A travel, resort & resort-construction network — built and run with AI, anchored at wholevoyage.com and flagshipped by Sandalwood on Koh Samui. Curate the experience, pioneer a niche, own the asset, compound the value — every line built from real industry numbers (70 sources).
Don’t guess. Sequence.
We call it the INTRAV model, after the pioneering luxury-travel company that proved it: four moves, in order — curate demand, pioneer a defensible niche, own the appreciating asset, then compound the value — run here by an AI build engine that does the work of a hundred hands. (The backstory behind the name lives here.)
Sell the experience of Koh Samui through an AI-built guide & booking cluster that captures travellers at the dreaming stage — owned demand, commission-free via SiteMinder.
Own a defensible niche the OTAs commoditize and lose: managed boutique villas, private charters, curated experiences — and the cruise/expedition lane Barney invented, surfaced through HulloShips.
The venture builds assets of its own — the demand network, the owned content/IP, the fleet — appreciating and saleable in their own right. The villas stay the builder’s; we build value around them, never claiming them.
Recurring booking EBITDA × a travel multiple, plus villa equity, plus the network & IP — the whole thing is saleable. Cash funds the build; the build compounds the value to $4M.
All of it new. None of it his.
This $4M is entirely new value the venture creates — separate from, and on top of, the villa revenue the resort-builder has already established, which stays wholly his. The plan never claims a share of the existing business. It is built from four new, buildable components:
Total: ~$4.0M of new value — the demand network, the voyage line, the owned IP, and the cash they generate — all built on top of an established villa business that remains entirely the builder’s.
OTAs take 15–30% per booking (Airbnb’s host fee is 15.5%, Booking effectively 25–30% with promos, Hostaway). SiteMinder charges a flat fee and 0% commission — so every direct booking keeps the margin OTAs skim. ~65% of direct bookings still start with an OTA discovery (RateGain), so our content cluster converts that “billboard effect” into owned demand.
Koh Samui has 3,055 villa-rental properties and supply grew 34% YoY (C9 Hotelworks) — thousands of owners fighting OTA fees and weak marketing. WholeVoyage signs them, lifts their revenue ~20%, and takes a 15–20% fee. This is the scalable, saleable core.
The demand network, the content cluster, HulloShips and the fleet are appreciating, saleable assets in their own right, at real multiples (SuiteOp, FE International). Koh Samui’s 2.78M air arrivals (+21% YoY, C9 Hotelworks) give the network plenty to market. A U.S.-owned Thai company can hold the venture’s assets up to 100% under the U.S.–Thai Treaty of Amity (U.S. Embassy).
Small/expedition ships are 70%+ of the cruise fleet and the fastest-growing segment (CLIA). Used small vessels trade at $3–25M; brokerage pays ~10%. HulloShips makes WholeVoyage the place that market is searched — an under-served niche, re-opened.
One operator. An AI build engine. A hundred sites.
WholeTech already proves the model: ~200 niche sites, built and run with AI by one person, each ranking for its own slice of a market and cross-linking into a network worth more than the sum of its pages. WholeVoyage runs the same play in travel — a cluster of guide and booking sites that each own a search niche (a destination, a villa type, a kind of voyage), capture travellers at the dreaming stage, and feed both the booking funnel and the network’s own value. Owned demand, at a content scale no traditional travel brand can staff by hand.
A starter network, from domains available today (~$13/yr each):
kohsamuiinsider.com · samuivoyage.com · thaiislandguide.com · gulfofsiamvoyages.com
thaivillaguide.com · poolvillaguide.com · samuiweddingvillas.com
hulloships.com · smallshipguide.com · islandhopvoyages.com
thairesortguide.com
wholevoyages.com
Each becomes an AI-built guide that ranks, captures email, and books — the content & IP network (component C of the $4M), compounding as it grows. hulloships.com (available now) anchors the cruise-marketplace concept.
The edge isn’t bigger ships — it’s smaller ones.
The proven move in cruising is the small, shallow-draft vessel that slips into harbors, coves and island anchorages the mega-liners can’t reach. That access is the product. WholeVoyage builds the same advantage in three deliberate steps, sized from the villa up:
A small private ship or motor-yacht sized to Sandalwood’s exact guest capacity — so a villa booking extends into a private island voyage. One group, one crew, “stay & sail.” Lowest entry cost, highest margin, and impossible for an OTA to copy.
The proven move: the smallest feasible shallow-draft expedition vessel that reaches the Gulf of Thailand, Andaman and wider SE-Asian island harbors the big lines can’t. Differentiation by access — the itineraries no one else can sell.
Once the small-ship experience is proven and booked, scale to the economically optimal small-ship size — enough berths for sustainable cruise economics, still small enough to keep the access advantage.
Used small/expedition vessels trade at roughly $3–25M (YachtWay), and HulloShips is how we find and value them — in the fastest-growing segment in cruising (CLIA). The fleet is the long arc of the plan: villa → voyage → line.
Seasonality. Samui villa occupancy swings from ~39% (September) to ~76% (February) (AirDNA) — the network & content engine must smooth shoulder seasons with promotions and feeder-market targeting (Germany/UK/France lead arrivals).
Ownership & law. Foreigners can’t own land outright; 2024 enforcement ended nominee structures. We use leasehold + the Amity treaty + a BOI path (Savills, Siam Legal). Legal structure is step one, not an afterthought.
Construction & financing. Island builds carry a 5–10% logistics premium and need a 10–15% contingency; foreign LTV is only 50–60% at 6.5–8.5% (Tranio). Budget conservatively; phase the build.
Concentration. One villa is fragile; the plan’s strength is the network + recurring fees + content, which diversify away from any single asset or season.
The villas are the resort-builder’s alone. Sandalwood and every villa — the land, the design, the construction, the development and the Thai-side operations — belong entirely to the builder on the ground. That craft is the heart of the venture, and it stays wholly his.
WholeVoyage is the demand engine around it. The AI content, booking and distribution network (proven across ~200 sites), marketing, SEO, the HulloShips concept and the numbers — the layer that fills the rooms the builder creates. It markets and books; it does not build.
The April 9, 2028 date is a quiet nod to the travel-industry forebear whose company gave the model its name.