Prince Harry

Has Prince Harry been dumped by eco-tourism firm Travalyst?


Prince Harry’s sustainable tourism project Travalyst has announced it has entered an ‘incredibly exciting’ era with a new board of directors – with no mention of the royal.

The independent non-profit organisation based in London was launched by the Duke of Sussex in 2019, when he was still a working royal, with wife Meghan Markle.

Harry spent three years as the public face of the initiative to encourage the tourism industry to become more sustainable – despite a furore over his use of private jets.

But he was left out of a major announcement by the group in May about its transition from a ‘pilot phase’ to a new board of five people with ‘world-class expertise’.

Travalyst’s statement was made eight days after Harry and Meghan’s spokesman said the couple had been involved in a ‘near-catastrophic’ car chase while being followed by paparazzi in New York after the Ms Foundation Women of Vision Awards. The NYPD later seemed to soften the couple’s dramatic account, saying ‘there were no reported collisions, summonses, injuries or arrests’ related to the incident.

Harry, 38, is still in regular contact with the Travalyst chief executive and board behind the scenes and remains committed to it, according to a report in Newsweek. In addition, the Duke is still listed on the Travalyst website as its ‘founder and patron’.

But it is notable that he was not used as a promotional tool for the revamp – given how prominently he has previously been involved in conferences and marketing.

September 2019 - Prince Harry launches his Travalyst initiative at A'dam Tower in Amsterdam

September 2019 – Prince Harry launches his Travalyst initiative at A’dam Tower in Amsterdam

September 2019 - Harry addresses an audience as he launches Travalyst in Amsterdam

September 2019 – Harry addresses an audience as he launches Travalyst in Amsterdam

September 2019 - The announcement of Travalyst on the 'Sussex Royal' Instagram account

September 2019 – The announcement of Travalyst on the ‘Sussex Royal’ Instagram account

May 2022 - Harry plays a role in a sketch for a new initiative in New Zealand for Travalyst

May 2022 – Harry plays a role in a sketch for a new initiative in New Zealand for Travalyst

PR expert Sean O’Meara, managing director of Manchester-based agency Essential Content, said the change of approach at Travalyst could be due to the marketing difficulties presented by the negative publicity often faced by Harry.

What are Prince Harry’s remaining projects? 

NETFLIX 

Harry and Meghan signed a deal worth an estimated £80million with Netflix in 2020. A six-part documentary called ‘Harry and Meghan’ was their first release last December, which included a series of swipes at the royals.

Three weeks later they released their second Netflix production, ‘Live to Lead’, which was about global leaders who have fought for social justice.

Now, the couple are said to be in talks to front a third Netflix documentary about humanitarian issues in South Africa. It is not yet clear whether this will be a solo production for Harry, or a joint work with Meghan.

BOOKS

Harry was reported to have secured a four-book deal with Penguin Random House worth £29million in June 2021.

His first book, Spare, was published in January, which contained a series of claims such as Harry saying William physically attacked him.

FOUNDATION

The couple’s Archewell Foundation was founded as a charity after they stepped down as senior royals in 2020. It is the umbrella group for their work.

ASPEN INSTITUTE

Harry joined the Aspen Institute’s new Commission on Information Disorder, joining 14 other commissioners and three co-chairs in conducting a six-month study on the state of US media.

It said his position, announced in November 2021, would be part-time and involve regular meetings.

INVICTUS GAMES

The Invictus Games is perhaps Harry’s most successful project, having founded the international tournament for wounded, ill and injured military personnel and veterans about a decade ago. The first games were held in London in 2014 and the next will be in Dusseldorf this September.

BETTERUP

Harry took on a role as chief impact officer at professional coaching and mental health firm BetterUp in March 2021.

The boss of the company, which sells companies employee coaching and mental health help, said he hired Harry because of his advocacy for mental health services rather than the publicity brought by the move.

ETHIC

Harry and Meghan joined US ethical money manager Ethic as ‘impact partners’ in October 2021. The Wall Street investment firm has a business managing $1.3billion of investments for around 1,000 wealthy clients.

