
Multi-Day Brand & Growth Strategies from Intrepid Travel
Tourpreneur Tour Business Podcast
Designing Short Breaks for North American Travelers
Christian explains launching four-to-six-day premium trips to suit North American time constraints and drive trial bookings.
When Christian Wolters rejoined Intrepid Travel, his goal wasnât to reinvent the brandâit was to reconnect it to its core. As President for Canada and GM of Marketing for North America, Christian brought a global perspective to a local challenge: how to ensure that Intrepidâs messaging reflected its values, operations, and guest experience.
At the time, Intrepid already had strong credentials as the worldâs largest B Corp-certified travel companyâbut its marketing had become noisy. Christianâs task was to bring back clarity and alignment.
In this episode, he shares how the team rebuilt trust through transparent messaging, simplified their email strategy, and launched bold campaignsâlike âOffsetting is not enoughââthat prioritized substance over slogans.
We explore how brand credibility starts internally, how even small teams can clarify their voice, and why the most effective growth strategy is simply this: make sure what you say matches what you do.
Top 10 Takeaways
Hereâs what stood out from Christianâs approach to brand leadership at Intrepid Travelâand how you can apply the same principles no matter your team size or marketing budget:
Marketing only works when it reflects whatâs real
Before crafting new campaigns, Christian focused on whether the brandâs messaging matched the guest experience. Effective marketing starts with operational alignment, not just creative ideas.
Less content can create more impact
Intrepid eliminated 70% of its email marketing output. By reducing noise and focusing on relevant, high-quality communication, they saw stronger engagement and a better connection with their audience.
Transparency strengthens your position
Instead of promoting carbon offsets as a total solution, Intrepid launched a campaign that openly stated: âOffsetting is not enough.â That honesty sparked deeper trust among travelers who care about sustainability.
Internal stories are the foundation of brand identity
Christian built Intrepidâs external messaging around what employees already cared about and talked about. That made the brand more authentic, more consistent, and easier to rally around.
Clarity attracts the right people
Getting specific about Intrepidâs values helped bring in better-fit travelers, partners, and employees. When you know what you stand for, the right people find youâand the wrong ones self-select out.
Show up with your real voice, not someone elseâs
Christian encouraged small operators to speak in their own words. You donât need slick campaigns to earn trustâjust a clear point of view and consistency in how you show up.
Sustainability starts with how you operate
For Intrepid, being a responsible travel company isnât just a messageâitâs built into how trips are run, how suppliers are chosen, and how decisions are made. Marketing simply tells that story.
Internal alignment makes external messaging stronger
Christian made sure every team member could explain the brandâs purpose and values. When your team understands the story, they can embody it and share it more naturally with guests.
Rebrands can help clarifyânot just refreshâyour identity
Intrepidâs rebrand wasnât just about visuals. It was about focusing the companyâs message and voice to reflect its mission more clearly and consistently across all channels.
Small teams can apply the same approach
Even without big budgets or a full marketing department, operators can build stronger brands by focusing on alignment, simplifying their message, and staying grounded in purpose.


