Roadshow car service, held together.
Multi-city investor car service coordinated as a single managed program — one concierge, one itinerary document, and one standard across every stop on an IPO tour, NDR, or analyst-day circuit.
IR teams · Bankers · CEOs · Flight departments
Executive SUV · Luxury Sedan · Sprinter
2–7 days · 3–8 cities · 12–35 meetings
Comfortable at 1–2 weeks · emergency builds inside 48 hrs
One concierge, one itinerary, every city.
Roadshow car service runs multi-city investor ground as a single managed program. The service covers IPO tours, non-deal investor roadshows, analyst days, fundraising and debt roadshows, and deal roadshows with multi-city diligence — along with board off-sites and executive travel running three to eight cities inside a compressed business week. Most circuits concentrate in New York, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Toronto, with meetings stacked at fifteen- to thirty-minute intervals and airport transfers, charter legs, and cross-town moves sequenced against on-block timing rather than scheduled arrival.
Itinerary intake
The full calendar is delivered to the concierge in one pass: meeting schedule, cities and venues, hotel addresses, commercial flight or private aviation details, and principal plus travel team contacts. For charter legs, tail numbers and FBOs are captured so ground locks to on-block timing rather than the scheduled arrival.
Per-market operator match & briefing
A vetted operator is selected in each city with roadshow experience: tight timing, financial-district routing, executive clientele. Each assigned chauffeur is briefed on the full day's meetings, venues, and sensitivities flagged by the travel team, and backup coverage is pre-staged in every market.
Pre-trip brief & day-of coordination
The night-before brief carries the chauffeur's name, vehicle, license plate, and direct mobile for every leg the next day. During the program, the concierge tracks every pickup, holds the next vehicle when a meeting runs long, and reroutes across traffic or city order when the schedule shifts. One phone number covers the program.
Reconciliation
At program close, every leg is logged: pickup, drop, vehicle class, duration, overtime (if any), and the assigned operator by city. A consolidated invoice across every market is delivered in a single document, with cost allocation available by leg, by city, or by IR engagement.
Single concierge, end-to-end
One named concierge owns the roadshow from intake through reconciliation. Principal, IR team, and banker team see the same name on every message across every city. No ticket queue, no account handoffs during the program.
Pre-staged operators in every market
A vetted operator with roadshow experience is held in each city before the trip begins. No live-market sourcing mid-program. The per-market match is locked at intake with backup coverage briefed behind it.
Consistent vehicle class across cities
Vehicle class is specified up front and held across every market — typically Executive SUV or Luxury Sedan for principal travel, with Sprinter staging for larger travel teams. A principal does not step out of a black SUV in New York and into a silver minivan in Boston.
Night-before briefs on every leg
The assigned chauffeur's name, vehicle, license plate, and direct mobile are delivered the night before for each pickup the next day. Changes to the schedule flow through the same brief, not a separate confirmation thread.
Real-time schedule adjustment
Meetings running long, new stops added, cities reordered. The concierge reroutes the active leg and briefs the next chauffeur without forcing the travel team to rebuild the trip. One phone line covers the program.
Private aviation coordination
Tail-number tracking, FBO staging, and on-block pickups are coordinated for every charter leg. Where the FBO permits ramp access, the vehicle is positioned planeside; where not, at the canopy. Crew moves between hotel and FBO are arranged alongside the principal's plan.
Backup coverage pre-staged
A second vetted operator is briefed in every market before the program begins so a mechanical issue, a traffic shutdown, or a same-day assignment change does not trigger a last-minute search while the principal is between meetings.
Consolidated post-trip invoice
One invoice at program close covers every city, every leg, and every vehicle assignment. Cost allocation by leg, by city, or by IR engagement is available for mandates tracking spend by deal.
Week-long IPO tour
New York, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Chicago across five to seven days, running twenty to thirty-five investor meetings with a dedicated charter aircraft or commercial first-class between legs. The concierge holds vehicle class across every city, times every pickup to on-block or commercial gate release, and runs a named backup operator behind every primary.
