TL;DR: The operators who sell out summer aren't the ones with the best tours — they're the ones who market smartly in spring. Four specific marketing moves between now and Memorial Day can meaningfully shift your booking volume for June through August.
Dropping prices in July to fill empty slots feels desperate — because it is. Early-bird pricing in spring feels like a reward.
The psychology is different. A discount says "we need butts in seats." An early-bird offer says "plan ahead and we'll take care of you." Same margin impact, completely different guest perception.
A few ways to structure this well:
The key is framing. You're not running a sale. You're rewarding guests who plan ahead. That distinction matters for your brand and your margins.
Social media gets the attention, but email drives the bookings. Operators who built even a modest email list from last summer's guests are sitting on their most reliable marketing channel right now.
Spring is the time to activate it.
A simple three-email sequence between April and late May can do more for your summer calendar than a month of Instagram posts:
Past guests already trust you. They've already had the experience. Reaching them costs almost nothing compared to acquiring a brand-new customer through paid ads.
If you don't have an email list yet, start building one now. Add a simple opt-in to your post-booking confirmation and your waiver flow. By next spring, you'll have a list worth activating.
Most operators think of local partnerships as a nice-to-have — a stack of brochures at a hotel front desk collecting dust. That's not a partnership. That's wallpaper.
Real partnerships create repeatable booking volume. And spring is when you set them up.
Think about who already has your ideal guests' attention:
Approach these partners with something concrete. Not "send people our way" — that's vague and easy to forget. Instead, offer a dedicated booking link so you can track referrals. Set up a simple commission or reciprocal referral arrangement. Give them a one-page guide to your experiences so their staff can actually describe what you offer.
The operators who build two or three strong local partnerships in April and May often find those relationships drive consistent bookings all summer — and into the following year.
Between April and June, potential guests are actively researching summer plans. What they find about your business during that research window determines whether they book with you or scroll past.
Three specific updates worth making right now:
Your Google Business Profile. Upload fresh photos — ideally from last season's best moments. Update your hours for summer 2026. Post a Google update about what's coming this season. Many operators find that an active, current profile generates significantly more clicks than one that hasn't been touched since last fall.
Your booking page. Open up your summer availability as early as possible. If guests land on your site in April and can't book anything past May, you've lost them. Make sure your calendar reflects your full summer schedule, and that the booking process works smoothly on mobile. The Small Business Administration's digital presence resources offer practical guidance on keeping your online tools current and secure.
Your reviews. If you haven't responded to last season's reviews — positive and negative — do it now. Potential guests read responses as much as they read the reviews themselves. A thoughtful reply to a three-star review often builds more trust than a five-star rating with no operator response.
None of these updates require a big budget. They require attention. And the operators who give their online presence that attention in spring are the ones guests find — and book — when summer planning kicks into high gear.
The busiest summer operators didn't get lucky. They spent April and May doing the unglamorous work: sending emails, updating profiles, building local relationships, and giving early-booking guests a reason to commit. Every hour you invest now compounds once peak season hits and you're too busy running tours to think about marketing.
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