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How Erin Pavane Grew a Yacht Company From 16 Charters to 80

How Erin Pavane Grew a Yacht Company From 16 Charters to 80
Photo Courtesy: Sanderson Yachting

By Kate Sarmiento

Luxury travel has a strange habit of pretending everything is effortless. The villa appears. The yacht appears. The cocktails appear. Somebody hands over a chilled towel before anyone even realizes they needed one. Meanwhile, behind the scenes, half the industry is held together by spreadsheets that should have retired years ago and sales tactics that still sound like they were written in 2009, which becomes painfully obvious the second a client asks a detailed question and gets a vague answer wrapped in luxury language.

That disconnect catches up eventually because travelers have changed, high-net-worth clients have changed, and travel advisors definitely have changed. Nobody wants to spend six figures on a luxury yacht charter only to feel like they are guessing their way through the process while somebody tosses around words like “bespoke” and “curated” without actually explaining anything.

That is part of what makes the recent turnaround at Sanderson Yachting worth paying attention to because the company already had the reputation, industry relationships, and history long before the growth happened. It had already spent two decades booking private yacht charter experiences around the world, from all-inclusive yacht charter catamarans in the British Virgin Islands to multi-million-dollar superyacht charter experiences across the Mediterranean. The foundation was there. The pace was not.

Then Erin Pavane stepped in as Partner and CEO, and the company went from roughly 16 charters a year to more than 80 in under twelve months. That kind of growth usually comes with chaos attached to it because fast growth tends to expose weak operations, shallow partnerships, and teams that were never actually prepared to scale. Plenty of luxury travel companies discover this right after they start celebrating, which makes the Sanderson Yachting story more interesting because the company somehow avoided the implosion stage almost entirely.

Mostly because the changes were not cosmetic. They were operational, personal, and sometimes uncomfortable in the way real business shifts usually are.

The Yacht Industry Got Too Comfortable Selling Appearances

The yacht industry has always tended to confuse access with expertise. Someone gets invited onto a boat once, posts a few marina photos, and suddenly they are calling themselves luxury charter specialists. Clients have become far more skeptical about that performance, especially after the pandemic reshaped how people spend money on travel because travelers started paying closer attention to experience quality, flexibility, and trust. Nearly 80% of luxury travelers now prioritize personalized experiences over standardized luxury offerings (Source: Tourwriter, 2025), which sounds obvious until realizing how much of the industry still operates like every client wants the same trip with slightly different wine pairings.

Erin Pavane approached the business differently because she already knew the yachts firsthand. Before officially stepping into leadership at Sanderson Yachting, she spent three years attending nearly every major yacht charter show in the world, and this was not the kind of attendance where somebody walks through for networking photos and leaves after champagne hour. She inspected hundreds of vessels personally, met crews, ate the food onboard, and paid attention to details most clients never think to ask about until they are stuck on a boat for a week, wondering why the “luxury” mattress feels suspiciously like something borrowed from a rental condo.

That level of familiarity matters more than the industry likes admitting because a yacht listing can look incredible online and still be completely wrong for a client. Some crews are amazing with families and terrible with corporate groups. Some yachts photograph beautifully, but feel cramped once twelve people start moving around at the same time. Some itineraries sound glamorous until guests realize they are spending more time relocating than actually enjoying where they are.

This is where Sanderson Yachting started separating itself because the company stopped acting like a booking engine and leaned harder into charter advisory. There is a huge difference there. Booking a luxury yacht charter is not the difficult part anymore because anybody can scroll through listings online. The internet solved that years ago. What clients actually need is somebody filtering the noise before they waste time or money on the wrong fit, especially when charter pricing alone can feel like somebody invented it during a stressful group project.

Clients Wanted Clarity. Travel Advisors Wanted: Backup

Travel advisors understand this problem immediately because yacht charters intimidate a lot of traditional advisors. Caribbean charters operate differently from Mediterranean charters. Some are all-inclusive charter experiences. Others involve VAT, APA, docking fees, provisioning expenses, fuel variables, and gratuities that clients somehow never expect, even after reading the contract twice. Half the confusion comes from the assumption that luxury automatically means one simple flat rate, and then travelers get quoted an APA and suddenly start googling acronyms at midnight while questioning every vacation decision they have ever made.

