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<Table><FONT face=Times size=+2>Eco-tour firm ‘Hummer’-ing along
</FONT> <FONT face=Times size=3>Company uses H2s to take customers to desert areas</FONT> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=200 align=right border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD align=right> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=180 border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD> <CENTER> ![]() </TD></TR> <TR> <FONT size=2><B class=headlink>Elite Land Tours [/b] Headquarters: Palm Springs Owners: Mark Farley, founding partner and partners Jim Trout and Tia Kennedy Founded: September Business description: Luxury eco-tour company providing customized back-country tours in the Palm Springs area. Entrepreneurial advice from Farley: If you have a passion about what you want to do, then follow that passion. Your enthusiasm will create your success. Another key piece of advice: Use local companies as your vendors. That reflects your dedication to the community. Start-up challenge and solution: Instead of buying expensive vehicles, the partners decided to limit start-up costs by leasing Hummer H2’s. This saved them a lump sum of $120,000. Employees: 6 Projected revenues: $200,000 a year Source of startup funding: Savings of two owner partners and a line of credit. Info: 555 S. Sunrise Way, Suite 200, Palm Springs, 318-1200, www.elitelandtours.com</FONT> ![]() <LI type=square><A href="http://webx.desertsunonline.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX?13@@.ee6b280">Post or read comments in our online forums</A></FONT> ![]() </LI></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><FONT size=-1>By Jenni Simcoe The Desert Sun October 11th, 2004</FONT> <HR> [/b]What do you get when you put a former stand-up comedian, a former hotel concierge and a former air-traffic controller together in a Hummer? A fun adventure, also known as Elite Land Tours. The company was the brainchild of founding partner Mark Farley, the former stand-up comedian. Farley and his partners, Jim Trout, a former air-traffic controller, and Tia Kennedy, a former concierge, all had prior experience working for other hospitality and tour companies in the desert. "One day I took a group from a prestigious country club on a tour and a light bulb went off," Farley said. He saw a niche that hadn’t been filled in desert tourism. "People want adventure, but they also want the experience to be comfortable and enjoyable," he said. Earlier this year, Farley went on an African safari and knew he could translate that experience to the desert landscape. "The safari was so exciting. We were in great vehicles that went into the back country where we could see wildlife," he said. Farley said Elite Land Tours emulates the experience he had on safari -- down to the minute details. "The guides were spectacular. They set up a meal out in the bush complete with linen table cloths and silverware," Farley said. <B class=headline>Dining in luxury[/b] Elite Land Tours also takes a white table cloth to remote areas in Joshua Tree National Park and serves a catered lunch from Aspen Mills in order to re-create a safari-like experience in the desert. The luxury aspect of the company is not only the service but the transportation in the form of two Hummer H2 all-terrain vehicles. While entertainment and luxury are key to the experience, education is also important to Farley, Trout and Kennedy. "When people look at the desert, it appears lifeless to them. When they look deeper, they realize there’s a lot more to desert life than they saw at first glance," Farley said. "We have phenomenal, highly educated guides who have a rapport with our clients," Trout said. Trout also was a guide for a desert-based tour company before starting Elite Land Tours. When Farley initially told him that Elite Land Tours would be using the H2 Hummer as the tour vehicle because it allows them to take clients further into back country than what open-air vehicles allow, Trout was opposed to the idea of using the H2. "I was turned off by the vehicle because I thought eco- tourism and the Hummer didn’t go together," he said. Upon further consideration and listening to Farley’s argument for the vehicle, Trout changed his perception. "It is actually a more efficient tour vehicle than others because we can have four to six people in the vehicle which makes the miles per gallon, per person a better use of fuel," Trout said. That said, Trout is adamant that the company isn’t set on Hummer vehicles if a better hybrid would come available in the future. Even when driving the H2, the partners live by the principles and outdoor ethics of Leave No Trace Organization and Tread Lightly. Before each tour they explain these ethics to clients. "We don’t drive off of designated trails or disturb the desert landscape," Trout said. The tour guides also try to leave the desert better than they found it, by picking up litter on hikes and tours. These ethics and principles were part of the business plan from the start. The three partners had the idea for the business and knew their market, but needed assistance in marketing their company to clients said Farley. "We interviewed several ad agencies in the valley and chose Ragle, Andrade, McLaughlin & Associates because they really understood our concept and came with great marketing ideas," Farley said. "The concept of adventure and discovery is often synonymous with roughing it, but they deliver eco-tours with an unexpected twist of luxury," said Michelle McLaughlin, partner of Ragle, Andrade, McLaughlin & Associates. McLaughlin said that one sentence nailed their concept, and after that branding session they were able to focus their attention on that niche. The eco-tours by Elite Land Tours include trips to Covington Flats, a Night Discovery Tour, a Salton Sea Tour and a Geology Tour. "I can’t believe I do this for a living," Farley said. "I used to take my friends and their visitors on tours like this, but now we do it for a living, and it doesn’t feel like work.</Table> |
