“We industrialize the complexity behind the scenes so the guest experience can remain highly bespoke on the surface,” Frits van der Werff, VP commercial at Anglo-Eastern Leisure Management, told Cruise Industry News.
The company provides end-to-end vessel management services across the cruise industry, including technical management, crewing, catering and hotel operations.
The client roster includes the likes of Margaritaville at Sea, Four Seasons Yachts, Aurora Expeditions, Victory Cruise Lines and others.
“At first glance the client profiles appear vastly different,” said van der Werff. “But operationally, we start from a disciplined platform. Our role is to build a scalable, brand-agnostic operating backbone that allows each client’s brand promise to be delivered consistently and safely.”
Service philosophy, crewing profiles, standards and guest programming are all customized in close alignment with the company’s clients.
“We view ourselves as precision-driven operators,” van der Werff said. “The platform is constant. The execution is tailored.”
There is a difference, he said, when it comes to delivering an ultra-luxury experience, for example.
“Success on an ultra-luxury yacht means invisibility of the machinery behind the experience,” van der Werff explained.
On a Margaritaville sailing, success is driven by resilience at scale, highly efficient operations, consistent delivery across higher guest volumes and strong cost discipline.
Aurora Expeditions has ships operating in the polar regions, meaning a much different operations footprint.
“Our hotel teams operate with a high degree of planned self-sufficiency,” van der Werff said. “Logistics into remote regions demand careful planning to ensure provisions arrive on schedule despite limited infrastructure and weather volatility.”
He also pointed out strong regional supplier partnerships that provide a safety net for last-minute needs.
Great Lakes operations, on the other hand, mean leaner inventory management.
To protect the culture of each brand, Anglo-Eastern assigns dedicated account leadership and specialists per client. That is non-negotiable, van der Werff said.
There are shared centers of excellence and resources in technical management, procurement, crewing infrastructure and digital performance systems.
“The strategic case for outsourcing is straightforward: deliver the same or better, more efficiently and at lower cost,” van der Werff explained.
Clients get focus and depth, he said, a combination that is difficult to replicate in-house. This brings established crewing pipelines, procurement leverage, proven safety systems and economies of scale.
“Building an in-house cruise platform for a single vessel means carrying full fixed infrastructure from day one: technical, crewing, compliance, procurement and global support,” van der Werff said. “That is expensive, slow to mature and difficult to justify at a small scale.
“It allows the owner to stay focused on the brand and guest experience and sales and marketing.”
Going forward, van der Werff said he is focused on scaling alongside the company’s clients, while selectively evaluating adjacent opportunities such as residential cruising as well as providing drydock project management and crewing services to cruise lines.
“We are selectively positioning Anglo-Eastern to support emerging verticals that require the same disciplined maritime backbone combined with increasingly sophisticated hotel delivery,” he said.