Persistency Pays Off
Meet Chris McGinnis
Chris McGinnis is a man who realizes that to get the
career you want, you have to do two things well: package
yourself and be persistent.
That’s the pattern of McGinnis’s varied resume as a
corporate executive, television personality, author and
consultant. Currently, San Francisco-based McGinnis is
editor of Expedia Travel TrendWatch, a public speaker and
columnist.
Like many who ended up in travel, McGinnis started off on
a very different path. A native of Atlanta, he studied
international business at the University of Colorado; he
then attended the American Graduate School of International
Management (known as “Thunderbird”) in Phoenix because, said
Chris, “I thought I’d do diplomacy or international
business.”
While he had hoped to work for an airline or hotel, said
McGinnis, “I never found my way into one of those so went to
work for Sea-Land, the shipping company. They sent me to
Puerto Rico where I learned Spanish and about Spanish
cultures; I was there for nine months and fell in love with
the place.”
But Sea-Land was a global company and transferred
McGinnis to New York, which he did not take to. He left the
company and “moved myself back to Puerto Rico.” There he
ended up getting a job with a management consulting company,
thus learning that business.
As a consultant, said McGinnis, “I would be flying out of
the island every Sunday and come home on Friday --. I was
flying all the time. This was the mid-1980’s and frequent
flyer programs were just getting started; business travel
was not yet its own category and there were no business
travel experts.
“I became an expert on airline routing; I would read the
Official Airline Guide (a phonebook-sized tome) before I
went to sleep, I became the expert on travel at my company.”
In his actual job, said McGinnis, “I did a lot of
training and came up with a training program on how
employees could become better business travelers. Nobody was
doing that. We thought people were quitting our company
because they hated to travel so much.“
McGinnis handled many questions about frequent flyer
programs and offered tips about things like “getting
upgraded by charming the gate agent at the airport.”
With that experience, McGinnis was sent on a big business
trip – to Australia, where he worked consulting at a copper
mine for a year.
While the pay was significant, says McGinnis, “I was
getting tired of the consulting industry. All the money I
made in Australia allowed me to go back to Atlanta and start
my own business.”
That business was the Travel Skills Group. McGinnis
explains, “I took the idea that I had at our company and
sold it to other companies. They would let me come in and
teach people how to travel; all of a sudden, these young
people would be in careers demanding travel and they had to
learn how to make the most of it.”
McGinniss’ pitch resonated with many companies and, as he
says, “Even then I was good at public relations. I got
written up in USA Today, the Wall Street Journal and others.
I started getting calls from media asking me to comment on
business travel.”
After getting many calls from the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, McGinnis decided it would be a good
idea to work there. “I talked my way into a doing a column
for them; it was the first travel column in a business
section,” said McGinnis; “only USA Today was covering
business travel at that point.”
McGinnis ended up writing that column for ten years and
it became extremely popular in Atlanta. Also, it got
McGinnis into travel writing and away from consulting and
training. “I found I really loved it,” says McGinnis; “I
started writing a column for Entrepreneur Magazine and
special sections for Fortune.
“The whole media thing blossomed,” says McGinnis; “I then
started pounding on CNN’s door and had to push really hard.
It had been the same at the newspaper because I had no
journalism credentials.”
But CNN, which was regularly calling McGinnis because of
his column, finally hired him in 1995 as a business travel
consultant. He recalls, “I did a business travel minute
sponsored by American Airlines; I did that for four years
and it was my entrée into CNN.”
McGinnis left CNN and, from 1998-2000, he did similar
work for the Weather Channel. After September 11, CNN hired
him back as a travel consultant, doing pieces every day. “It
was grueling,” he said, “and I did that for a year until
travel got back to normal. They switched me back to an
occasional piece and then finally I left in 2004.”
It was time for another big change. Says McGinnis, “I had
always wanted to live out west. I started thinking of all
the abilities I had developed from covering travel and being
on TV and thought I should be able to take this package and
bring it to somebody.Ӊ۬
McGinnis brought that package of skills to no less a
company than Expedia, which hired him to be editor of
Expedia Travel TrendWatch, a new quarterly report on
consumer travel trends, insight and tips, as well as to be a
public voice for the online travel company.
Through all these changes, says McGinnis, “I always
considered myself an entrepreneur. These things don’t just
happen. You have to have staying power and keep going back
to plead your case. Once they realize you’re not a flash in
the pan and you know what you’re talking about, you have a
good shot.”
A big boost for McGinnis, he says, is having written two
books: the first “202 Tips Even the Best Business Traveler
Might Not Know” and the second “The Unofficial Business
Traveler Pocket Guide.” He says, “Once you can say you’re an
author it puts you on a pedestal. I’m able to go to somebody
have a signed copy of the books (which, combined sold more
than 50,000 copies.)
None of his positions was easy to get, says McGinnis,
sometimes taking a year of trying -- even writing sample
articles or making other efforts to prove his worth.
Aside from Expedia, says McGinnis, he also does
marketplace research for a bank, helping analysts make
decisions on the financial positions of travel-related
companies.
He has maintained some of his earlier businesses. He
maintains the Travelskills.com site and has a newsletter
called The Ticket that carries advertising.
McGinnis is happy with his choice of living in San
Francisco, saying, “It’s a wonderful place to live – and
from a travel point of view, there are a lot of airlines, a
cool airport and a vibrant hotel scene.”
In the end, says McGinnis, he is living where he wants
and doing something he loves because, “I saw opportunities
and took them. You have to see things and get there before
everybody else does.”
Top