Editorial cover image for a Frenchway Travel article about common Fashion Week production travel mistakes, showing a luxury travel planning flat lay with smartphone itinerary, city maps, coffee, fashion sketches, fabric swatches, and travel documents.

The 5 Mistakes That Quietly Cost Production Teams During Fashion Week

The details that seem small until they affect the entire schedule

Production teams don’t make obvious mistakes.
You’re experienced. You’ve done this before. You know how Semaine de la mode works.

The issues that come up aren’t basic; they’re the small operational gaps that only show up under pressure. And during Fashion Week, those gaps don’t stay contained.

They ripple across schedules, talent experience, and execution.

Fashion Week production coordinator backstage checking a smartphone while holding call sheets beside a clothing rack, with a small team preparing in the background.
Section graphic for a Fashion Week travel article showing the heading “Treating Travel as Confirmed Instead of Flexible,” a large number 01, and a close-up travel planning flat lay with smartphone itinerary, boarding pass, hotel key card, printed schedule, and pen.

Most teams lock in travel once they have a working schedule

During Fashion Week: Schedules are never fully locked
What happens:

And then:

  • Talent needs to arrive earlier
  • A show shifts
  • A fitting gets added

Now you’re fixing instead of adjusting

Red travel flexibility icon showing an airplane ticket with circular arrows, representing adjustable bookings and flexible travel planning.

Where This Actually Matters

  • Refundable vs non-refundable hotel strategy
  • Flight flexibility and fare class selection
  • Ability to extend or shorten stays without penalties

This isn’t about paying more, it’s about buying flexibility where it matters

Red calendar icon with checkmarks and a star badge, representing strong teams planning ahead and building flexibility into travel schedules.

What Strong Teams Do Differently

  • Use a mix of refundable and strategic holds
  • Build in a buffer for key travelers
  • Prioritize flexibility over marginal savings

This is one of the most common and least talked about issues

For VIP talent and high-profile guests, travel is part of the experience.
But often:

  • Bookings are made under real names
  • Hotels aren’t prepared for discreet arrivals
  • Incidentals aren’t pre-arranged

Which leads to:

  • Friction at check-in
  • Delays at the front desk
  • Visibility issues for talent

Where This Breaks Down

  • No alias structure for hotel bookings
  • No credit card on file for incidentals
  • Hotel not briefed on arrival timing and preferences
Red concierge and hotel key card icon with a verification badge, representing smooth VIP arrival handling and pre-arranged hotel coordination.

What Makes the Difference

  • Rooms secured under aliases where needed
  • Credit card pre-authorized for incidentals (no personal card required)
  • Hotel teams aligned in advance on VIP handling

The goal: A zero-friction arrival, nothing visible, nothing delayed

Section graphic for a Fashion Week travel article showing the heading “Overlooking Flight-Level Details That Matter in Real Life” with a flat lay of boarding pass, seat map, baggage tag, phone, and travel wallet

The Small Flight Details That Create Big Problems

What Gets Overlooked

  • Seat assignments for talent or key team members
  • Group travelers split across cabins unintentionally
  • No priority boarding or baggage coordination
  • Lack of flexibility on high-risk routes
Red flight details icon showing a boarding pass, airplane seat, and luggage, representing seat assignments, group bookings, and baggage planning issues.

Where This Shows Up

  • Talent arrives uncomfortable or delayed
  • Teams are separated unnecessarily
  • Baggage delays affect fittings or shoots
Red flight planning icon with a boarding pass, seat map, suitcase, and checkmark, representing coordinated seat selection, group bookings, and baggage preparation.

What Experienced Teams Focus On

  • Securing specific seat assignments early
  • Aligning group bookings properly
  • Planning baggage needs in advance
  • Prioritizing routes that support timing, not just price

Vols aren’t just transportation; they impact how people arrive and perform

Section graphic for a Fashion Week travel article showing the heading “Treating Transportation Like Logistics Instead of Timing Control” with a black executive car waiting outside an event venue.

Ground Transport Is Timing Control

Transportation is one of the most underestimated areas. It’s often handled late or loosely, but it directly affects whether the day runs smoothly.

What Goes Wrong

  • Drivers booked without a full itinerary context
  • No confirmed contact details shared in advance
  • Pickup times based on assumptions, not real timing
  • No adjustment for traffic or show delays
Red car and route icon with a location pin and alert badge, representing transportation delays, routing problems, and driver coordination issues.

Where It Breaks

  • Talent waiting for cars
  • Drivers unable to locate guests
  • Delays between fittings and shows
  • Last-minute scrambling
Red car route icon with a location path and checkmark badge, representing confirmed driver details, clear routing, and transportation timing control.

What Actually Works

  • Driver details shared the day before (name, phone, vehicle)
  • Schedules aligned to real movement, not ideal timing
  • Clear routing between:
    Hotel
    Show
    Event

Transportation isn’t support. It’s part of the production schedule

Section graphic for a Fashion Week travel article showing the heading “Leaving Payments and Expenses Until After the Trip” with a hotel payment flat lay including a card, receipt, key card holder, checklist, and pen.

Delayed Payments Create Hidden Friction

This is one of the biggest hidden issues. Not because it’s hard, but because it’s delayed.

What Happens Without Structure

  • Talent and teams use personal cards
  • Incidentals are paid out of pocket
  • Expenses are tracked later
  • Reimbursements become a process
Red flight details icon showing a boarding pass, airplane seat, and luggage, representing seat assignments, group bookings, and baggage planning issues.

Where It Creates Friction

  • Hotel check-ins slowed down
  • Confusion around who pays for what
  • Accounting clean-up after the fact
Red flight planning icon with a boarding pass, seat map, suitcase, and checkmark, representing coordinated seat selection, group bookings, and baggage preparation.

What Strong Systems Do Instead

  • Pre-authorize payment methods for hotels and incidentals
  • Set a clear structure for:
    Who pays
    What’s covered

The goal: Nothing gets figured out at the front desk or after the show

None of these are “mistakes” in the traditional sense. They’re details.
But during Fashion Week: Details are what determine whether things run smoothly or not.

Final Thought

Production teams don’t struggle because they lack experience. They struggle because Fashion Week compresses:

  • Time
  • Availability
  • Decision-making

This exposes the smallest structural gaps. When those gaps are handled properly:

  • Travel becomes predictable
  • Talent experience improves
  • The production stays in control

 

En savoir plus
Fashion Week Production Travel

Planning for Fashion Week?

Frenchway supports production teams, fashion houses, and talent management groups across New York, London, Milan, and Paris, handling both logistics and the details that most teams don’t see until they matter.

✉️ online@frenchwaytravel.com

📞+ 1 212 243 3500

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