Saturday, January 23, 2010

Spyns 2010 Tour de France Trips: Armstrong "I'll be doing some racing in 2011."

http://www.tdf-tours.com/

An Armstrong Victory in 2011?

Witness history as Lance Armstrong competes for an unprecedented 8th win in the 2010 Tour de France. Spyns clients will see the final tour stages and watch the battle between rivals Lance Armstrong and Alberto Contador. A combative Armstrong has also mused about his chances in next year's tour.

The rivalry between Tour de France champions Lance Armstrong and Alberto Contador is healthy and good for cycling, the president of the sport's world body, Pat McQuaid, said Saturday. Contador won last year's tour as a teammate of Armstrong's but has since been critical of the seven-time Tour winner, saying their relationship was virtually "nonexistent."Armstrong has more tactfully denied Contador's claims that he lacked support from his Astana teammates and team management during last July's Tour.

McQuaid told a news conference in Adelaide on Saturday, during the Tour Down Under, that the war of words between Armstrong and Contador was better than the doping controversies that have often hurt cycling."I see it as a healthy rivalry, I don't see it as being over the top," UCI president McQuaid said."They're both saying things to position themselves in the leadup to the Tour (de France) and that's a strategic aspect that there's always been throughout cycling. I don't think there's anything unhealthy about it. I think it's good for the sport."The 38-year-old Armstrong will ride this year's Tour de France for his new U.S.-based Team Radioshack. He returned to competitive cycling last year after a 3½-year retirement lured by the desire to win the world's most famous cycling race for an eighth time.

Armstrong is competing in the six-day Tour Down Under and Saturday delivered a strong hint that this cycling season will not be his last. There had been strong speculation that Armstrong would retire for good at the end of the current season but he now appears to dismiss that possibility."I suspect I'll be doing some racing in 2011. I don't know if it will be a full schedule," Armstrong said.

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Spyns is an active travel company based in Whister, BC (Canada). With Spyns see the final 5 (of 6) stages during our 2010 Tour de France trips running July 18-26, 2010. For more information, please visit our website http://www.tdf-tours.com/ or http://www.spyns.com/. To make a reservation, please call 1.888.825.4720 or email info@tdf-tours.com or info@spyns.com.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Spyns Tours: How it All Started

http://www.spyns.com/
http://www.tdf-tours.com/

Sales for Spyns' 2010 Tour de France trips have been brisk despite the US downturn. In fact, sales have been stronger than during the boom years begging the question, "What crisis?" Spyns has a better reputation, better web rankings, or much better tours than when I started the company so I decided to post about our humble beginnings. As you'll ready shortly, nothing in my past meant Spyns was pre-destined to become the largest tour operator for Pamplona's running of the bulls.

My (brief) Resumé

From 1998 to 2003, I worked in finance in my native Canada and truly loved every minute of it. A graduate of Queen's Law (Class of '98), I moved west and worked in mergers & acquisitions. Law firms weren't really hiring at the time and my laclustre grades made me look elsewhere so I found a position in finance. My first transaction was a shareholder dispute with a large number of Swiss shareholders so I traveled there quite frequently. I never ended up practicing law and don't really regret it when I hear my former classmates describe the tedious life in a lawfirm. Anyhow, I eventually worked for a Swiss-backed fund, started my own fund, sold out in 2003 and moved to France 'to retire'. The next phase will explain how Spyns came to life.

Early Guiding Days

Retirement lasted exactly 3 days. Bored and restless, I took a position as a guide with a tiny bike tour company with just myself and another guide (a great Swiss woman named 'Fanny') leading all the trips. At that time, they only really offered Burgundy tours. Fanny and I shared a small company apartment in Beaune (Burgundy) where we would stay during the Burgundy trips. Any time off I would spend with my French family. From my first tour, I was hooked. I had always loved cycling, wine, people, and travel but really just fell into the job. Spyns wasn't even an idea at that point.

Spyns the Start-Up

I have always described myself as a reluctant entrepreneur because I don't just rush from idea to idea or business to business. I had some business experience, albeit in finance, but worked much better as part of team rather than as a groundbreaker. As such, I stayed with the small but growing cycling tour company first as a guide and then, briefly, as manager. I would have stayed but it was obvious the job would always be seasonal and the salary was ridiculously low (paid in dollars but my expenses were in euros). There were quite a number of bike guides working in Beaune at the time, many of whom had been with their respective companies for 10 years or more. I feared becoming one of them: 40-something; little money; no job security; bizarre mid-Atlantic accent (sort of like Katherine Hepburn); and waiting all winter for the spring tour season to start to fund "that travel book." After a ridiculously lowball offer from my former employer to work as manager, I thought, "This can't be too difficult." and Spyns was born. Little did I know what was to come.

