Part I: The Travel Advisor as Curator
(00:00:27)
Erina Pindar, COO of SmartFlyer, argues that the travel advisor’s core product is less about access but more so curation and personalization: the construction of high-emotional-impact moments that exist outside the algorithm and cannot be replicated through self-booking.
In Part I of this episode, Erina walks through how SmartFlyer conceptualizes experiences designed to generate genuine surprise for HNW clients, why safari travel has seen a measurable resurgence in demand post-pandemic, and what the rise of multi-generational, long-stay itineraries signals about how the most valuable travel clients are beginning to define the category for themselves.
This episode was made possible in partnership with SmartFlyer.
SmartFlyer works with hotel owners and management companies looking to access a HNW traveler base that sits outside standard distribution channels. Reach out to learn more.
[email protected] Learn more about SmartFlyer here
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Part II: The Art of Emotional Storytelling: How Airelles Builds Ultra-Luxury Around History & Generosity
(00:09:54)
Anne-Laure Ollagnon is the CEO of Airelles, the French ultra-luxury hotel group owned by entrepreneur Stéphane Courbit, whose portfolio of historic properties spans France and, as of this month, Italy. She joined the group in 2007 when Courbit acquired the original property in Courchevel, bringing a background in M&A law that shaped her approach to transforming heritage buildings into destination assets.
Airelles follows a full ownership model across almost all of its portfolio: Airelles Courchevel, Airelles Val d’Isère, Château de la Messardière and Pan Deï Palais both in Saint-Tropez, La Bastide de Gordes in Provence, and Palladio Venice on the island of Giudecca.
The one exception is Le Grand Contrôle, the only hotel inside the grounds of the Palace of Versailles, which Airelles operates under a concession with the French government. It is arguably the most precise expression of what the brand stands for: identifying sites of irreplaceable historic significance and restoring them into experiences that could not exist anywhere else. Across all of it, Airelles has grown without third-party management contracts, maintaining direct operational control and brand integrity at every property.
In this episode, Nadine sits down with Anne-Laure Ollagnon to explore what it really takes to build and run an ultra-luxury hotel group rooted in historic properties, emotional storytelling, and a culture of generosity that institutional capital structures are rarely designed to sustain.
Interview Highlights:
The difference between family office capital and institutional capital in ultra-luxury, and how that impacts the guest experience
How Airelles won the Palace of Versailles tender against more than fifteen competing hotel groups
The six-year acquisition and authorization process for Airelles Palladio Venice, and what patience as a development discipline actually costs
Airelles’ philosophy behind owning and operating distinct hotels
What Anne-Laure looks for when evaluating a new asset, and why emotion is the first filter before any underwriting begins
How a high-end hotel under 50 keys justifies its ADR and operates profitably without relying on volume
Anne-Laure’s view on where ultra-luxury is heading
Learn more about Airelles here
Follow Airelles on Instagram here
Follow the latest opening in Venice on Instagram: the Airelles Palladio
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