These poor Americans with their one week of vacation…I could practically hear the thoughts and see the pity spreading across the faces of my new friends. I had landed in Cartagena just a few hours earlier and had ventured into the balmy night air for a drink to celebrate my arrival in Colombia. As is often the case with travel, it took little more than a ‘Club Colombia’ cerveza and a smile before I found myself huddled around a table, elbow-to-elbow with fellow travelers hailing from around the globe.
While conversations in New York often begin with questions of job title, living location and education, these backpackers cared only to know where I’d been, where I would be going and how long I had be on the road. Two of the girls had come from Germany and were on the last leg of a multi-country backpacking tour of South America, one of the guys was a sun-kissed surfer who was making his way down from Costa Rica to catch the best waves, while yet another was a soccer enthusiast hailing from Italy; I listened intently as my new found companions shared stories of treks through Brazil, adventures in Peru and surfing in Panama. Our table looked like a veritable United Nations convention with me representing the overworked and over-stressed Americans comically clinging to my 7 days (a mere 168 hours) of vacation time.
Having been bitten by the travel bug and struck with an insatiable wanderlust, I have made it my goal to make travel a priority and see the world one pin at a time. Having recently gone freelance, I spent last year walking the fine line between balancing my love of travel with a full time career in advertising. Lacking a bottomless trust fund and endless vacation time, I became savvy to tricks and tips to make the most of my time off. Consider this your guide.
Learning to work with the vacation time you have
19 days. Out of 365 days a year, I had only 19 days with which I could escape the monotony of the corporate world and indulge in my love of travel. While 19 days may seem like a measly number to some, when that time is combined with the 16 company holidays my agency provides I was working with 35 days available for travel.
I’m often asked how I find the time to take a trip and the trick is to make the most of your time off and use your vacation days wisely. Pull out your calendar and mark off the company holidays your employer gives you, then look for how your can extend those holidays into a decent size trip. Rather than using 10 vacation days at once, you can tack on less days to a holiday weekend while still saving days for future travel opportunities in the year.
Thinking like a travel agent & learning to sleep on planes
You’re looking at your calendar and realize that if you add 3 vacation days to that 4 day holiday weekend you already have, you can take a week-long trip. It sounds like a great deal until you start to look up flight prices and find that the only affordable destination is one hour away.
Planning how to use your time off is just one part of the equation, the other half is being savvy with flight prices and when to plan your travel. As a rule of thumb, flights that depart on Tuesdays or Wednesdays are less expensive and can save you hundreds of dollars vs. leaving on a Friday or Thursday evening. Similarly, learning to sleep on planes and opting for red-eye flights can shave dollars off airfare with the bonus of arriving at your destination early in the morning and not sacrificing half a day to travel. Here, I share my best tips on travel hacking to save BIG on airfare.
Tip: February and March tend to be the cheapest months to travel, so look at long weekends like President’s Day weekend to extend into a decent length trip. Similarly, holidays like Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Eve will always prove expensive travel times so focus on smaller bank holidays and always begin monitoring flights in advance! Flight prices—like the stock market—fluctuate each day and sites like Kayak.com will show the trend in price and help you predict the best time to make a purchase.
Snagging more vacation time
With family, out-of-town visitors and weddings, sometimes vacation time needs to be reserved for social commitments rather than exotic destinations. If your allotted PTO isn’t sufficient enough to feed your wanderlust, then speak with your company’s Human Resources team about ways to earn more vacation time or take unpaid days off. Some companies allow you to accrue vacation time over the year, while some employers will allow unpaid time off so long as your work load is covered.
Exploring company travel programs
With offices around the world, my former agency had implemented a program that gives employees the opportunity to “swap” with a co-worker of a similar job title from another global office. The company swap program gives everyone the chance to temporarily live in a different country, learn a new language and experience a new culture without sacrificing their position, title or income. Most large companies with international offices will have a variation of this program in an effort to increase global connectivity, so if living abroad piques your interest, speak with Human Resources about eligibility for your company’s swap program but note that often you must be with the company for a set amount of time to be eligible.
Quenching your wanderlust with weekend getaways
While I spend more time than I’d like to admit perusing travel deals online, the fact of the matter is that buying a last minute flight and slapping together an exotic trip is not always affordable. In times like these, when visions of Belize are dancing across my mind, I look for weekend getaways or day trips near New York City to quench my wanderlust.
Beyond the glass skyscrapers, packed avenues and crowded subways of the city rest the Catskill Mountains, beaches along the Atlantic coastline and charming towns that are just a train or bus ride away. While venturing to local destinations might not have the same allure of visiting a seaside city in South America, changing up my scenery from the Concrete Jungle to scenic mountains gives me a respite from routine, work and the city.
Getting a trip on the books
You’re dreaming of Paris in the Springtime, lamenting your cubicle and longingly scanning flights for affordable options—sometimes the spark of wanderlust is fanned into a fire that can’t be satisfied with a day trip to the beach. When that happens, plan a trip! Having a vacation on the horizon—whether it is a month or 6 months away—gives you something to plan, look forward to, read about and get excited about.
Working remotely
Thanks to laptops, e-mail and smartphones, most work can be done anywhere there is a strong internet connection and an outlet. If you work for an international company, speak with your HR team about working from one of the other global offices or explore opportunities to work remotely short term. Although setting up camp on a beach and working from Aruba for a year may be far-fetched, if you are traveling abroad and want to extend your trip by a few days, some employers may prove flexible in letting you work remotely.
Making travel your priority
Whether you stay in the corporate world or consider going freelance, like most things in life it is not enough to want to travel, you have to turn action into words and choose to fuel your passion of globetrotting. Whether that means saving money by relinquishing happy hours or giving up a holiday to see the world, deciding to make travel your priority will start to frame how you both spend your money and manage your time while balancing a full time job.
How do you balance a full time job and travel? Share your comments below!