Waitin' By the Phone

For anyone who has started their own business and succeeded, I applaud you. Working in finance spoiled me because I could work within a structure. Even when working for my former employer's puny company, at least he had letterhead. As someone who previously evaluated large corporations based on their financial statements and perhaps a quick visit to the plant, I was removed from the incredible people who take an idea, buck the naysayers, and build a business. Going from fiancier, to employee, to entrepreneur wasn't easy. With Spyns, I was about to get a rude awakening.

Spyns Humble Beginnings

As a virtual business, Spyns needed a good website. "No problem." I thought it would take a few weeks to throw something together. I somehow forgot that I'd have to write every line on the Spyns website. The launch was months behind and I still didn't have any clients. I also had a dot.com like naïveté thinking you'd just throw out a website and people would rush to travel with you. What folly! I didn't get my first phone enquiry for almost 3 months. I also took for granted that I only had to lead the trips with my former employers, not do all the marketing, reservations, billings etc. And when I did finally have reservations, Spyns had no way to accept credit cards. That led to a merchant account, billing system, etc. Nuts and bolts things for sure but starting a company is like building a car from scratch. You have no idea how much time and effort it takes.

Years later I'm not at all nostalgic about Spyns 1.0, however I now have a greater understanding of how much it takes to go from concept, to creation, to success. As I've written before, I truly wouldn't change it for anything. With Spyns, there have certainly been ups (running with the bulls) and downs (the lesbian triathlon group that wanted my blood) but I was struck by how far we'd come when potential clients asked if they could be placed on a waiting list for our 2010 Tour de France trips. Sometimes I still feel like the young guy working out of a bedroom office (with my "desk" crushed between my bed and the wall) praying someone, anyone, would call and take a trip with us.

And now we're offering Tour de France trips staying at the 5-star Crillon and seeing the Col du Tourmalet finish (Stage 17) with helicopters! Thanks to Spyns, I've also biked through Ireland, France, Italy and Spain and seen some incredible festivals and sporting events. This post is dedicated to my family to thank them for their unwavering support. I'd also like to thank all former Spyns clients. You've been incredibly supportive over the years. For this, I extend my heartfelt thanks.

================================================= For more information about our 2010 Tour de France trips to see Lance in France, please visit our website: http://www.tdf-tours.com/ or http://www.spyns.com/. You can also call us toll-free at 1.888.825.4720 or via email at info@tdf-tours.com or info@spyns.com.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Spyns Tour de France: Lance Down Under

http://www.tdf-tours.com/

Spyns Tour de France — Andre Greipel of Germany won the first stage of the Tour Down Under on Tuesday, while Lance Armstrong finished among the peleton in 46th place after a "fairly uneventful day." Greipel won here in 2008, but his promising 2009 campaign ended after only three of six stages when he was seriously injured in a collision with a parked police motorbike. The worst of Greipel's various injuries was a broken collarbone which kept him out of competition for four months, severely damaging his 2009 season. Greipel said he no longer thinks about the crash after he broke from a bunched sprint Tuesday to win a 141-kilometre stage between the rural towns of Clare and Tanunda north of Adelaide.

He later praised the work of fellow riders in his U.S.-based Team Columbia for his win, which left him with the tour leader's orange jersey and a four-second advantage on general classification.
"It was a good finish and a good warmup for the team," he said. "We took responsibility for the whole stage. The team made the difference. We started as a team and finished as a team."
Gert Steegmans took second place for Armstrong's new Radioshack Team - which made its official ProTour debut Tuesday - while Steegman's Belgian compatriot Jurgen Roelandts was third.

Tens of thousands of spectators watched Tuesday's stage, lining the streets of small townships or waiting patiently outside remote homesteads for riders to pass. Armstrong raced among the peleton for most of the stage, which undulated through some of Australia's richest wine-growing country and finished in the pack, credited with Greipel's winning time of three hours 15 minutes 30 seconds. "I feel pretty good, but it was not an easy day. It was very up and down," Armstrong said. "Overall, it was a fairly uneventful day." Armstrong dodged a crash only 300 metres after the start which brought down almost 60 of the 132 riders, among them two-time Tour de France runner-up Cadel Evans of Australia who had to replace a broken shoe.
"It was a quick bit of work with the electrical tape and it was all right," said Evans, who quickly caught the bunch and finished 50th to sit 53rd overall.

Much of the stage was dominated by a breakaway involving young Australian Timothy Roe, a member of Armstrong's development squad, Switzerland's Martin Kohler and France's Biel Kadri. The breakaway group led by as much as nine minutes 45 seconds, but came back to the peleton less than 20 kilometres from the finish. Kohler won the two intermediate sprints Tuesday to lead the sprint classification while Roe was first over the top of steep Menglers Hill to win the King of the Mountain jersey.

For more information about Spyns and our Tour de France Tours, please visit our website http://www.tdf-tours.com/ or http://www.spyns.com/ or call us toll-free at 1.888.825.4720.