This article originally appeared in the October/November 2025 edition of “Conference & Meetings World” (CMW)
The roots of incentive travel
For those of us working in incentive travel, it’s worth remembering that the industry owes its very existence to one place: the United States of America.
Incentive travel could only have emerged in a culture that unapologetically embraced aspiration. The American mindset of celebrating achievement — rather than hiding it — created fertile ground for corporate recognition programs.
“Honest reward for honest effort” wasn’t just a slogan. It was a lived reality, and travel soon became the ultimate form of recognition: something aspirational, memorable, and emotionally powerful.
Post-war optimism and the rise of rewards
The post-war boom in the USA created an economy built on optimism and productivity. Companies wanted ways to motivate their people that went beyond cash bonuses, which too easily disappeared into household budgets.
Early incentive trips — often to Florida, California, or Hawaiʻi — gave participants not just exotic experiences, but visible proof that their contributions were valued. From those early roots, the idea spread across North America, then to Europe, and eventually to every major market worldwide.
Today, incentive travel is truly international, but its DNA is still unmistakably American.
The American model of experience
Much of the language and style still used in incentive travel originated in the US. The gala dinner with a keynote speaker, the personalized recognition moment on stage, the storytelling woven through every detail of an itinerary — all are part of a reward philosophy that sees motivation as an emotional currency.
The Americans understood early on that touching the heart is what drives performance.
Beyond incentives: America’s wider influence
It isn’t just incentive specialists who have been shaped by the USA’s approach.
The global business events industry owes much to America’s early embrace of scale, spectacle, and service culture. From the sprawling resorts of Las Vegas and Orlando to the urban sophistication of New York, Chicago, and San Francisco, US destinations have long set the benchmark for infrastructure and hospitality standards.
Relevance for today
We now operate in a world where competition for talent is fiercer than ever. The principles that powered those first incentive trips — clear recognition, meaningful reward, and aspirational experience — remain vital.
The US is not only still a key market for incentive travel, but the industry’s “source code.” Its influence is hardwired into the DNA of every program we design, whether the destination is Miami or Marrakech.
