// Documentation · positioning

Why we
win.

Who the customer is, why the brand sounds the way it does, and where the four big OTAs leave a gap we own. This is the thesis everything else — brand, product, pricing — is built to serve.

Al carajo con la planeación.

Our customer doesn't plan — they decide tonight and head out at dawn. We don't fight that chaos, we put a price on it: the seats agencies couldn't sell, today and tomorrow, at half off. Forget the plan. Show up.

The thesis

// Six beliefs the whole product is built on. The brand sheet is their visual execution → Brand sheet.

01

The client is spontaneous

~90% locals, Instagram-driven, deciding last-minute. We build for the person choosing at 9pm what to do at 5am — not the planner with a spreadsheet.

El cliente no planea.
02

Empty seats are burned money

Gas, tolls, food, the extra guide — fixed costs don't care if the van is full. We turn the unsold spots into half-price adventures instead of dead weight.

Una banca vacía es dinero quemado.
03

Embrace the chaos

CDMX runs on last-minute. Agencies already discount in DMs on Thursdays; we just make it structured, fair, and out in the open.

Abraza el caos de la ciudad.
04

No itinerary, just discounts

Browse free, pay to go. A WhatsApp number, two taps, and you're out the door tomorrow — zero friction, no account, no customer-service queue.

Sin itinerario, solo descuentos.
05

Distinctive, never generic

No smooth AI mountains, no overused "epic." Hard shadows, bold type, a hand-stamped ticket feel — old-school and honest, so we never blur into the OTAs.

Nada de "épico" genérico.
06

Local and fair

Built for CDMX, not a global catalogue. Low commission so the agency keeps more, the customer pays nothing to look, and the money is ours to make right.

Local y justo, en pesos.

The competitive read

// What the four closest competitors do well (copy it) and where they leave a gap (our opening). From the founding meeting + a live UX study of each.

Competitor What they do well — copy it Where they fall short — our opening
GetYourGuide Reserve-now-pay-later + 24h free cancellation as the headline trust pair, near every CTA. Inline strikethrough original→deal price on the card. Compact meta capsule. Per-topic ratings + "Verified booking." Actively blocks same-day / next-day booking — the exact gap we exist to fill. No Today/Tomorrow badges, no spots-left urgency. Deals hidden as a % glyph in the date picker.
Viator Strong urgency / scarcity ("Booked 5+ times last week"), reserve-now-pay-later, 24h cancellation, mobile ticket, Tripadvisor review density. CDMX hiking spread thin across broad taxonomies; not organised around hiking. Aggressive bot-walls (a moat we can't and needn't replicate).
Civitatis Spanish is first-class. "When to book" line per activity. Hoy / Mañana quick-filters. Nationality + age tiered pricing in the participant picker. Graceful "no dates" fallback into the city listing. Spain-Spanish vosotros reads foreign to a CDMX audience. No difficulty / altitude rating on hikes — reviewers complain. No curated last-minute hub. Currency defaults to GBP.
México Travesías Clean card: photo + duration + pin + INCLUYE icon strip + bold MXN price. 4-step checkout with persistent summary. No-account "Consulta tu reservación." WhatsApp float with pre-filled message on every page. No shareable / deep-linkable URLs (JS form-post tokens) — terrible for SEO and social. No difficulty / distance / altitude. Deals static & manual. "Cotizar / Solicitar" fork adds friction vs instant book.
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The wedge

Nobody owns last-minute, same-day / tomorrow, discounted outdoor inventory with loud deal mechanics, deep-linkable pages, a Mexican-Spanish voice, and a difficulty / altitude band on every hike. That is our UX wedge.

Market frame

"Greater Mexico City" is a blend of urban-origin discovery and regional highland fulfilment — demand starts in the city and spills into day-trip mountain country: Iztaccíhuatl–Popocatépetl, Nevado de Toluca, Paso de Cortés, Ajusco / Pico del Águila, Los Dinamos, Desierto de los Leones, Tepozteco and La Malinche. The competitors that matter aren't the ones with the most product — they're the ones built for spontaneous discovery, flexible commitment, and short lead times.

Who counts as "the competitor" depends on what we are:

If we're a…Most direct competitorWhy
Marketplace / discovery layerGetYourGuideLocal hiking breadth + Today/Tomorrow availability + reserve-now-pay-later + marketplace economics, in one place.
Local guided-hikes operatorMéxico TravesíasOwns local fulfilment, MXN pricing, WhatsApp support, direct adventure credibility.
OTA-style resellerViatorAlready sits between the traveller and the local supplier, monetising operator inventory.
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The OTAs already sit on our supply

This isn't hypothetical. The same volcano trek is sold on Viator supplied by México Travesías, and both GetYourGuide and Viator list a meeting point in Condesa — the exact local supply and geography we'd aggregate is already being captured and monetised by an external marketplace layer.

// Three buyer segments: the general tourist (OTAs win on reach), the spontaneous mobile-first explorer (our segment, courted with last-minute messaging), and the serious outdoor participant (altitude warnings, summit products). Reference deal prices, illustrative as of Jun 2026 — GetYourGuide volcano ~$161→$129 · Viator ~$164.74→$131.80 · México Travesías Izta–Popo MXN 1,920 (from 2,400).

Table stakes we adopt

// Patterns the competitors proved work — we take them as baseline, then go louder.

  1. Loud deal mechanics — inline strikethrough + "−X%" / "Ahorra $Y" badge + availability tag on every card (louder than GYG's hidden glyph).
  2. Hoy / Mañana / Este finde availability quick-filters as primary navigation — Civitatis has the filter; nobody foregrounds it.
  3. Reserve-now / free-cancellation trust pair near every CTA — adapted: real last-minute deals are pay-now / no-cancellation; soft deals can be more flexible.
  4. "When to book" urgency line — "Reserva hasta 12h antes si quedan lugares."
  5. What's-included icon strip on card and detail (México Travesías).
  6. Difficulty / distance / altitude band on every hike card — the gap all four leave open, and a safety/trust win.
  7. WhatsApp-first support float with pre-filled message on every page.
  8. No-account booking lookup (booking № + phone) for a low-friction audience.
  9. Deep-linkable, SEO-clean URLs for every listing — our reel/paid funnel depends on it; fixes México Travesías' worst flaw.
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Still open

Product / UX questions carried from the meeting, not yet decided:

  • Advertise the concept vs individual tours? (Leaning: reels link straight to /t/{id}.)
  • How hard to push regular full-price customers away from last-minute deals (audience exclusion / gating)?
  • Reschedule / refund UX for the inevitable bad event (no-show / unsafe guide).
  • Show Mexicano / Extranjero pricing tiers from day one, or stay flat initially?
  • Permit & regulatory transparency — protected-area access, transport authorisations and tourism registration aren't consistently disclosed; supplier due-diligence stays essential if we aggregate third-party operators.

Pricing-side open calls — commission (15 vs 20%), membership ($500 vs $1,000), per-user dynamic pricing — live in → Monetisation.

The visual execution of all this → Brand sheet · the flows → User journeys · Docs home