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Phillip Lopez

The Corliss Group Voyage Hong Kong: Where to Drink, Shop and Date, According to Deutsch... - 2 views

What’s the world’s most expensive city for a pint of beer? How about a pair of jeans? Or a date?   Sadly for French beer quaffers, Swiss fashionistas, and romantically-inclined Bri...

The Corliss Group Voyage Hong Kong Where to Drink Shop and Date According Deutsche Bank

started by Phillip Lopez on 15 May 14 no follow-up yet
Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group Voyage Hong Kong | The Tripologist: What are the Best Travel Apps? - 1 views

I AM TRAVELLING WITH MY HUSBAND AND TWO YOUNG GIRLS TO GUANGZHOU, LONDON, MANCHESTER AND BERLIN. THERE ARE SO MANY APPS FOR TRAVEL I FEEL OVERWHELMED. IN YOUR OPINION, WHAT IS THE BEST APP THAT IS ...

Corliss Group Voyage Hong Kong Tripologist: What are the best travel apps?

started by Alexander Waggoner on 14 May 14 no follow-up yet
Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group Travelers: Når du reiser i blir USA et mareritt - 0 views

På en gitt dag gjennomsnitt rundt 2200 australiere satt ut for å gjøre forretninger eller ferie i Amerika. Til enhver tid er det omtrent 30.000 kortsiktige australske besø...

Corliss Group Travelers When travelling in the US becomes a nightmare

started by Alexander Waggoner on 18 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group Travel, Hong Kong: 10 Things to Do - 1 views

Introduction I was born and have lived most of my life in Hong Kong, and whenever I travel to the other two members of the Nylonkong triumvirate I see immediate connections. But if you really want...

The Corliss Group Travel Hong Kong 10 Things to Do

started by Alexander Waggoner on 28 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Abigail Wunderlich

Corliss Travel, Hong Kong: 10 Things to Do - 1 views

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Corliss Travel Hong Kong: 10 Things to Do

started by Abigail Wunderlich on 07 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Alexander Waggoner

13 Travel tips with Corliss Group for finding low airfares - 1 views

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    No question about it, airfares on some routes are higher than they were four or five years ago, although Airfare watchdog airfare searchers frequently find hundreds of fares crisscrossing the country for $250 or less round-trip. And even though fares seem higher, let's not forget that, adjusted for inflation; most fares are actually lower than they were 10 or 20 years ago. That said, here's my best advices for making your airfare dollars go further. 1. There's no "magic" day or lead time to buy the best airfare. 2. So search often, over a long lead time, and pounce when there's a deal! 3. Get airfare alerts by e-mail 4. Sign up for the airlines ' e-mail feeds and frequent flier programs 5. Use Twitter 6. Be a flexible travel date flier 7. Search airline sites individually, but online travel agencies are still useful. 8. Use Priceline for last-minute trips 9. Use consolidators, but beware of the restrictions 10. Consider the extra fees before you buy 11. Combine two separate fares rather than buying one fare 12. Use alternate airports creatively 13. Buy tickets on an airline that will refund the difference if a fare goes down Go Here: http://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/columnist/hobica/2014/04/01/how-to-find-airfare-deal/7122673/ Extra resources: http://answers.oreilly.com/topic/21800-the-corliss-group-world-travelers-on-surviving-hong-kongs-wildest-sporting-event-of-the-year/ http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x1dfsns_the-corliss-group-luxury-travel-agency-barcelona-tourist-guide-the-easy-way-to-plan-your-trip_travel
Shawn Cedric Marley

Corliss Group Travel: How to Make a Romantic Ski Vacation Work When One Person is a Beg... - 1 views

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    ASPEN, Colo. - This winter I put my relationship to the ultimate test: a romantic ski vacation. Many couples ski together, but my fiancee Sheri Askinazi is just learning while I've been skiing for more than two decades. We'd done group ski trips, but never skied alone. To make this trip work, we needed some advance planning and clear expectations. I wanted to ski with Sheri but also desired time to speed down the harder trails. We chose four days at Aspen/Snowmass in Colorado because it offered a little bit for each of us. "I am a little nervous about the trip. It's a lot of time skiing," Sheri confessed to me a month before we left. When I mentioned that I had found ski buddies for a day, she asked: "A whole day?" The conversation continued at dinner a few nights later. One of our friends flat-out said: "He has to ski with you. That's it." We chatted through our desires and made a plan. Sheri would take two days of lessons. The first was at Snowmass. Elk Camp Meadows, a new beginner's area there, is fenced off from the rest of the resort so experts don't race through on their way to the lift. She quickly advanced to other parts of the mountain. I took a refresher course - it's never too late to learn something new - and we met up for lunch. The next day, she took a lesson at nearby Buttermilk Mountain. It's geared toward beginners but has some great intermediate trails that she mastered by the end of the day. I met up with some friends and got my adrenaline fix on the harder Aspen Mountain. Lessons were key - it was much better for Sheri to get tips from a professional instead of me. "Taking feedback from someone you love can be the hardest thing. You start to personalize it," says Katie Ertl, who oversees the ski and snowboard schools at the four mountains of Aspen/Snowmass. (Warning: Skiing isn't cheap. If purchased a week in advance, a four-day lift ticket costs $396. Adult group lessons start at $139; full-day private lessons start at $660.)
Abigail Wunderlich