Two- to three-day NDR
A non-deal investor roadshow running New York plus Boston plus San Francisco with two primary principals and twelve to eighteen meetings. Meetings stacked at fifteen- to thirty-minute intervals, commercial first-class between coasts, and the concierge tracking every leg so a meeting running long in midtown does not cascade into a missed dinner in SoMa.
Analyst day + follow-ups
A single-city cluster with eight to twelve small meetings across a morning, a hosted analyst day at mid-day, and investor follow-ups through the afternoon and next day. Multiple vehicles staged at the host venue, shuttle staging for the travel team, and principal cars held against the main schedule — all managed by the same concierge holding the program together.
International arm add-on
A New York and San Francisco roadshow with a London or Toronto add-on at the front or back of the week. Cross-border legs run through the same briefing document, the same named concierge, and the same vehicle standards applied against a local vetted operator abroad.
Run the circuit on one brief.
Share the full itinerary in one pass — cities, meetings, charter legs, travel team. The concierge returns a program quote with per-leg breakdowns after review.
— CONCIERGE REVIEW · NO OBLIGATION
Experience the concierge standard.
Our team curates the perfect ride through vetted local operators, ensuring every detail meets our rigorous standards of excellence.
Frequently asked questions.
Patterns vary by deal type. A non-deal investor roadshow (NDR) typically runs two to three days across three or four cities, with New York and Boston almost always, often adding San Francisco or Chicago. An IPO tour runs longer: five to seven days across five to eight cities, with New York, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, and occasionally Toronto on the circuit, plus London add-ons where the deal book warrants. Analyst days are usually single-city clusters: one host city, eight to twelve small meetings across a morning, with two or three days of follow-ups. Board off-sites and executive retreats tend to be one to three cities over two to five days. A single concierge manages every pattern end-to-end.
Tail numbers and FBOs are captured at itinerary intake so the ground plan is synchronized to the flight plan. The receiving chauffeur is staged at the FBO matched to on-block timing, not the scheduled wheels-down, with the vehicle waiting at the canopy or planeside where the FBO's ramp protocol permits. Common FBOs on the roadshow circuit include Signature Flight Support, Jet Aviation, Meridian, and Clay Lacy; each has its own access rules that the assigned operator coordinates with the FBO dispatcher before the aircraft arrives. Crew moves between aircraft and hotel are arranged alongside the principal's plan when the charter is dedicated to the roadshow.
Every trip is monitored by the named concierge during the roadshow window, not routed through a general dispatch queue. When a meeting runs long, the concierge holds the next vehicle and pushes subsequent pickups down the schedule. When a meeting is added or dropped on short notice, the concierge reroutes the current leg, briefs the next chauffeur on the new address, and updates the travel team by the same channel used at intake. There is one phone number for the IR or banker team to call. The concierge handles the rebuild across operators, cities, and vehicle assignments.
For any roadshow that crosses more than one market, a named concierge owns the program end-to-end, building the briefing document, validating every venue and hotel address, holding the phone line through every trip date, coordinating across the per-market operators, and reconciling the invoice at program close. The principal, the IR team, and the banker team all see the same name on every email. No ticket handoffs, no swapping account managers mid-trip. For large IPO tours with parallel travel teams, a second concierge shadows the primary to handle the volume.
Pricing is quoted at the program level with a per-leg breakdown rather than as a flat package. Each leg is priced against the vehicle class held for the program, the duration, and any overtime the schedule builds in, then rolled into a single program quote before the roadshow begins. Standard inclusions are tolls, gratuity, and the agreed wait-time window; anything outside that window is billed as overtime at the operator's published rate. At program close, a consolidated invoice lists every leg, every city, and every vehicle assignment in one document, with cost allocation available by leg, by city, or by IR engagement.
One to two weeks is comfortable and gives the concierge room to match vetted operators in every market, hold the same vehicle class across cities, and pre-stage backup coverage. Three to four days is workable on most itineraries, subject to vehicle availability in the peak cities. New York, Boston, and San Francisco tighten first during earnings cycles and conference weeks. Emergency builds inside 48 hours are attempted but subject to chauffeur and vehicle availability at that moment in each market; the concierge flags any leg that cannot be held to program standard before confirming the itinerary.