From Travel Dreams to Real Jobs: Surat’s Tapi Travel Expo 2025 Was More Than Just a Showcase
By PNN | Updated: August 8, 2025 10:54 IST2025-08-08T10:45:21+5:302025-08-08T10:54:52+5:30
Surat (Gujarat) [India], August 7: On a humid August morning, before the crowds arrived and the banners fluttered high, ...

From Travel Dreams to Real Jobs: Surat’s Tapi Travel Expo 2025 Was More Than Just a Showcase
Surat (Gujarat) [India], August 7: On a humid August morning, before the crowds arrived and the banners fluttered high, something quite ordinary happened that felt… symbolic. A young woman, notebook in hand, stood quietly near Gate 2 of the Indoor Stadium, scanning the list of booths at the TAAPI Travel Expo 2025. She wasn't there to plan a holiday. She was looking for work – or maybe, just a place to start again.
Over the next two days, she'd find both.
That's the kind of ripple this year's TTE-2025, hosted by the TAAPI Association, created in Surat. It wasn't just a showcase of airline discounts and fancy resorts. It became a space of stories, of first steps, unexpected connections, and for many – hope that didn't come printed on a glossy brochure.
A Start That Felt Bigger Than Ceremony
The event was formally flagged off at the Indoor Stadium on Ghod-dod Road on August 3, with the kind of dignitary presence you’d expect at a major city event. Names like Shri Nikhil Madrasi (SGCCI President), Shri Ashok Jirawala (FOGWA President), and Sushree Vandana Seth (VP, Akhil Hind Mahila Parishad) brought both gravity and applause. The Mayor of Surat gave it a warm push – talking not just about tourism, but its deeper contribution to jobs, economy, and cultural pride.
Nikhil Madrasi probably said it best:
“Events like this tell us how far Surat has come. We're not just trading goods anymore – we're exporting experience.”
By the time the speeches ended, over 2,000 people had already passed through the gates.
More Than Deals: The Quiet Power of Human Exchange
There were more than 170 exhibitors, offering everything from Diwali tour packages to remote eco-stays. Sure, there were crowd-pleasers: hourly lucky draws, flash discounts, selfies with regional mascots.
But you had to look a little closer to see where the real action was.
In quieter corners, job seekers were submitting CVs. Students from local institutes were taking notes, not flyers. At some booths, interviews were happening right on the spot. In total, more than 3,000 job openings were shared – a number that surprised even the organisers.
One exhibitor, a hotelier from Rajasthan, mentioned he hadn't expected to meet so many capable young women. “They knew their tech, they knew the industry… and they just needed a chance,” he said, tucking away a stack of resumes for follow-up.
And that's the kind of undercurrent that ran through the expo – especially for the 500+ women who came not as tourists, but as future business owners, travel consultants, and marketers. Many sat in on special mentoring sessions. Some walked out with business ideas. A few even found collaborators on the spot.
Day Two: When Business Dressed Down and Got Real
The second day was all B2B. But again, it didn't feel stiff or scripted. There was a sense that everyone here – from small-town agents to larger hospitality firms – were actually listening to each other.
Over 500 professionals attended. Some scribbled down WhatsApp numbers on leaflets. Others did quick demo pitches on iPads. What stood out was how organic it all was – no stage management, no overuse of buzzwords. Just real conversations about where tourism in India is going.
Vinesh Shah, President of TAAPI Association, said it best:
“We wanted this to feel like a community, not a transaction. And I think we managed that.”
A Future Carved Quietly: TAAPI Travel Institute
Just as the energy was peaking, TAAPI VP Jignesh Patel dropped a little surprise: Surat will soon have a TAAPI Travel Institute – a dedicated centre for career courses in tourism and hospitality.
Not an announcement for applause. But for direction.
The idea is to build a pipeline of talent, trained with both knowledge and humility – the kind the industry so often forgets it needs.
For many of the students who visited TTE-2025, this bit of news felt like an open door.
When an Expo Becomes Something Else Entirely
By the time the booths were being packed up, there wasn't much fanfare. But the stories lingered.
A woman from Varachha signed her first-ever partnership deal to sell custom tour packages. A 21-year-old hotel management student walked out with an internship offer. An elderly couple left clutching a leaflet for a Northeast India tour – a dream they had shelved for years.
That's the thing about events like this. The metrics matter – 2,000+ visitors, 170+ exhibitors, 3,000+ job openings – yes, impressive. But what sticks is the smaller stuff. The real stuff.
Maybe next year, that girl at Gate 2 will be the one behind the counter, offering someone else their first opportunity. That's how travel changes people – even when they don't move an inch.
Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor
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