Why Self-Guided Tours Make Your Business Stronger

If your “self-guided tour” is basically Wikipedia read by a robot, you are not building a product. You are building noise. Mitch Bach sits down with Iain Manley, founder of VoiceMap, to answer the question operators keep asking. If you publish a self-guided audio tour, does it steal bookings from…

If your “self-guided tour” is basically Wikipedia read by a robot, you are not building a product. You are building noise.

Mitch Bach sits down with Iain Manley, founder of VoiceMap, to answer the question operators keep asking. If you publish a self-guided audio tour, does it steal bookings from your guided tours, or does it serve a different buyer?

They get specific on how this works in practice.

  • Who buys self-guided. People who do not like group tours, people on tight schedules, and experienced travelers.
  • When it sells. Often when guided tours are sold out. Same-day and day-before bookings show up in peak season.
  • What a “good” tour is. Start with a highlight, build an interesting route, and write backwards. Personal perspective beats dry facts.
  • How long it takes to make. Roughly a 4,000 to 8,000 word script and a few hours of audio. Most publishers build it over a few weeks.

If you are trying to decide whether to build one, this will save you time. It also might stop you from building the wrong thing.

Key Takeaways

  • Self-guided tours rarely cannibalize guided tours. The buyers are often different. They want flexibility, do not want groups, or cannot match scheduled times.
  • Start with the route, then write backwards. An interesting route and a clear “highlight” moment can carry the whole product.
  • Storytelling wins over encyclopedia mode. Personal perspective, opinions, and a real human voice outperform dry facts.
  • Reliability matters more than features. A clunky GPS experience can create more anger than a simple printed map.
  • There are multiple ways to use self-guided in your business. Upsell at the end of a guided tour with a QR code. Sell when you hit capacity. Offer alternate languages. Use a free tour as marketing.
  • Pricing power is higher than most operators assume. VoiceMap tours often sell at $15 to $30. People are not comparing it to a guided tour price.
  • AI will flood the market with “decent” audio content. That does not mean operators should race to the bottom on price. If you cannot offer a real human voice and point of view, do not bother.
  • Distribution is the hardest part. Building steady demand takes years. OTAs are not a guaranteed channel for self-guided.
  • Production time is more manageable than people assume. A tour is often a 4,000 to 8,000 word script. Audio recording can be done in a few hours. Most people build it in blocks over a few weeks.