<Table><FONT face=Times size=+2>Eco-tour firm ‘Hummer’-ing along
</FONT> <FONT face=Times size=3>Company uses H2s to take customers to desert areas</FONT> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=200 align=right border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD align=right> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=180 border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD> <CENTER> ![]() </TD></TR> <TR> <FONT size=2><B class=headlink>Elite Land Tours [/b] Headquarters: Palm Springs Owners: Mark Farley, founding partner and partners Jim Trout and Tia Kennedy Founded: September Business description: Luxury eco-tour company providing customized back-country tours in the Palm Springs area. Entrepreneurial advice from Farley: If you have a passion about what you want to do, then follow that passion. Your enthusiasm will create your success. Another key piece of advice: Use local companies as your vendors. That reflects your dedication to the community. Start-up challenge and solution: Instead of buying expensive vehicles, the partners decided to limit start-up costs by leasing Hummer H2’s. This saved them a lump sum of $120,000. Employees: 6 Projected revenues: $200,000 a year Source of startup funding: Savings of two owner partners and a line of credit. Info: 555 S. Sunrise Way, Suite 200, Palm Springs, 318-1200, www.elitelandtours.com</FONT> ![]() <LI type=square><A href="http://webx.desertsunonline.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX?13@@.ee6b280">Post or read comments in our online forums</A></FONT> ![]() </LI></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><FONT size=-1>By Jenni Simcoe The Desert Sun October 11th, 2004</FONT> <HR> [/b]What do you get when you put a former stand-up comedian, a former hotel concierge and a former air-traffic controller together in a Hummer? A fun adventure, also known as Elite Land Tours. The company was the brainchild of founding partner Mark Farley, the former stand-up comedian. Farley and his partners, Jim Trout, a former air-traffic controller, and Tia Kennedy, a former concierge, all had prior experience working for other hospitality and tour companies in the desert. "One day I took a group from a prestigious country club on a tour and a light bulb went off," Farley said. He saw a niche that hadn’t been filled in desert tourism. "People want adventure, but they also want the experience to be comfortable and enjoyable," he said. Earlier this year, Farley went on an African safari and knew he could translate that experience to the desert landscape. "The safari was so exciting. We were in great vehicles that went into the back country where we could see wildlife," he said. Farley said Elite Land Tours emulates the experience he had on safari -- down to the minute details. "The guides were spectacular. They set up a meal out in the bush complete with linen table cloths and silverware," Farley said. <B class=headline>Dining in luxury[/b] Elite Land Tours also takes a white table cloth to remote areas in Joshua Tree National Park and serves a catered lunch from Aspen Mills in order to re-create a safari-like experience in the desert. The luxury aspect of the company is not only the service but the transportation in the form of two Hummer H2 all-terrain vehicles. While entertainment and luxury are key to the experience, education is also important to Farley, Trout and Kennedy. "When people look at the desert, it appears lifeless to them. When they look deeper, they realize there’s a lot more to desert life than they saw at first glance," Farley said. "We have phenomenal, highly educated guides who have a rapport with our clients," Trout said. Trout also was a guide for a desert-based tour company before starting Elite Land Tours. When Farley initially told him that Elite Land Tours would be using the H2 Hummer as the tour vehicle because it allows them to take clients further into back country than what open-air vehicles allow, Trout was opposed to the idea of using the H2. "I was turned off by the vehicle because I thought eco- tourism and the Hummer didn’t go together," he said. Upon further consideration and listening to Farley’s argument for the vehicle, Trout changed his perception. "It is actually a more efficient tour vehicle than others because we can have four to six people in the vehicle which makes the miles per gallon, per person a better use of fuel," Trout said. That said, Trout is adamant that the company isn’t set on Hummer vehicles if a better hybrid would come available in the future. Even when driving the H2, the partners live by the principles and outdoor ethics of Leave No Trace Organization and Tread Lightly. Before each tour they explain these ethics to clients. "We don’t drive off of designated trails or disturb the desert landscape," Trout said. The tour guides also try to leave the desert better than they found it, by picking up litter on hikes and tours. These ethics and principles were part of the business plan from the start. The three partners had the idea for the business and knew their market, but needed assistance in marketing their company to clients said Farley. "We interviewed several ad agencies in the valley and chose Ragle, Andrade, McLaughlin & Associates because they really understood our concept and came with great marketing ideas," Farley said. "The concept of adventure and discovery is often synonymous with roughing it, but they deliver eco-tours with an unexpected twist of luxury," said Michelle McLaughlin, partner of Ragle, Andrade, McLaughlin & Associates. McLaughlin said that one sentence nailed their concept, and after that branding session they were able to focus their attention on that niche. The eco-tours by Elite Land Tours include trips to Covington Flats, a Night Discovery Tour, a Salton Sea Tour and a Geology Tour. "I can’t believe I do this for a living," Farley said. "I used to take my friends and their visitors on tours like this, but now we do it for a living, and it doesn’t feel like work.</Table> |