SENTEBALE

Harry co-founded Sentebale in 2006 to help vulnerable children in Lesotho, Botswana and Malawi, including those who are affected by extreme poverty and the HIV/Aids epidemic.

He will travel to Singapore to take part in Sentebale’s annual charity polo match next month.

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He told MailOnline today: ‘This move to lower Harry’s prominence as Travalyst enters a new phase of growth looks and feels strategic. It’s not an oversight. And it very well could be at Harry’s request or at the request of his advisors.

‘Many in the PR industry, myself included, were speculating in the press earlier this year about how he might rehabilitate and refresh his media profile and one of the most common recommendations was for Harry to step away from centre stage and give himself and the organisations he’s associated with some breathing room.

‘Harry had become something of a lightning rod for negative PR which was harming perceptions of the organisations he was trying to support.’

Mr O’Meara said that the downside to a ‘brand ambassador’ approach to PR is that when the ‘halo effect’ of endorsement or association with a public figure wears off, it is ‘significantly more difficult to attract attention and generate the required media coverage to build awareness’.

He added: ‘This is by far the biggest risk facing brands that partner with public figures to build awareness; their perceptions are tied to, and become a function of, perceptions of the celebrity.

‘When things are going well for the celebrity the organisation benefits too. It’s easy to get attention. When things become challenging and the celebrity’s appetite for seeing themselves in the press wanes, that has a downstream effect on their partners and affiliates.’

And another PR expert Andy Barr, co-founder of Gloucester-based agency 10 Yetis Digital, told MailOnline: ‘Harry has really stepped back from the glare of the media in recent months and this is to be expected given the negativity and public outcry that came from him washing his dirty linen in public.

‘He won’t want the causes that he is most passionate about to become embroiled in rows about his own decision making so he has clearly decided to reduce the amount of mentions of his own name.

‘You can expect his name to be used far more when his brand starts to improve, which it most certainly will given the army of image and PR advisors he has access too.

‘For now though, it’s low profile time and this is undoubtably going to frustrate some of the passion projects companies that he has signed up to as they rely on his name to make their stories travel further.’

In April 2020, Harry was listed on Companies House under the name of ‘Henry Charles Albert David Duke of Sussex’ as an ‘individual person with significant control’ when the project was incorporated as a company. Documents confirmed the Duke held 75 per cent or more of the shares and voting rights. 

At the time there were two company directors listed on Companies House – James Holt, who remains one of the Duke’s most senior aides, and Heather Wong, who worked as Harry’s assistant private secretary at Kensington Palace for three years before he quit the Royal Family. She left Travalyst in March 2021. 

Sally Davey, who is now Travalyst’s chief executive, was appointed as a director one day later on Companies House.

Harry officially launched Travalyst in September 2019 at a time when he and Meghan were facing intense criticism after reportedly taking four private jet journeys in 11 days.

The Duke defended himself at the time , saying ‘no one is perfect’ and that what is important is ‘what we do to balance’ out negative effects.

Harry flew to the Netherlands on a commercial plane for the launch event in Amsterdam, having spent three years working on the initiative which was founded along with brands including Booking.com, Skyscanner, Tripadvisor, Trip.com and Visa.

July 25 - The most recent press release for Travalyst mentions Prince Harry towards the bottom

July 25 – The most recent press release for Travalyst mentions Prince Harry towards the bottom

June 8 - The second most recent press release also has Harry mentioned near the bottom

June 8 – The second most recent press release also has Harry mentioned near the bottom

May 24, 2023 – Travalyst’s statement about its ‘next phase of growth’, with no mention of Harry

December 7, 2022 – Harry is mentioned at the top of a Travalyst press release issued last year

October 25, 2022 - In another Travalyst press release last year, Harry is mentioned at the top

October 25, 2022 – In another Travalyst press release last year, Harry is mentioned at the top

Then in February 2020, in one of his last events as a working royal before stepping down and moving to the US with Meghan, he spoke at a Travalyst event in Edinburgh in which he memorably asked to be introduced just as ‘Harry’.

The conference was organised for Harry and his Travalyst team to gain feedback from the travel industry on new ideas for sustainability, with about 100 people from the tourism and travel industries invited to join the working summit.

