This takes considerably more time to fill out than simply purchasing a vitamin selection online, but this time is worth spending for the personalised service customers will get in return.
When multiple-generations travel, they bring a wealth of knowledge about themselves and each other. This is data that can be collected in the booking process and activity throughout the stay to inform a personalised experience. Holiday providers can be asking...
- How might we collect, standardise and use data to personalise the experience?
Making the experience flexible and accessible
Accessible furniture and mobility options for senior family members who need flexibility isn’t a given. When suitable alterations and additions are available, they can feel incredibly undesirable. Whilst elderly relatives relish the chance to spend time with the family, they want to feel like they’ve come on holiday, not like they’ve come to a care home. Claywood by Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt is a stunning home that was created to make life easier for a wheelchair-using mum so she doesn’t miss out or compromise on key family moments. Branded a wheelchair-friendly house in disguise, it has been built with many accessible features, like level thresholds, extra-wide corridors, lift access and specialist furniture. No compromise in beautiful design here.

Wheelchair-friendly house in disguise: Claywood by Ayre Chamberlain Gaunt
As some families take their grandparents on what may be one of their last holidays together, providers should be considering the desirability and suitability of their architecture, furniture and spaces. Providers can be asking...
- How might we ensure our accommodation and experiences are flexible for everyone in the family?
How businesses can build on this travel trend
In the coming months, some will be looking for trips that can ignite nostalgia for parents and grandparents, whilst creating new memories for young children. Young adults who no longer live with parents will be looking to upgrade quality time they’ve missed out on by holidaying together around special occasions. As holiday-goers increasingly look to travel in the UK with extended family members, the winners will be those who can bring flexibility across the physical and digital experience, deliver a heightened sense of occasion and facilitate memory capture across the generations.
Businesses that cater for multi-generational travel should ask themselves:
- How might we use technology to help plan, inform and entertain holiday goers?
- How might we facilitate memory capture?
- How might we collect, standardise and use data to personalise the experience?
- How might we ensure our accommodation and experiences are flexible for everyone in the family?