| By
Sherri LaReaux Whoever
says fairy tales dont come true hasnt met Gloria Bohan.
Her story reads like a fairy tale of grand proportions: a school
teacher from Manhattan meets the man of her dreams and plans the
wedding. The couple saves enough to host their reception and honeymoon
on the cruise ship, the "Queen Elizabeth." The newlyweds
move to a sleepy Virginia town named Fredericksburg, and Gloria,
still elated from her cruising experience dreams of running a small
business that allows her to travel. In 1972, she starts Omega World
Travel. Twenty-nine years later, with 200 offices, 1,000 employees
worldwide and $612 million in sales last year alone, Bohan reigns
supreme as queen of all metropolitan Washington woman-owned businesses
(according to the Washington Business Journal, June 15-22,
2000).
"I
never thought about making it an empire," says Bohan, a soft-haired
blonde with baby doll eyes. "I guess you just have to give
yourself to something you really believe in. I wiped out a lot of
other things in my life to devote myself to business," she
says, adding quietly that she sometimes regrets never having her
own children. "You have to look at the good things that happen
in your life and count your blessings and go on from there, however.
It crosses my mind that I am a businesswoman and Im not ashamed
of it
The thing I really do enjoy is having some control over
what I want to do. I dont have investors or directors to answer
to."
Its
oddly obvious that Omega is the child Bohan never bore she
mothers her company with every shred of care and attention. And
Bohan has survived every growing pain and temper tantrum Omega could
throw her way. A study of her company is like a history lesson
Bohan lived through the dawn of the computer age in the 70s,
a wrenching economic recession in the 80s, and the dawn of
the Internet age in the 90s. Her thoughtful beginnings are
a textbook example of intelligent business management Bohan
studied her industry and the competition. The only other travel
agency in Fredericksburg at the time wasnt delivering tickets
and closed its doors at 5 p.m., just as the rest of the workforce
was heading home. In turn, Omega stayed open until 7 p.m., and Bohan
went door to door introducing herself and delivering brochures about
her services. She took the work whenever she could get it
whether it was chartering a plane to Disney World or securing a
bus for a tour of the Amish country no task was considered
too large or small. Within a year of starting her business, however,
Bohan realized that her customer base in Fredericksburg was limited.
She jumped at the opportunity to purchase a tiny agency in Woodbridge
for $2,000 one that came complete with an ad in the Yellow
Pages. Overhead was low the monthly lease payment, a few
office furnishings, and "a huge plant for $120, which I thought
was overpriced," and she was in business. Thus began
Bohans commute between offices, adding to her workday and
subtracting time from her personal life. In 1978, after working
yet another night until 9 p.m., Bohan arrived home to a quiet house
and her husband already tucked into bed. "I havent had
my dinner yet," he grumped. "I havent had my lunch
yet. We need to talk," Bohan retorted. They worked out a schedule
for meals, and within a few years, her husband, Daniel, was employed
at Omega.
Common
sense has been the mainstay of many of Bohans business decisions.
When personal computers first emerged on the scene in the late 70s,
Omega was among the first travel agencies to switch to automation.
When a major air carrier began presenting travelers with "buy
one, get one free" travel vouchers, Bohan sent members of her
maintenance crew down to the airport, with their pockets and socks
bulging with cash. There, they met travelers at the exit gate and
bought "buy one, get one free" vouchers for $40 or $50
from those with no future travel plans. Omega then sold thousands
of these transferable flight coupons to their customers, saving
them 50 percent of the cost of a regular flight, which amounted
to substantial money and built a cache of funds for Omegas
growth into offices in downtown Washington, Baileys Crossroads
and other high-visibility areas. "My concept was that you need
to be close to your customers," Bohan says.
Her
vision of human touch and easy accessibility led to a last minute
offer to bid for government travel services. It was 1982, and a
large travel agency that had previously won the U.S. governments
$26 million contract was failing. "If the government doesnt
understand their bills, they dont pay," says Bohan, adding
that the prior contractor failed to maintain careful invoicing records,
which led to its demise. On a Friday night, Bohan got the call that
the governments travel business would be split into smaller
contracts. On Saturday morning, Bohan presented her bid and was
awarded a $6 million contract at a time when her whole company was
logging $8 million in travel sales.
The
notoriety from this overnight success threw Omega into a whole new
working arena. As president and CEO of one of the largest government
travel contractors, Bohan was instrumental in forming the "Society
of Travel Agents in Government" in 1984. Last year the group
changed its name to the "Society of Government Travel Professionals"
to include car rental companies, hotels, and other organizations
that cater to the government.
She
attributes Omegas success to her family of qualified employees,
some of whom have been with the organization since the very beginning.
"If you dont have a loyal staff to call on, youre
in trouble." Bohan travels regularly, often with her husband,
to various offices around the country (and to the extension office
in London, which was added in 1995) to get to know her agents and
build team spirit. "People want to know what youre about,
what your story is and what you believe in." Because of that,
Omegas website includes pictures of agents to personalize
the act of Internet travel window-shopping, and Omega is a supporter
of affiliate agents who telecommute from home.
These
days, Omega has sacrificed some of its glitzy, high-profile storefronts
for efficient telephone and web support centers to meet the demands
of high-speed business travel. The company shaves overhead by consolidating
nearby offices and developing new worksites in secondary cities
and less urbanized locales where employee turnover, standard of
living and office rent is often lower.
And
Bohan has jumped on the Internet bandwagon, with Cruise.com, which
was formed in 1998. As the number one cruise seller on the Net,
this website can be seen as a return to Bohans roots
to her happy honeymoon memories. For more information about Omega
World Travel, visit www.omegatravel.com.
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