Months later in July that year, he made an opening speech at a virtual global summit for Travalyst, urging the travel industry to ‘build back better’ after the pandemic.

This appearance was notable because it was his first public appearance since a series of royal revelations were published in Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand’s book Finding Freedom.

The following year, in February 2021, he wrote the foreword to a report by Travalyst in which he suggested that Covid-19 offered the travel industry the chance to ‘jump-start a wholescale realignment’ towards a sustainable future.

And then in May 2022, Harry played a starring role in a sketch for a new initiative in New Zealand for Travalyst in which he jogged through a forest before being accused of dropping a lolly wrapper four years earlier on a trip to the country.

The Duke delivered several phrases in Te Reo Maori for the clip, which he launched on Maori Television’s current affairs programme Te Ao with Moana.

But fast forward 12 months to May 24 this year, and Travalyst announced it was moving into its ‘next phase of growth’ – with no mention of Harry in the press release. 

February 2020 - Harry at a Travalyst summit at the Edinburgh International Conference Centre

February 2020 – Harry at a Travalyst summit at the Edinburgh International Conference Centre

July 2020 – Harry gives a speech at a virtual global summit for Travalyst during the pandemic

May 2022 - Harry plays a role in a sketch for a new initiative in New Zealand for Travalyst

May 2022 – Harry plays a role in a sketch for a new initiative in New Zealand for Travalyst

A statement by Travalyst chief executive Ms Davey said the ‘original coalition comprising five founding partners has now almost doubled in size to nine partners with a combined market value of nearly $2trillion’. 

Among these new partners is Google, which joined in September 2021.

The announcement added: ‘Today we formally mark the end of Travalyst’s pilot phase with the appointment of a new board to govern and guide us on our journey ahead to delivering major positive and system-changing impact.

‘The board is composed of individuals with world-class expertise in impact, systems change, not-for-profit governance, advocacy, and campaigning for a just and sustainable world.’

The new board members were listed as India Gary-Martin, founder and chief executive of Leadership for Execs; Clea Kaske-Kuck, director for policy, advocacy and member mobilisation at the World Business Council for Sustainable Development; Dr Sally Uren, chief executive of Forum for the Future; James Whiting, chief executive of Doughty Street Chambers; and Henrietta Worthington, lawyer with Vedder Price. 

Ms Davey also wrote: ‘This is an incredibly exciting moment for Travalyst and, I believe, for the industry as we stride ahead into our next phase of growth and expansion to ensure our work is freely available to all, used by all and catalyses the positive transformation of the sector.’

The announcement has also not been mentioned in the press releases section of Harry and Meghan’s Archewell website.

May 16, 2023 - Harry and Meghan at the Ms Foundation Women of Vision Awards in New York

May 16, 2023 – Harry and Meghan at the Ms Foundation Women of Vision Awards in New York

May 26, 2023 - Travalyst chair India Gary-Martin mentions Harry in her Instagram statement

May 26, 2023 – Travalyst chair India Gary-Martin mentions Harry in her Instagram statement

Today - Prince Harry is still listed on the Travalyst website as its 'founder and patron'

Today – Prince Harry is still listed on the Travalyst website as its ‘founder and patron’

But Harry was given a mention by Ms Gary-Martin, chair of the board, in her own personal Instagram announcement on May 26, in which she said: ‘Really exciting to announce that I’ve accepted the role as the Chair of the board of Travalyst.

‘Founded by Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, we are conveners and drivers of sustainability in travel and tourism working with the world’s biggest corporations to drive standards and make sure we aren’t taking out more than we put in – particularly in the places that are most impacted.’

There have been two further press releases posted on the Travalyst website in 2023, which both simply mention in the ‘about Travalyst’ section at the bottom that the project was ‘founded by Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex in 2019’.

According to Companies House documents, prior to the May 2023 announcement of the five-person board, Mr Holt and Ms Davey were the two directors of Travalyst. 

MailOnline has contacted representatives for Travalyst and the Sussexes for comment today. Both declined to comment when contacted by Newsweek.



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