<Table><FONT face=Times size=+2>Eco-tour firm ‘Hummer’-ing along
</FONT> <FONT face=Times size=3>Company uses H2s to take customers to desert areas</FONT> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=200 align=right border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD align=right> <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=180 border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD> <CENTER> ![]() </TD></TR> <TR> <FONT size=2><B class=headlink>Elite Land Tours [/b] Headquarters: Palm Springs Owners: Mark Farley, founding partner and partners Jim Trout and Tia Kennedy Founded: September Business description: Luxury eco-tour company providing customized back-country tours in the Palm Springs area. Entrepreneurial advice from Farley: If you have a passion about what you want to do, then follow that passion. Your enthusiasm will create your success. Another key piece of advice: Use local companies as your vendors. That reflects your dedication to the community. Start-up challenge and solution: Instead of buying expensive vehicles, the partners decided to limit start-up costs by leasing Hummer H2’s. This saved them a lump sum of $120,000. Employees: 6 Projected revenues: $200,000 a year Source of startup funding: Savings of two owner partners and a line of credit. Info: 555 S. Sunrise Way, Suite 200, Palm Springs, 318-1200, www.elitelandtours.com</FONT> ![]() <LI type=square><A href="http://webx.desertsunonline.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX?13@@.ee6b280">Post or read comments in our online forums</A></FONT> ![]() </LI></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><FONT size=-1>By Jenni Simcoe The Desert Sun October 11th, 2004</FONT> <HR> [/b]What do you get when you put a former stand-up comedian, a former hotel concierge and a former air-traffic controller together in a Hummer? A fun adventure, also known as Elite Land Tours. The company was the brainchild of founding partner Mark Farley, the former stand-up comedian. Farley and his partners, Jim Trout, a former air-traffic controller, and Tia Kennedy, a former concierge, all had prior experience working for other hospitality and tour companies in the desert. "One day I took a group from a prestigious country club on a tour and a light bulb went off," Farley said. He saw a niche that hadn’t been filled in desert tourism. "People want adventure, but they also want the experience to be comfortable and enjoyable," he said. Earlier this year, Farley went on an African safari and knew he could translate that experience to the desert landscape. "The safari was so exciting. We were in great vehicles that went into the back country where we could see wildlife," he said. Farley said Elite Land Tours emulates the experience he had on safari -- down to the minute details. "The guides were spectacular. They set up a meal out in the bush complete with linen table cloths and silverware," Farley said. <B class=headline>Dining in luxury[/b] Elite Land Tours also takes a white table cloth to remote areas in Joshua Tree National Park and serves a catered lunch from Aspen Mills in order to re-create a safari-like experience in the desert. The luxury aspect of the company is not only the service but the transportation in the form of two Hummer H2 all-terrain vehicles. While entertainment and luxury are key to the experience, education is also important to Farley, Trout and Kennedy. "When people look at the desert, it appears lifeless to them. When they look deeper, they realize there’s a lot more to desert life than they saw at first glance," Farley said. "We have phenomenal, highly educated guides who have a rapport with our clients," Trout said. Trout also was a guide for a desert-based tour company before starting Elite Land Tours. When Farley initially told him that Elite Land Tours would be using the H2 Hummer as the tour vehicle because it allows them to take clients further into back country than what open-air vehicles allow, Trout was opposed to the idea of using the H2. "I was turned off by the vehicle because I thought eco- tourism and the Hummer didn’t go together," he said. Upon further consideration and listening to Farley’s argument for the vehicle, Trout changed his perception. "It is actually a more efficient tour vehicle than others because we can have four to six people in the vehicle which makes the miles per gallon, per person a better use of fuel," Trout said. That said, Trout is adamant that the company isn’t set on Hummer vehicles if a better hybrid would come available in the future. Even when driving the H2, the partners live by the principles and outdoor ethics of Leave No Trace Organization and Tread Lightly. Before each tour they explain these ethics to clients. "We don’t drive off of designated trails or disturb the desert landscape," Trout said. The tour guides also try to leave the desert better than they found it, by picking up litter on hikes and tours. These ethics and principles were part of the business plan from the start. The three partners had the idea for the business and knew their market, but needed assistance in marketing their company to clients said Farley. "We interviewed several ad agencies in the valley and chose Ragle, Andrade, McLaughlin & Associates because they really understood our concept and came with great marketing ideas," Farley said. "The concept of adventure and discovery is often synonymous with roughing it, but they deliver eco-tours with an unexpected twist of luxury," said Michelle McLaughlin, partner of Ragle, Andrade, McLaughlin & Associates. McLaughlin said that one sentence nailed their concept, and after that branding session they were able to focus their attention on that niche. The eco-tours by Elite Land Tours include trips to Covington Flats, a Night Discovery Tour, a Salton Sea Tour and a Geology Tour. "I can’t believe I do this for a living," Farley said. "I used to take my friends and their visitors on tours like this, but now we do it for a living, and it doesn’t feel like work.</Table> |
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