For years, incentive planning followed a familiar formula. Pick somewhere warm. Add a rooftop dinner, a few excursions and some downtime by a pool, then call it incentive travel.
And whilst there is nothing wrong with that model, the most effective incentive programmes have never succeeded simply because of temperature.
People do not return from a great incentive talking about the weather. They talk about the moments, the experiences they would never have booked for themselves, and the connections that lasted long after everyone got home.
A strong incentive is not simply a reward. It is a business tool. It strengthens relationships, reinforces behaviours, builds loyalty and creates measurable momentum.
And increasingly, the smartest incentive strategies are proving that long-haul flights and predictable destinations are not always the answer. In many cases, a more intentional programme, sometimes closer to home, can deliver even more.
Here, we take a look at incentive travel through a slightly different lens.
Experience first. Destination second.
A destination matters. Of course it does. But it is only one ingredient.
Too often, incentive planning starts backwards. A location is chosen first, then the programme is built around it. That can work. But it can also create generic experiences that look impressive on paper while leaving little lasting impact.
The strongest incentive programmes begin with the audience and the outcome.
The most memorable incentives feel personal. Not everyone wants the same thing. Some attendees thrive on thrills. Others value privacy, exceptional food, culture or time to reset. A great programme reflects that.
The real return on an incentive is not measured by how far people travelled. It is measured by what happens afterwards:
- stronger engagement
- improved loyalty
- better communication
- increased performance
- conversations that continue long after everyone gets home
The challenge, of course, is measuring those outcomes. That’s exactly what we explore in our article on ROI vs ROE: Building incentive programmes that prove their worth.
Does ‘closer to home’ mean lower ambition?
In our opinion, absolutely not.
Expectations for incentive travel have changed. Senior teams have limited time. The quality of experience and personal touches are now important. Attendees increasingly seek experiences that are unique, personal, and memorable—whether through boutique exclusivity, access to unexpected places, or moments that stand out as truly special rather than predictable.
The most effective incentives are no longer necessarily the most exotic or remote. Instead, they are the ones that feel thoughtfully designed.
In the current climate, businesses are making more intentional decisions around travel, time and environmental impact, creating an opportunity to rethink what a standout incentive actually looks like.
Less transit can mean more meaningful time together. Simpler logistics can create greater flexibility. Familiar geography can still feel extraordinary when the programme design is right. Not to mention, a closer-to-home option enables further accessibility and inclusivity for all. The key is to stop treating proximity as a limitation and start seeing it as an advantage.
UK-based incentive ideas that feel different.
Some of the most compelling incentive options are much closer than many teams assume. Here we explore some of asembl’s top picks.