Supersquad lets any creator organize trips for followers – not just travel influencers – capturing the margin that usually goes to tour operators.
ENTRY ANGLES
Platforms enabling creators to productize experiences beyond travel (retreats, live events, learning experiences) · Creator-led group travel as marketing distribution channel · Positioning active/experiential travel over passive relaxation
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Creator audience engagement and distribution, Experience design and logistics management, Group booking and payments infrastructure
Supersquad lets influencers organize trips for their followers.
The distinctive angle: this isn't just for travel creators. Any influencer can do it – though the platform sensibly suggests choosing trip themes that align with the creator's personality, niche, and audience.
The format is wide open: fitness retreats, adventure travel, cultural immersion, luxury getaways, or anything else. And the scale doesn't have to be ambitious – a day trip within the city, a weekend road trip, a neighborhood event all qualify.
Influencers don't need to become travel planners either. They connect with a Supersquad specialist, share their profile and audience information, and run a survey for their followers with questions the platform helps design.
From that input, Supersquad proposes a detailed trip plan with curated activities.
The influencer then promotes the trip to their audience and drives them to a custom microsite Supersquad builds for each trip – where followers can view the itinerary and book. The microsite also includes a dashboard where the creator can track bookings in real time.
Platform specialists support the creator throughout the promotion process, advising on messaging and providing ready-to-use content.
Each trip comes with a local host – sourced by Supersquad – responsible for welcoming the group, managing logistics on the ground, and handling issues as they arise.
The key condition: the influencer goes too. Their presence is the main draw, and it makes the marketing much more credible.
The upside for creators: flights, accommodation, meals, and local experiences are covered. The catch: those costs are deducted from the commission the creator earns when the trip runs. Effectively free, conditionally.
Supersquad was founded this year and recently closed its first funding round – approximately $250K.
Travel creators have been monetizing travel for years, and tour operators have long worked with them. None of that is new.
What has changed is where travel inspiration comes from. Three quarters of people now say social media influences where they travel – outpacing traditional media (64%) and even friends and family (47%). The shift has reached the point where the creator is often a more trusted voice on destination than a guidebook or a travel agent.
Startups are starting to productize that influence – and they're taking notably different approaches.
Unravel ([related review](/review/ne-vylozhil-fotochki-schitaj-ne-otdohnul)) raised $1.25M for a marketplace that looks like a short-video feed: creator partners promote destinations, and followers can book directly from the app. Travly ([covered here](/review/ljudi-stali-vybirat-glazami)) democratizes that further – any user can post travel videos and earn a 5% commission when a booking follows. Essentialist ([reviewed here](/review/millionery-popali-v-dyru)) went the opposite direction entirely: $2,600/year memberships for custom itineraries curated by journalists and creators, raising $11.9M.
TrovaTrip ([covered previously](/review/vlijatelnye-puteshestvenniki)) is the closest to Supersquad in mechanics – it connects creators with followers who want to travel together, has raised $20M, and focuses primarily on travel, fitness, and food creators. Supersquad's ambition is to pull in a much wider creator pool: people who've never thought of themselves as travel organizers but who have loyal audiences and something worth gathering around.
The real competitive thesis here is that the non-travel influencer has untapped leverage. A fitness creator, a book club host, a cooking personality – each has an audience that wants to go deeper than content. And trips are uniquely valuable as content fuel: pre-trip anticipation, live moments during the journey, post-trip recap. The content cycle runs indefinitely.
Buried in small print on Supersquad's website is a line worth highlighting: "Your followers want more than content. They want experiences." That's not just a tagline – it's a structural shift in what creators can offer.
The travel market is large, growing, and fully recovered from the pandemic – projected to exceed $1 trillion by 2027.
One clear recent trend, per American Express's latest research: travelers increasingly want experiences and active engagement rather than passive relaxation. Lying on a beach is no longer the default aspiration.
Given how much influence individual creators have over their audiences' decisions, group travel organized around a specific creator is a natural and potentially large segment. It's also one of the easiest to market – you reach it through the same creators who run the trips.
The opportunity spans a spectrum: from using creators as marketing distribution for travel products (Unravel and Travly) to helping creators design and run their own trip products (Supersquad and TrovaTrip). The more interesting space may be in the middle – platforms that let any creator with a loyal audience productize an experience, regardless of whether it involves travel at all. Group retreats, live events, immersive learning experiences, community gatherings. Travel is the clearest use case, but it's probably not the limit.