by the end of 1995. "The
industry is starting to wake up to the fact that having a commissioned
outside sales source is a more profitable way to go," says OSSN’s
president, Gary Fee. "There's really going to be a tidal wave in ’96.
Not all independents are serious. Fee estimates that as many as 75 percent
are either moonlighting part-time or just angling for perks. But that still
leaves plenty of full-time, committed, independent sellers of travel – including,
says Sylvester, many former agency owners who have grown tired of the headaches
of running their own shop.
As striking as it is, the move toward independents should not come as
a surprise. Experts in business dynamics say this kind of structural shift
is the necessary reaction of an industry under pressure. In fact, it is
part of a larger trend – known as "outsourcing" – that
has been reshaping the face of American business in the last decade.
"We’re in the middle of the most profound restructuring of
business organizations since the 1920’s and ‘30’s, when
the model of the big integrated industry was created," says Mike Corbett,
director of the outsourcing institute, and New York-based information clearing
house and referral network. Financial pressure forces all of us to rethink
what we are doing. And when they look at it, organizations are finding
that trying to do everything within the company is not the most efficient
use of their resources.
At the corporate level, that leads to task swapping on a grand scale.
In a $10 billion deal, electronic data systems took over management of
Xerox's computer systems worldwide. Xerox, in turn, took over document
management services for EDS. At a lower level, hiring contractors is a
natural extension of that, says Corbett.
For owners, one obvious benefit is cost. Independents customarily do not
receive fringe benefits, and they pay their own expenses. With owners looking
for ways to cut down on the bricks and mortar, this certainly is an area
that’s ripe for expansion says ASTA. The agency is not paying overhead
for that person – no payroll tax, no social security, not necessarily
even health benefits.
There are other advantages for agency owners. Commission-reliant independents
are highly motivated to sell – often more than staff agents who are
paid regardless of production. And independents either bring in their own
stable of clients or drum up entirely new businesses – in either
case, expanding the agency’s customer base. Let’s face it,
a lot of in-house agents aren’t on the phone making calls to identify
prospects, says John Dalton. "independent contractors make a career
of doing that. They drive business to the agency, instead of the owner
driving business to the agents. They are aggressive. They are drumming
up business. These people are sellers.
With in-house agents, "If the phone isn’t ringing, you still
have to pay for that body sitting there," says Bobbie Sylvester, herself
a former agency owner and current ASTA national director. "The compensation
of an independent contractor only takes place at the point of sale. That
is a compelling force to an agency owner who is looking at their buttom
line. Because if we don’t sell, there no outlay."
In fact, using contractors subtly encourages owners to refocus their attention
on productivity. "In outsourcing it’s called the 'green-dollar
effect,' says Mike Corbett." "There is a change in management’s
attention when it is green dollars they are spending, instead of internal
budget money. The relationship becomes much more results-oriented."
FAMILY FUN CRUISES & TOURS WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1978 AND IS AN IATAN ENDORSED TRAVEL AGENCY, A MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF TRAVEL AGENTS, A VACATION.COM MEMBER AGENCY, A MEMBER OF THE CRUISE LINES INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION, A MEMBER OF THE OUTSIDE SALES SUPPORT NETWORK AND A MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATION OF RETAIL TRAVEL AGENTS
