Cruise sales executives share wisdom at CruiseWorld

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The Masterminds panel at Travel Weekly's CruiseWorld.
The Masterminds panel at Travel Weekly's CruiseWorld. Photo Credit: Jamie Biesiada

FORT LAUDERDALE -- Listen. Find a mentor. Communicate. Set goals. All of those and more were offered as career advice for travel agents at CruiseWorld on Wednesday.

The advice came from cruise line executives on the "Mastermind Sales and Marketing Secrets of Success" panel, moderated by Mary Pat Sullivan and Joanie Ogg.

Camille Olivere, senior vice president of sales at Norwegian Cruise Line, said, "Choosing a mentor that can really add value to you and help you grow and develop is important," she said.

Cruise sales executives share wisdom at CruiseWorld

Having mentors was also an important career step for Dondra Ritzenthaler, Celebrity Cruises' senior vice president of sales, trade support and service.

Ritzenthaler said persistence has also been key. Right out of college, she applied to get a job at American Airlines three times. The first two times she wasn't hired, but she believed she was the best candidate, so she listened to what her interviewers told her, made some changes, and went for the job a third time. She was hired.

"Don't let anybody tell you that you can't get that group of business or that group or that charter," she said. "And if you don't get it the first time, listen and see what you did that made you lose it, learn from it and get after that."

Eva Jenner, vice president of North America sales at Holland America Line and Seabourn, also advised listening -- specifically to clients and their needs.

"What they're telling you is going to help you create the best vacation experience for them," Jenner said. "Then they're going to come back to you."

Joe Jiffo, MSC Cruises' senior vice president of sales, shared a tidbit from Rick Sasso, with whom he first worked at Carnival in 1991 (the duo has come full circle as Sasso is MSC's chairman today).

"He always told us there's no one above you," Jiffo said. "Everyone is equal."

An early boss also taught Carnival Cruise Line's Adolfo Perez an important lesson after reviewing every piece of communication her employees created, complete with red lines and worse than an exam at school. But he got the message.

"Communication is key because you have to get the message out, the story out -- you have to be able to do it in a way that was convincing," said Perez, Carnival's vice president of trade and sales marketing. 

John Chernesky, vice president of North America sales at Princess Cruises and Cunard Line, had a simple piece of career advice: Be nice to the people you work with, whether it's the president of the company or the person in the mailroom.

Clients obviously expect agents to be nice because they are providing them with a service, he said, but it's also important to connect to them on a personal level.

Chris Austin, senior vice president of global marketing and sales at Seabourn, encouraged agents to set goals for themselves and their business.

"All of you need to set your own targets, but also use a number," Austin said. "Whether it's six, whether it's three, whether it's 10 -- you can go after six new clients and find eight, and suddenly have them all cruising and they've never cruised before. I think setting your own personal targets, being tenacious, is a great lesson."

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