This guy is great....when I travelled through Europe on my motorcycle, I carried the first edition of his book. I love how he has made a success out of his love of travel, and pulls no punches with his opinions, he'd make a great NNBM barmate...
Saturday, April 23, 2005
Outspoken travel guru rooted in Edmonds
By DAN RICHMAN SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
EDMONDS -- Join travel guru Rick Steves as he walks to get coffee in this picturesque waterfront city, and his involvement with his hometown quickly becomes clear.
"Hi, Rick!" call out at least six passers-by, some from across the street or f rom passing cars. He initiates an equal number of conversations, sometimes stopping for longer chats. Everyone he sees gets a big smile and a hello.
Steves, 49, makes his living writing about traveling, spending about a third of the year abroad. But this worldly Europhile bases his business and his home life in Edmonds, a city of 40,000 located about 15 miles north of Seattle. He revels in being a small-town guy.
The junior high school he attended is visible through the huge windows of his corner office downtown on Fourth Street. That brick building, which houses his 20,000-square-foot retail space and headquarters, is the third one the business has occupied -- all on the same street.
"I really love my town," Steves said. "When you're coming home to Puget Sound, you realize you've got a lot. ... I've never thought about living elsewhere."
Steves has had a major impact both economically and culturally on Edmonds. With his outspoken manner and bold stance on some touchy issues -- such as legali zing marijuana and whether to fly the American flag -- he has been both praised and criticized.
But he is never ignored.
National stature
Steves is probably the bes t-known travel promoter in this country, with an established TV show on PBS, a radio show that recently debuted on National Public Radio affiliate KUOW (94.9 FM) in Seattle, and a popular series of phrasebooks and guidebooks. His company -- Rick Steves' Europe Through the Back Door Inc. -- is Edmonds' largest downtown business, with 60 employees and record revenue of about $20 million last year.
Despite the pressure of running that business, he takes his time while returning to his office with coffee.
"I run all day long. On this walk, I like to savor my town," he said, recounting his life in Edmonds as he and a visitor stroll.
About 30 years ago, when he was giving piano lessons to pay for his first trips to Europe, his father, a piano importer, gave him studio space to work from. Now his dad maintains a little piano shop in the building's basement.
He describes himself as a Christian and is an active member of nearby Trinity Lutheran Church. He got undergrad degrees in both business and history at the U niversity of Washington, and now lives in north Edmonds with his wife and two children. He sometimes walks the two miles to work down the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad tracks.
In h is "Europe Through the Back Door," now in its 23rd edition, Steves describes the ideal traveler's attitude as "relentlessly optimistic." By living that attitude, and by working hard in a field he loves, Steves has made his mark on Edmonds, just as he has on the American tourism industry.
'Tremendous local impact'
"Rick Steves is a constant, a homegrown businessman who started a business here and has kept it here," said Chris Guitton, executive director of the Greater Edmonds Chamber of Commerce. "We know he has a tremendous positive impact on our local economy."
In the long term, Europe Through the Ba ck Door's draw means exposure for Edmonds, bringing first-time visitors who may return. More immediately, it swells business for about 30 percent of Edmonds' shops, hotels and restaurants, and for the city's con ference center, performing arts center and movie theatre, said Guitton.
On any given day, Steves' business can bring 3,000 well-heeled visitors to town. His twice-yearly travel seminars ea ch can attract 6,000 people over a weekend. Aside from several annual holidays and festivals, those are the largest crowds to assemble in the city.
"Our business is about three times what it is usually during t he seminars," said Marlaine Berentson, a waitress at the nearby Chanterelle restaurant. "We put in extra servers and stock up on everything."
Steves puts some of his money back into the co mmunity in creative ways. He recently spent $1.3 million for a 24-unit apartment building in Lynnwood, which he's allowing that city's Pathways for Women YWCA to use at no cost for 15 years to house single mothe rs and their children.
Aside from his business' tangible contributions to the area -- charity, taxes, employee salaries -- "you also have an impact just by changing the personality of the way a community thinks," Steves said.
Specifically, after he holds a seminar, "everybody's wandering around this town buzzing about the rest of the world," he said. "Here we are in little Edmonds, and this is a springboard for a better understanding of the world."
Competitors complain
The benefits Steves confers on the area don't make everyone his fan. Reactions among nearby travel businesses, some of which compete with his own, range from tepid to testy.
"We benefit a little from Rick Steves, because sometimes the people who come to his seminars will see our office and possibly buy air tickets for his tours," said Susie Main, operations manager at Nordic Travel Tours in Edmonds.
Other local travel businesses say that while Steves has expanded the number of people going abroad, they don't benefit, because Steves-style travelers tend to buy their own tickets online and generally make their own way.
"I think he stirs up a lot of interest, and he's a very well-respected m ember of the travel community, but we're in two different worlds," said Richard Hertzog, owner of Carlson Wagonlit Travel in Lynnwood.
Steves' new radio show has antagonized some travel-industry competitors, both locally and elsewhere. They say it violates NPR's code of ethics, because it lets him use a publicly funded outlet to promote his own business.
Matthew Brumley, a former Steves employee who left to found Earthbound Expeditions Inc. on Bainbridge Island, recently began an e-mail campaign enlisting other tour and travel agencies in a protest against KUOW.
