They’re small but perfectly formed: travel’s miniples are booming, and they’re proving one of the sector’s most resilient elements.
While times are tough amid the ongoing Brexit malaise, three independent agency chain leaders have told TTG there has never been a better time or chance to make a success of bricks and mortar.
For all the warnings the internet would sound the death knell for the high street, conscientious and community-focused agencies – aided by government rate reliefs, bargain property and major players like Thomas Cook hitting the headlines for the wrong reasons – are continuing to thrive.
The growth of the miniple – widely accepted as travel agencies with five to 50 branches – is none more evident than in south Wales and along the Welsh border, where a slew of new openings has made travel agencies a focal point of depleted high streets.
It is Don Bircham, managing director of Hays Travel North West, who perhaps summarises this new-found optimism most succinctly. “We can now compete with the multiples – we don’t have to hide around the corner from them any more, we’re right in the mix with Cook and Tui.”
Hays Travel North West started life 20 years ago in Mold, north Wales, as Just Go Travel. However, it was after a 10-year spell as a Tui franchise that Hays Travel founder John Hays invested, giving Bircham fresh impetus to more than double the size of his business over the past four years with the Hays brand above the door.
Bircham is confident of hitting the 40-store mark by the end of the year – new branches in Northwich and Oldham are ready to go as the business expands into Lancashire and Greater Manchester, while the Hays name will soon arrive in Shrewsbury. Two or three more openings are “in the pipeline” as well, reveals Bircham.


