Tour Guide Talent Show: German Comedians

It just feels right to invite all of our guides over to my house for a big party as a thanks for the great work they do each tour season. And part of the festivities is our guides’ international talent show. In this skit, our German guides explain “The Four Principles of German Humor” (color-coded in bordeaux, ruby, scarlet, and crimson). To keep it snappy, we’ll just show you “bordeaux.”

A Rollicking Rick Steves Tour Guide Party

My favorite party of the year is the day in January I open my house to our guides. Last year was packed to the max. We had 30 percent more guides this year — giving us a good excuse to clean out the garage and rent a heater.

Large group of tour guides laughing

Our tour guides’ international talent show has become a tradition, and this year we packed our living room to enjoy ten acts from ten countries. (I’ll be sharing video clips of my favorites over the next three posts.)

Rick Steves and tour guides

The best advice when serving dinner to 130 hungry guides: Hire a food truck. Another tip: Clean up the laundry room and let the island become a stand-up dinner table.

Two tour guides switching name tags

We insist on the guides wearing name tags at all times (each with the flag of where they guide our tours). But we forgot to insist on wearing your own. Here, Robert and Cynthia did their best to confuse our newbies. Photo: The Travelphile

Tour Guide Radio

I need to record lots of interviews — about 150 each year — for my weekly one-hour public radio program. With so many brilliant guides in town for our summit, my radio staff and I take full advantage of the opportunity, and line up about 18 hours of recording sessions during our summit week. Along with generating great content for our radio show, podcast, and Rick Steves Audio Europe™ app, it gives me a valuable opportunity to get to know our guides’ teaching styles.

A Busy Week of Work and Fun with Our Guides

More than 20,000 Americans entrusted our guides with their European vacations in 2015. That’s a huge responsibility, and one we take very seriously. That’s why we fly in our guides (more than 100 this year from all over Europe and the USA) for a one-week series of workshops and itinerary roundtables to fine-tune our tour program and ensure that we’ll offer the best possible European tours in 2016.

Group photo

I’ve got to admit, stopping traffic to gather our entire family of guides for a group photo in the street — and getting to be right in the center of this amazing group of travelers and teachers — is a feeling I really enjoy.

Group meeting

We have about 40 different tour itineraries. For each individual itinerary, the guides who lead the tour and the home-office tour operations person who makes all the reservations gather to brainstorm, debate, and fine-tune each day of the trip. Getting these itineraries just right is the meat of our tour guide summit. We know Americans have among the shortest vacations on earth. Our goal: to be sure our travelers get maximum experience out of each tour minute. Photo: The Travelphile

Tour guides and colored folders

We’ve hosted our guides each year for the last two decades, and my staff has it well figured out. Color-coded guide packets explain it all. How well our annual summit is run is a reflection of how well we run our tours. Photo: The Travelphile

Rick Steves talking to group

Filling our town’s Masonic Lodge with the entire gang, I gave two three-hour talks (plus another talk just for our first-year guides) to ensure that all of our guides understand our stateside operations — and are clear on exactly what distinguishes a Rick Steves tour. A favorite and particularly instructive event: an afternoon-long workshop in which nine of our senior guides gave individual talks as if to a tour group in Europe…and we all constructively critiqued their performance. Photo: The Travelphile

Presentation

Each year at our summit, we fly in experts to teach workshops on safety, communication, technology on the road, sexual harassment, first aid, and conflict resolution. As we’re entrusting our guides with the care of so many tour members each year, these skills are critical in my estimate for any professional tour guide. Photo: The Travelphile

Four people wearing Rick Steves t-shirts

After discussing safety, the refugee crisis, and people’s concerns about terrorism, everyone got one of our wildly popular new “Keep On Travelin’” T-shirts. To be sure everyone got the right size, we had human size models: XXL, XL, L, M and S. (Want your own t-shirt? You can pick one up in our online Travel Store.) Photo: The Travelphile