Tourism is built on trust, ethics, and long-term responsibility. Without these foundations, the industry collapses from within.

It is deeply concerning to see a pattern repeated again and again:

Someone joins a company, gets trained, gains experience, earns a salary, improves their lifestyle, and builds their know-how using the company’s resources. Then, instead of responding with loyalty, professionalism, and gratitude, they walk away and immediately launch a Facebook page or a website, attempting to compete without proper licensing, structure, or ethics.

Let’s be clear:

this is not ambition.

this is not entrepreneurship.

this is opportunism.


Tourism Is Not a Shortcut Business

True tourism development requires commitment, discipline, and respect for the profession. A person who leaves behind the values of loyalty and integrity cannot suddenly become a contributor to the growth of tourism. Values do not change when the logo changes.

Anyone who betrays the entity that trained them will likely betray:

the client the partner the destination itself

Because the issue is not technical skills — it is mindset.


Growth Requires Ethics, Not Exploitation

Tourism thrives when people:

respect the opportunity they were given acknowledge who invested time and trust in them understand that success is earned, not stolen

Launching an unlicensed operation after years of paid training is not innovation. It weakens the industry, damages fair competition, and harms the reputation of the destination as a whole.


Real Entrepreneurs Take the Right Path

If someone truly wants to build their own business, the path is clear and respectable:

get properly educated gain experience ethically obtain legal licenses start independently, transparently, and responsibly

This is how industries grow. This is how trust is built. This is how tourism becomes sustainable.


Final Thought

Tourism is not just a job — it is a national image and a shared responsibility.

People driven by short-term personal gain cannot contribute to long-term industry growth. They consume value instead of creating it.

A strong tourism sector is built by professionals with principles, not by individuals chasing quick wins at the expense of others.