Sanderson Yachting leaned into education instead of avoiding those conversations, which turned out to matter a lot more than flashy branding. Advisors received more support. Clients received clearer explanations. Expectations became more realistic before anyone stepped on board, and that sounds like a small operational detail until remembering that most luxury travel complaints begin with mismatched expectations rather than actual service failures.

Honestly, the yacht industry has been overdue for that correction because there is something refreshingly practical about the way Sanderson Yachting approaches luxury. A lot of brands in this space talk about exclusivity like they are auditioning for a perfume commercial. Sanderson Yachting focuses more on functionality, which sounds less glamorous until realizing that functionality is exactly what travelers remember when they are spending that kind of money.

The company pays attention to which crews work best for multi-generational groups, which destinations make sense during shoulder season, and whether Croatia or Greece actually fits a client’s travel style instead of whichever destination happens to dominate social media that month. Clients notice the difference quickly because the recommendations feel informed instead of performative.

That level of transparency extends into the company’s technology as well because Sanderson Yachting invested heavily into giving clients and advisors access to nearly every yacht on the market through multiple APIs and permissions systems. Many charter companies only display selective inventory based on internal partnerships or limited integrations, which quietly pushes clients toward whatever inventory benefits the broker most. Sanderson Yachting took the opposite route and built visibility into the process itself.

That transparency builds trust faster than marketing slogans ever will.

It also helps that the company maintains strong industry credibility through its membership with MYBA, which carries significant weight inside the yacht charter world even if the average traveler does not recognize the acronym immediately. Advisors notice it. Brokers notice it. Industry professionals definitely notice it.

Luxury Travelers Became Less Impressed by Surface-Level Luxury

The timing of all this matters because luxury travelers are behaving differently now. People are taking fewer trips but spending more on the trips they actually care about. Multi-generational travel continues growing fast, particularly among affluent families looking for privacy and flexibility (Source: Market Intelo, 2025), and yacht charters fit neatly into that shift because they solve multiple problems at once without forcing travelers into rigid resort structures.

A family booking a BVI yacht charter can wake up in a different bay every morning without repacking once. A corporate group can host meetings, dinners, water sports, and downtime without coordinating six separate vendors. Even first-time charter guests are becoming more comfortable entering the space because companies like Sanderson Yachting have gotten better at removing the intimidation factor around booking.

That matters because yacht chartering spent years feeling weirdly inaccessible on purpose. The irony is that many travelers who can afford a private yacht charter still assume it is “not for them,” while spending similar amounts at luxury resorts where they still have to fight for restaurant reservations and hear somebody else’s screaming child during sunset cocktails.

The modern luxury traveler has less patience for performative luxury because the experience has to actually work. That operational mindset seems to be one of the biggest reasons Sanderson Yachting accelerated so quickly under Erin Pavane’s leadership, because the company did not reinvent yachting. It simply paid attention to all the parts the industry kept brushing aside.

Communication became sharper. Client matching became more intentional. Advisor relationships became stronger. The company modernized without flattening the personality out of the business, which happens constantly when legacy travel brands try to evolve, and suddenly every website sounds like it was generated by the same consultant wearing expensive sneakers.

Sanderson Yachting still feels personal, and that is harder to scale than people think.

The Future of Luxury Travel Belongs to Companies With Better Judgment

The next era of luxury travel probably belongs to companies that understand something surprisingly basic: clients do not want more options thrown at them. They want better judgment because judgment is the thing that prevents a luxury vacation from quietly becoming an expensive logistical problem.

That becomes even more important in private yacht chartering, where small details shape the entire experience. The right crew changes everything. The wrong itinerary can quietly ruin a trip that people spent a year planning. Travelers remember how a company handled stress, weather changes, last-minute requests, and complicated logistics far longer than they remember the welcome champagne waiting onboard.

Sanderson Yachting built its recent growth around that reality instead of chasing surface-level luxury branding, and the results showed up quickly. Whether someone is planning a superyacht charter in the Mediterranean, an all-inclusive yacht charter in the Caribbean, or looking for a trusted charter partner for their travel agency clients, the process works better when expertise comes from firsthand experience instead of recycled sales language.

The yachts matter. The destinations matter. The people guiding the experience matter more because travelers can tell when somebody actually knows what they are talking about, and right now, that alone is becoming a competitive advantage.

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