Becoming A Guide Wherever You Are
Most people think you need to live somewhere like Washington, D.C. to give a great tour.
You don’t.
You just need to know something… that other people don’t notice.
Think about where you live right now.
  • A street you’ve walked a hundred times
  • A building with a story nobody talks about
  • A park, a neighborhood, a corner with history or meaning
To you, it’s normal.
To someone else… it’s new.
That’s where a tour begins.
Not with a script.Not with a license.But with a point of view.
I’ve been guiding for over 10 years, and one thing I’ve learned is this:
People don’t remember everything you say.They remember how you made them see something differently.
There’s a real market for that.
People travel every day looking for:
  • Local insight
  • Unique experiences
  • Something that feels real—not generic
And most cities don’t have enough people offering that in a personal way.
You don’t need to know everything.
You just need:
  • 3–5 interesting stops
  • A story that connects them
  • And the confidence to share it
That’s a tour.
If you had to build one where you live…
What would you show first?
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Dion Blacknall
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Becoming A Guide Wherever You Are
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