Corliss Travel Agenda - 1 views

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corliss Travel Agenda

started by Abigail Wunderlich on 04 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group Travelers Tips: Holidays in Croatia - 1 views

Travel tips: holidays in Croatia and this week's best breaks at home and away Source: http://www.theguardian.com/travel/2014/mar/09/travel-tips-croatia-cornwall-sardinia Baroque churches and cobb...

The Corliss Group Travelers Travel tips: holidays in Croatia and this week's best breaks at home away

started by Alexander Waggoner on 12 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Lavinia Klum

The Corliss Group Voyage Summer Travel Tips - 1 views

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    1. Start out with a checklist. 2. Identify your suitcase. 3. Create separate travel bags. 4. Designate a travel packing area a week prior to your flight. 5. Purchase magazines at the airport. 6. Bring an extra set of reading glasses, cell charger, and ear buds. 7. Don't get caught without important phone numbers. 8. The name on the reservation and identification should match exactly 9. For special requests, alert the airline in advance. 10. Fly nonstop whenever possible. See here: Summer Travel Tips Bonuses: The Corliss Group Voyage The Corliss Group Luxury Travel Agency
Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group World Travelers on Luxury cruise and biking - 2 views

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    I fancy myself a backpack-carrying, adventure-seeking traveler, at home in hostels and on hiking trails. But there I was, on a luxury cruise ship, sipping wine with silver-haired foxes, fox-trotting with male escorts in the ballroom, and escorting myself on a tapas-like tour around Europe, sampling cities for a day via ship, bus, foot and bike. It was the biking aspect that had led to my unlikely sojourn on the ship, Crystal Cruises ' Serenity. Months before, my cyclist-enthusiast ears perked up when I heard about the cruise, with biking-based itineraries in several port cities. The regimented itinerary of a cruise with its scheduled ports of call, and the idea of spending that much time on a ship, wasn't all that appealing to me, but the prospect of biking around a few different European cities was. So I packed my sneakers, some cute bike shorts and an open mind. Embarking in Dover, England, I was sure I was the only passenger hauling a backpack on board when the butler assigned to my cabin floor did a double-take at the sight of my luggage. But after a restful sleep, rocked by the waves of the Atlantic and the gentle hum of the ship's engine, thoughts of hostels were but a distant memory. On the first of my 10-day adventure hitting seven cities in four countries, my cousin and fellow cruiser Olivia Female, I, and a few other cyclists biked around Guernsey, one of the Channel Islands, on cruisers we were given. We traversed the quaint, compact island, two-wheeling by fawn-hued cows, primary-colored fishing boats and World War II bunkers.
Vivian Anderson

The Corliss Group Review: TripAdvisor challenge the Two Providers of Online Travel Serv... - 1 views

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    "BREAKFAST is nasty, the rooms are nasty." So complained a reviewer of an Oregon guesthouse earlier this year. There is nothing unusual in that: all hotels must deal with the odd disgruntled guest. This critique, though, appeared on TripAdvisor, a travel-review website. When the correspondent went on to document drunken housekeepers and licentious receptionists, the owners sued him. It was more than a point of pride. What customers say on TripAdvisor can make or break hotels. Around 260m people visit the site each month to read some of the 125m reviews. The firm makes money by displaying prices from online travel-agents (OTAs) alongside its reviews, and then charging those agents each time a customer clicks through. It is such a good example of a network effect that it is the subject of a Harvard Business School (HBS) case study. The more users post reviews, the more useful the site is to those about to book a holiday. This makes it more important to hotels and travel agents, who offer better deals. This results in more traffic-and more reviews-closing the virtuous circle. Last year TripAdvisor reported revenue of $944.7m. Because users post reviews free of charge, in 2012, Jeffrey Bussgang, an HBS lecturer, calculated that its gross margin was an astounding 98%. For these reasons, some think TripAdvisor may be able to take on the "big two" OTAs, Expedia (from which TripAdvisor was spun off in 2011) and Priceline, which on August 6th bought up to 10% of Ctrip, a large travel website in China. These firms sell flights and hotel rooms directly, rather than pass booking requests on to others, as TripAdvisor does. But, says Blake Harper of Wunderlich Securities, a stockbroker, the two ways of doing business are converging.
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