The company name originates from the
misheard "lovely planet" in a song written by
Matthew Moore.[8] Lonely Planet's first book, Across Asia on the Cheap,[9] had 94 pages; it was written by the couple in their home.[10] The original 1973 print run consisted of stapled booklets[11] with pale blue cardboard covers.[12]
Wheeler returned to
Asia to write Across Asia on the Cheap: A Complete Guide to Making the Overland Trip, published in 1975.[13]
The Lonely Planet guide book series initially expanded to cover other countries in Asia, with the India guide book in 1981,[14] and expanded to rest of the world later on.[15]Geoff Crowther was renowned for frequently inserting his opinions into the text of the guides he wrote. His writing was instrumental to the rise of Lonely Planet. The journalist used the term "Geoffness", in tribute to Crowther,[clarification needed] to describe a quality that has been lost in travel guides.[10]
By 1999, Lonely Planet had sold 30 million copies of its travel guides. The company's authors consequently benefited from profit-sharing and expensive events were held at the Melbourne office, at which limousines would arrive, filled with Lonely Planet employees.[15]
21st century
In 2007, the Wheelers and
John Singleton sold a 75% stake in the company to
BBC Worldwide, worth an estimated £63 million at the time.[10] The company was publishing 500 titles and ventured into television production. BBC Worldwide struggled following the acquisition, registering a £3.2 million loss in the year to the end of March 2009. By the end of March 2010, profits of £1.9 million had been generated, as digital revenues had risen 37% year-on-year over the preceding 12 months, a Lonely Planet magazine had grown and non-print revenues increased from 9% in 2007 to 22%.
Lonely Planet's digital presence included 140 apps and 8.5 million unique users for lonelyplanet.com, which hosted the Thorn Tree travel forum.[16] In 2011, BBC Worldwide acquired the remaining 25% of the company for £42.1 million (A$67.2 million) from the Wheelers.[17]
BBC's sale to NC2
By 2012,
BBC wanted to divest itself of the company and in March 2013 confirmed the sale of Lonely Planet to
Brad Kelley's NC2 Media for
US$77.8 million (£51.5 million), at nearly an £80 million (US$118.89 million) loss.[18]
Red Ventures
In December 2020, NC2 Media sold Lonely Planet to
Red Ventures for an undisclosed amount.[19] Lonely Planet offices continue to operate in
Dublin,
Nashville,
New Delhi and
Beijing. Phillippe von Borries, a former co-founder and CEO of
Refinery29, was named head of the company.[20]
In 2022, Lonely Planet bought Elsewhere, a website that links travellers directly with experts who assist in designing trips.[21]
Products
Lonely Planet's online community, the Thorn Tree,[22] was created in 1996. It is named for a Naivasha thorn tree (Acacia xanthophloea) that has been used as a message board for the city of
Nairobi, Kenya since 1902.[23] The tree still exists in the
Stanley Hotel, Nairobi. In April 2020, the forum was locked and left in read-only mode as part of Lonely Planet temporarily halting business in response to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In September 2021, the Thorn Tree was shut down.[24]
In 2009, Lonely Planet began publishing a monthly travel magazine called Lonely Planet Traveller. It is available in digital versions for a number of countries.[25]
Lonely Planet also had its own television production company, which has produced series, such as Globe Trekker, Lonely Planet Six Degrees, and Lonely Planet: Roads Less Travelled.[26] Toby Amies and Asha Gill (both British TV presenters) took part in Lonely Planet Six Degrees.[citation needed]
Controversies
In 1996, in response to a "Visit Myanmar" campaign by the
Burmese military government, the Burmese opposition
National League for Democracy (NLD) and its leader
Aung San Suu Kyi called for a tourism boycott.[27] As the publication of Lonely Planet's guidebook to
Myanmar (
Burma) is seen by some as an encouragement to visit that country, this led to calls for a boycott of Lonely Planet.[28] Lonely Planet's view is that it highlights the issues surrounding a visit to the country, and that it wants to make sure that readers make an informed decision.[29] In 2009, the NLD formally dropped its previous stance and now welcomes visitors "who are keen to promote the welfare of the common people".[27]
Lonely Planet popularity in the 21st edition means a mention in a Lonely Planet guidebook is likely to inspire large numbers of travellers to that location. In 2010, for instance, Lonely Planet was blamed for the rise of what is sometimes referred to as 'the
Banana Pancake Trail' in
Southeast Asia.[30][31]
In March 2019, Lonely Planet posted a video on
Facebook falsely claiming that the
Banaue Rice Terraces in the
Philippines were created by the Chinese, leading to criticism. The magazine later posted on
Twitter in April 2019 that their Facebook video was indeed "misleading", and that they would update the next Philippines book edition, but will not scrap current editions that already wrongfully state that the terraces were made by the Chinese.[32][33]
In popular culture
In April 2008, American writer
Thomas Kohnstamm published the memoir Do Travel Writers Go to Hell? in which he described research shortcuts he employed while writing guidebooks for Lonely Planet. In a follow-up interview, he first claimed that in one case he had not even visited the country he wrote about, but subsequent to the ensuing publicity boost for his new book, Kohnstamm clarified that, in this particular edition, he was only contracted to update the five-page history section.[34] After a review of Kohnstamm's guidebooks, Lonely Planet's then-publisher Piers Pickard stated that he had "failed to find any inaccuracies" in them.[34]
In 2009, Australian author and former Lonely Planet guidebook writer
Mic Looby published a fictional account of the guidebook writing business, titled Paradise Updated, in which the travel guide business was satirised.[35]