Often I get people asking me if they can join me in what I
am doing, if I need someone to lead trips along with me.
Often I wonder, if I have to scale and get bigger, I might
need to hire a few people to lead parallel trips. Someone to lead a trip to
Bhutan when I am doing Ladakh, someone to do Vietnam if I am doing Europe.
But there is so much that goes into being a good trip leader
that no job CV will ever cover. What you see on Facebook, the pictures, they hardly tell the complete story. And this post is just about that, about the
kind of person that would make for a worthy trip leader. Not just about him
knowing which hotels to book, and what all to show people in that city or
country, but a lot more than that.
1)
A good trip leader needs to be a people’s
person: If you aren’t, this job is not
for you at all. In every trip of mine, there are 12-16 people and it is but
obvious that they will have different personalities. There will always be some
people who are extroverts and will mingle immediately and be absolutely
comfortable. And there will always be people who are quieter, who will take
their time to open up. It is important that a trip leader recognize different
personalities, and ideally should not take more than a day to do so. Being
perceptive is the key here.
It is important to identify the ones who are more reserved.
He will know soon if they are comfortable in their silences, or if they find it
hard to be part of conversations with strangers. And subtly he will, in his own
way, tease them, or bring them to notice, and include them in conversations
with the group, especially if they have come all by themselves for the trip and
not with their friends. Making everyone comfortable is the first priority once
a trip starts.
2) Forging friendships: They say “don’t mix business with pleasure”.
Well, I never much cared for management maxims. Making friends is what I have
done and what I will do, in life, in trips, everywhere. But then on the trips there
will always be people you find easier to become friends with than with some
others. It is basic human nature. But as a trip leader it becomes my
responsibility to talk to everyone, and to create situations in which everyone
finds new friends.
When you are with friends, they will help you out unconditionally. I feel
I am extremely lucky that I have had so many people help me out in everything. In our
last trip to Bhutan, this guy Sagoo would be the first to climb onto the bus’
roof and pass down the luggage. Then I remember way back on my first trip, everyone was at a Karaoke bar
and having fun and realizing they did not serve any food, I stepped out at ten
in the night to find a restaurant that had not shut. Varun and Antara, followed me even without me asking and together we roamed around for twenty minutes before finding one place that was open and sitting there together for
half an hour while the food was being made and later packed. They needn’t have
sat there with me, and could have gone and had their fun at the bar but they did because we are friends.
3)
A trip leader needs to be a little mad, he
should be a character. The group must look up to him for inspiration. We live
in a world which has conditioned us so much, especially here in India. We have
always learned to play it safe. I find it amazing that a lot of people will just
look at a waterfall and not bound towards it the moment they see it. I find it
perplexing that if you see a steep hillock, your not thinking of finding a way to get on top of that bloody rock. If
people ask me why must we get wet in a waterfall or risk banging our knee while
climbing, my answer always is “Because when else will you do it” . We can’t
always be playing safe, for crying out loud.
The world loves characters. And if you are a trip leader running up a
mountain or stopping the bus and jumping out because you saw a river or a yak
or a meadow you wanted to run in, chances are your group will follow you – to
laugh at you, or to run with you, to liberate themselves or to just be part of
that entire infectiousness.
And that, my friend, is how your trip is separated from most others.
4)
You must know how much to lead, and how much to
let go: Everyone else, besides you is on
holiday. But they will want to do their own thing and it is right for them to
want to do so. You need to know when to lead from the front, and when from the
back, and most importantly when to just give everyone their space. You can’t let things go haywire; if there is
a schedule for a day, you need to make sure people get ready in time in the morning.
But if you are at a place and see people enjoying and wanting to spend more
time there, you need to be flexible enough and let them enjoy that space.
I have often had people ask if it will be a problem if can just go sit on
a hill a little far away, by themselves. Especially women. In the unequal world
we stay in, I guess they feel the need for liberation a lot more than us men. I
could never say no to someone wanting to sit on a hill by themselves and just
stare at the valley. They shall find their way, and they shall find their way back,
and we can wait.
5)
Sensitivity will always take you far in life. If
not in life, well in the hearts of some at least.
It does not matter if you are just nice to the people who paid to come on your trips. It also matters how you are with everyone you met in that place. Can you, after a whole day’s excursion, when you are sitting at the back of the bus, realize something and walk to the front and wipe the front window screen when there is rain or will you let the driver do it all by himself? Can you help your man to unload the luggage from the bus’ roof or does it not matter? Can we rub a dog’s back, tell people lightly to not litter, put your arm around the driver and treat him like a friend, in the same breath?
It does not matter if you are just nice to the people who paid to come on your trips. It also matters how you are with everyone you met in that place. Can you, after a whole day’s excursion, when you are sitting at the back of the bus, realize something and walk to the front and wipe the front window screen when there is rain or will you let the driver do it all by himself? Can you help your man to unload the luggage from the bus’ roof or does it not matter? Can we rub a dog’s back, tell people lightly to not litter, put your arm around the driver and treat him like a friend, in the same breath?
We needn’t. We will still get paid for the trip. But you win far more in
connecting your soul to someone else’s – be it an animal’s or a man’s. Money
will take you places, but your soul will tell the world who you are.
And no MBA college will teach you that.
Or so said This Guy On His Own Trip.
Or so said This Guy On His Own Trip.
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