"Rick Steves Inc., a for-profit tour company, is being given the unfair advantage of having a nationally aired program to use as a forum for advertising his company, tours and products," his e-mail complain s.
Petra Rousu, owner of Edmonds' Savvy Traveler tour business and travel-gear store, agrees, as does Clair Nolan, owner of Alki Tours in West Seattle.
KUOW program director Jeff Hansen s aid his station isn't bound by NPR's code of ethics, but even if it were, "we don't see a problem with his program.... As far as I can tell, his reputation for high-quality public broadcasting is impeccable," he said.
Steves attributes the flap mainly to jealousy.
"I think it just embarrasses Matthew to send out that letter to a lot of people, because for one thing, if anybody listens to my show, they would not find it to be a conspiracy against competition but a celebration of travel," he said.
"And I don't think anybody can quite pull it off like me," he added with a grin, " 'cause I'm pretty talented about that."
There's no question Steves' talents wield a strong influence on the travel industry nationwide.
His guide to Italy was the best-selling guidebook in the U.S. last year. H is phrase books outsell Berlitz's in bookstores. And both here and abroad, he's often recognized and accosted by autograph-seekers.
"He must be responsible for an uptick in European travel," said David Tykol, editor of International Travel News, a monthly magazine reaching 43,000 travelers. "I think he has probably made people take a chance and go it on their own, rather than just going with a tour group."
Added Roger Dow, chief executive of the Travel Industry Association of America, "If we had a Rick Steves in Germany or England doing for the U.S. what Steves does for Europe, it would increase tourism to this country big-time."
Steves' knack for popularizing European travel -- especially among older travelers who might otherwise be sitting in their recliners -- has made him wealthy. S teves said he's worth "millions -- several millions," declining to elaborate.
Unconventional views
Steves is conventional in appearance, but far from it in some of his attitudes and belie fs.
The man who got famous advising tourists to seek the "back door" into Europe -- in part by sniffing out family-owned lodging and restaurants -- himself prefers a chain coffee shop.
"T he little place across the street always tries to lure me in, but I go to Tully's," he said. "I do like to patronize small businesses, but Tully's coffee is better. That's just the way it is."
Despite his stature in Edmonds, he doesn't belong to the city's Rotary Club or its chamber of commerce.
He unabashedly both smokes marijuana and backs efforts to legalize it -- a stance that makes some of his employees nervous about the future of his business.
"Here in America, people say it's so courageous for me to say it's not right to arrest mature adult users of marijuana," he said, sighing. "It's a big lie in our society. It's a huge lie."
His business flies the blue and gold European Union flag, not the Stars and Stripes. That choice makes a statement about America's excessive dominance abroad, while countering a national tendency toward conspicuous patriotism, he said.
Steves once defied the local Lions Club and personally removed 50 American flags from the business district, put up by the club a few weeks earlier in a show of support when the war in Iraq began.
That caused a stir, and a number of businesses protested. But Steves is unrepentant.
"It's patriotic of me to defend my (American) flag that way. There's a third of the people in this community that disagreed with the war, and they were too afraid to say anything because they'd lose business," he said.
Steves knows he can get under the skin of some people in his community. But that doesn't worry him. In fact, he enjoys "politically afflicting the comfortable."
What he does worry about is that failing to speak out against what he calls "the tyranny of the majority" -- as he did with the Lions Club's flag display -- can gradually lead to repression, even if it's self-imposed.
He tells of talking with Germans who recall the ascendancy of Hitler and how insidiously that changed their lives, even in the way they greeted one another.
Traditionally, "they would say 'Grüss Gott' or 'Guten Tag.' Then slowly they had to say, 'Sieg Heil!' I don't want that around here."
So taking down the flags, he said, was "just my little way of challenging Edmonds to do better."
IN HIS OWN WORDS
On marijuana: "I could take or leave marijuana myself. I know one thing: It's not addictive. I love it, but I smoke it less than I talk it."
On overexposing parts of Europe: "Yeah, yeah. It's true. ... I'm sort of like the whaler who screams, 'Quick, harpoon it, before it's extinct!' Now, having said that, I'm not stupid. If there's a fragile little bit of something hiding out in some corner, I'm not going to send everybody there to trample it and kill it."
On revelations while traveling: "I was in a park in Oslo, with my parents doting over me -- a very self-centered little kid -- and I loo ked around and I saw other parents loving their children as much as my parents loved me. ... It lets you know that struggles in Latvia, Morocco and Nicaragua are real struggles."
On whethe r to enter politics: "I probably do (have the right personality for politics). But in our political situation, I wouldn't get into it. ... You could give 10 years of your life to something, and then somebody els e could come in and, based on some perversion of patriotism or abuse of fear, they could wipe out everything you accomplished."
On investing and charity: "OK, I make more money than I can consume. What am I going to do with it? If I consume more, it just makes me fat and uncomfortable. But if someone else can consume for me, it actually turns me on."
On being influential: "For some reason, when people describe me, people say 'guru.' I think that's funny! If I say it's better to wear black underwear, they probably would. It's a scary responsibility."
On his occupation: "I love to sell guidebooks. When I cross a border, they say, 'What's your occupation?' I say 'teacher.' I'm a teacher, and my students are people with my guidebooks." |