You’d think marrying a Texan and watching hours of unofficial documentaries about Beyoncé, the queen of Houston, would serve me well for a move to the Lone Star State. Alas, little could prepare me for what was to come.
25.08.2023 - 13:37 / skift.com / Rafat Ali
This week the Skift team is in Iceland for our annual retreat. In 2023, 11 years into our existence, this is coming a full circle in so many ways for this company, which has now become amongst the most influential forces in global travel industry.
The last time the Skift team was in Iceland was also the first year we started doing our annual retreats: in 2014. Back then we were less than two years into our journey, 10 of us that could barely afford it, stayed in hostels, did it all on the cheap and set the template for us for these annual retreats that have become a seminal part of our culture of living the brand we espouse. Iceland back then was at the convergence of so many travel megatrends we were covering on Skift, from growing clout of Chinese travelers, to how social media was changing how we experienced destinations, to the rise of what was then called the “sharing economy,” from the rise of deeper experiential travel to the effect of climate change on tourism and vice versa.
Now as a team of 75 of us spread around the globe, we are gathering in Iceland this week; to immerse ourselves in this tiny wind-swept volcanic island, into the world of travel in a post-pandemic, post-overtourism world, to spend time with Skift colleagues and get to know each other beyond the tiny squares in Zoom screens. We’ll discuss what we are working on at Skift in the next few months and the year ahead, take in all the fresh air and purest fresh water we would ever taste, and of course at the end of all of our activities, wash out our tired bones in the thermal pools!
In many ways this trip is a huge breathing out for our company, which went through near-death in Covid times. And now in 2023, where the travel continues to be in great shape despite some economic headwinds, Skift is thriving as a fast-growing and solidly profitable global company, where every optionality as a business lies ahead of us.
Iceland is also a place that we have covered closely as a tourism success story from the beginning of Skift, so much so that when we did a big deep dive into the boom town island in 2016, we also inadvertently coined the term “overtourism” to describe the challenges of managing the crush of tourists descending there. And thus was born a trail of stories and analysis around the global boom in travel, the ensuing backlash from locals, the collision of climate change and overtourism, and a spotlight of travel’s not-so-salubrious part in this mix.
Now in 2023, Iceland’s visitation numbers of 2.3 million tourists are expected to be almost back to 2019 numbers (2.6 million) though still less than the peak of 2017 at 3.1 million visitors. The destination has a lot more infrastructure to deal with the increased numbers, the
You’d think marrying a Texan and watching hours of unofficial documentaries about Beyoncé, the queen of Houston, would serve me well for a move to the Lone Star State. Alas, little could prepare me for what was to come.
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