Audley Travel reviews

3.3

60% would recommend to a friend

(479 total reviews)
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Richard Hodgson

Not enough data to show CEO approval

41% positive business outlook

Audley Travel has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 479 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Audley Travel employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Hotel and travel accommodation industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

479 reviews
2.0
Sep 22, 2016

A sinking ship

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The familiarisation trips really are fantastic and you can see why clients book with Audley again and again as the organisation is usually very efficient and the areas you get to see are truly magnificent. The people you actually work with within Audley are brilliant. It’s such a sociable company and if for whatever reason you’ve had a bad day, there’ll always be someone to join you for a drink after work, either at the office bar (another perk) or at one of the local pubs. There are a couple of really good clubs such as restaurant club and 5-a-side football, to name a couple. The Summer & Christmas parties are always highlights, well arranged and everybody tends to have a great time. As to pay, my experience of the pay scale is not at all positive (more about that later) but I know that if you’re in a popular area that’s selling easily, it can be lucrative. The offices in Witney & London are both really cool. You get free fruit juice, innocent smoothies, milk, fruit and there’s a reasonably-priced tuck shop and/or canteen for those people who walked half-way to the underground and realised that they’d left their sandwiches in the fridge.

Cons

When I joined the company last September, I would only ever focus on the pros of the company because they so outweighed the cons that it wasn’t really worth mentioning anything bad. However, as many people will know, there was a change in “investor” around January 2016, the new company being 3i, the old one being Equistone. Since then, alas, the atmosphere has changed completely. 1. The company is on a serious cost saving mission and the way they’ve chosen to save on costs is to get rid of a substantial chunk of the workforce. The way they go about this is BRUTAL and utterly inconsistent. Most often, people will be called into an interview room where there’ll be a member of the HR team and a Head of Programme who will tell you that they’re terminating your contract and that you’re not allowed to return to your desk – this has become such a joke that it now has a name: “being trapdoor-ed”. There are other mysterious disappearances, sometimes labelled as people being off sick, sometimes people who quite simply appear to be jumping from a sinking ship. All that’s left are people who seem to have their heads down, working longer hours to make up for their increased workloads from all the leavers. Not a good atmosphere. 2. I alluded to this above: there are some areas that are not particularly busy at the moment, possibly due to the virus Zika but possibly other reasons too. People who are struggling to sell these areas will be on a fairly slender salary of around 24 – 26K. If they’re lucky enough to pass their probation period AND stay at the company for 12 months, they’ll top you up to 28.5K. However, it seems as if dozens of people are not being given this uplift. 3. Progression within the company is exceptionally limited. There are very few managers who progress from within. Most come from outside, have no idea about our systems and have to be taught by other members of the team. To me, this really doesn’t make sense. In fact, it’s just stupid. 4. It’s disappointing that the only good reviews from the company on this seem to be from management. The post below labels a ‘con’ as the communication between the three offices. If this were an unbiased review from caring employees, they would raise the issue of the stale atmosphere and fear of being fired over Skype not working, trust me. I could go on in more detail but I’d hate to bore you.

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Audley Travel Response
9y
Upon joining Audley all of our Country Specialists go on a one month familiarisation trip to their destination of specialism in order to taste ‘The Audley Way’ and experience the excursions and properties that our clients may choose to experience themselves. I’m glad that you found your trip to be a rewarding experience, I certainly enjoy hearing about them! Audley is a very sociable company and that is as much the case today as it was when I joined over ten years ago, we strive to create a supportive network of colleagues that not only work together but also enjoy spending time together taking advantage of our various clubs and sports teams. When I joined Audley all those years ago I joined a flourishing travel company and I am proud to say that it remains the case today. Our investors will enable us to push to the next level and in doing that we shall develop and grow our people accordingly. Our investor has also enabled us to offer the ‘Employee Partnership Scheme’ enabling employees with three years service or more to join a unique share scheme and directly benefit from Audley’s success. I can assure you that not a single employee of Audley’s has been terminated as part of a cost saving mission and it concerns me that this is your perception of how we operate. Sometimes an employee will decide the role is not for them, sometimes an employee will not perform at the level required of them, but this is no different to any other comparable company and our thorough recruitment and training programme ensures that these cases are rare. I cannot discuss any single employee case in detail but I can assure you that each employee is treated as an individual and no decision is taken lightly, whether by Audley or the employee. As I mentioned above, a growing company means growing opportunities and we are very happy to be increasing these. As a tour operator a large portion of our positions are within the sales team but there are opportunities for progression into product, management and many other service related roles. Our annual appraisal system enables employees looking for their next challenge to create career development plans alongside their manager and we are great believers in growing talent internally. I was really surprised to read that you felt that not enough managers are promoted from within, as things stand currently, 50% of our managers started with Audley as Country Specialists and promotion from within is considerably higher than comparable organisations. I hope that this has put some of your concerns to rest and thank you for taking the time to review your time with Audley.
3.0
May 17, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great offices & locations in West Oxfordshire, London and Boston. There is a creative social committee who offer some good events (although far too much a focus on alcohol sadly). There is a generous social fund too. Fam trips can be awesome - great locations! If you are a good seller with excellent customer service you will be rewarded with more fam trips. In the Witney and London office there are some wonderful people employed. Internally promoted managers are usually - great quality - more of this needs to happen! Free fruit, smoothies and jellybeans. An honesty tuck shop. An onsite BBQ. Spare wellies for countryside walks. On-site gym and subsidised fitness classes. Bike clubs, running clubs etc. Occasional free breakfasts, afternoon tea, maybe once a quarter - same applies to free bar tabs too. A good focus on charitable donations. Reasonable targets and a clear progression up the sales ladder. An ambitious, growing company. If you want to work in a travel sales role for around 3-4 years max in a fun, large call centre - this is a good choice (if you want a serious career, want to make an impact, exercise creativity, progression... Look elsewhere in the travel industry).

