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We often look far away — and make things complicated — for what lies three hours from home, within easy reach.
In this episode of Unitour Talks, we make the case for Morocco as one of the most powerful, and most underestimated, settings for incentive trips, seminars and corporate events.
We unpack the element of surprise — what happens to a team's curiosity the moment "three days in Morocco" lands in their inbox — then the geography most planners miss: a few hours' flight from Europe, no jet lag, and a density of settings that lets you move from a refined riad in the Marrakech medina to a luxury bivouac at the foot of the dunes, from an Atlas valley to a windswept Atlantic beach, in a single drive.
We talk about what a real change of scenery does to a team — shared tagine, six-handed cooking, dinner under the stars with no signal, no screens, just faces lit by the fire — and why Moroccan hospitality is closer to an art than a service. We close on four practical rules every planner needs (season, anticipation, rhythm, local partner), and the idea that drives everything we do at Unitour: an event abroad is already a bridge — between colleagues, between a company and its people, between cultures.
A 30 minute conversation for event planners, corporate buyers and incentive specialists ready to look south. Read the original article on unitour.ma.
By Unitour MarocWe often look far away — and make things complicated — for what lies three hours from home, within easy reach.
In this episode of Unitour Talks, we make the case for Morocco as one of the most powerful, and most underestimated, settings for incentive trips, seminars and corporate events.
We unpack the element of surprise — what happens to a team's curiosity the moment "three days in Morocco" lands in their inbox — then the geography most planners miss: a few hours' flight from Europe, no jet lag, and a density of settings that lets you move from a refined riad in the Marrakech medina to a luxury bivouac at the foot of the dunes, from an Atlas valley to a windswept Atlantic beach, in a single drive.
We talk about what a real change of scenery does to a team — shared tagine, six-handed cooking, dinner under the stars with no signal, no screens, just faces lit by the fire — and why Moroccan hospitality is closer to an art than a service. We close on four practical rules every planner needs (season, anticipation, rhythm, local partner), and the idea that drives everything we do at Unitour: an event abroad is already a bridge — between colleagues, between a company and its people, between cultures.
A 30 minute conversation for event planners, corporate buyers and incentive specialists ready to look south. Read the original article on unitour.ma.