Cons

Since the original owners sold the company to investors the vibe, the focus and the integrity of the company has changed for the worse. The tag-line "tailor-made holidays for the discerning traveller" no longer truly applies. The rule is to sell to whatever to whoever. Therefore "tailor-made" holidays are a real rarity. The specialist creating the itinerary will be using a template package that has been used for hundreds of other travellers, not entirely tailor-made. Managers advise staff to sell anything - this results in trips being sold for as little as 2 nights away, sometimes using hotels that no staff have inspected, selling at rock-bottom prices to "price match" competitors - generally adding no value to the client and completely going against the "values" the company prides itself on. The specialists tell clients that "we pride ourselves on recommendations and repeat business and we don't spend any money on marketing". There are some r&r yes. Largely, the company runs on Google advertising. This results in huge volumes of poor quality enquiries for the sales staff. As the company has grown the quality of the recruits has seriously gone downhill. This is down to poor hiring decisions by managers. This quick increase in staff has a negative effect on the more experienced members of the team. For every new member of staff there is a group training lasting around 2 weeks. Once this period passes the responsibility should lie with the managers - yet the managers are always in meetings. Therefore the new and inexperienced members of staff are left in the hands of their experienced colleagues. Whilst people are happy to help it is always to the detriment of your own time, sales and ultimately your pay. What makes this an even bigger blow is that the new staff receive the best and easiest leads. All managers deny this yet all staff know this to be fact. The best leads - the ones from repeat clients and high spenders always go to the new staff, it is supposed to boost their moral. Of course it does - and good for them - we are all new at one time. Yet, this means the more experienced specialists are suffering with a loss of time and now losing the quality leads. It would be great if managers admitted to this bias. With the expansion of the business the new recruitment has meant new managers in the sales teams. With maybe a couple of exceptions the new wave of external managers brought into the business are poor quality. There is a lack of company knowledge, they can't relate to the sales role and they are inflexible, rigid, micro-managers who are ruining the experience for those who once loved their jobs. Audley would have been better to wait, grow slower and recruit and promote from within. Those managers who have progressed from sales specialist to manager are generally, amazing! The middle management approach is "one size fits all". There is a Big Brother feeling about the whole approach. Your calls are monitored and there is a school-like work book to record your every move. There is no scope for flexibility. There is no individual management - simply one approach and hope for the best. Cringe-worthy and low-grade incentives from RSMs including balloon popping (!). Children's toys used to signal a booking. Makes the office feel like a playground. The pay can be good - if you work incredibly hard. However, there is also a lot of luck involved - if you are given the good leads, if your region is popular that year, if you haven't chosen to book your holiday at the wrong time etc. The fam trips can be a great way to explore the world at the expense of the company. However, they are incredible hard work - no days off. You work everyday for 30 days, weekends and evenings too. The hours are long 9-6 and around 12 weekends a year. There are a lot of holiday embargo dates too. The product could be better - Audley is often behind its competitors in terms of interesting day-trips, quirky hotels - it really should better at this. There is a PDP in place with little flexibility and it generally involves signing a piece of paper and never speaking about it again with your manager. This is a shame - if there is a need for a personal development plan, fine, but act on it, be creative, work hard with the individual. If this is simply a rigid rule for 2 months missed targets in an otherwise impeccable year - give the individual a break. The senior management team are distant and removed from the sales floor - so when ideas like the afore mentioned school book or compulsory call centre-style headset are implemented they literally have no idea of the negative impact it has on staff. Whilst the sales career path is clear and achievable there is little scope to move into other roles and areas of the business. There is no opportunities for sales staff to work reduced hours - hence anyone in sales wanting to return post maternity leave (which is a pitiful pay) has to work full time. Audley Travel is sadly no longer the smaller independently run travel company providing bespoke itineraries for the discerning traveller. This huge company is owned by the investors and is managed by corporate managers with the sole purpose of making as much money as possible.

2.0
Aug 27, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The office and it's surroundings are pretty and my team colleagues were an amazing bunch. There were lots of social events, free jelly beans and fresh fruit.

Cons

The role is advertised as a whole region, yet upon starting they will dictate to you where within that region potentially leaving you with a very small area to sell. This in turn means you could spend months with very little to do as you, along with many other team colleagues selling the same area are fighting for any new lead because the demand for a small region during a monsoon season (for example) is incredibly low. Audley are recruiting on mass without taking into consideration the quiet periods. They create the impression that they are inundated with new leads throughout the year at interview stage but this in reality is not the case. For those with travel experience AVOID Audley, you will be disappointed! They pay a slightly higher salary which seems attractive but this is completely out weighed by their complex commission structure. Very few incentives are offered with just one free flight being offered as a prize at the summer party between 300+ plus employees. Promotion is very structured and is slow. The micro management is unreal. Managers will scrutinise everything and not trust you. Team social events are organised but very few managers attended creating a negative vibe within teams because they feel managers are not making an effort. Many people have relocated to Witney to work for Audley and they take advantage of that. You are expected to live and breathe Audley. **IT HAS BEEN MENTIONED BEFORE THAT THE POSITIVE REVIEWS ON HERE WITH THE ODD EXCEPTION IS WRITTEN BY HEAD OFFICE SO PLEASE DIS-REGARD THESE. THE WAY IN WHICH THEY ARE WRITTEN MAKE THEM QUITE OBVIOUS!**

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Glassdoor has 487 Audley Travel reviews submitted anonymously by Audley Travel employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Audley Travel is right for you.