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  • Travelport Pushes Ahead in Complex Distribution Landscape

    Travelport Pushes Ahead in Complex Distribution Landscape

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    Travelport’s Greg Webb discusses:

    • Progress and plans for Deem
    • American Airlines’ NDC about-face
    • The next frontier in lodging distribution

    Global distribution system provider Travelport in recent years has evolved its product offering, acquiring online booking tool Deem while launching Travelport Plus, a unified distribution platform that it recently enhanced with new search abilities, while working with airlines to distribute New Distribution Capability content. Travelport CEO Greg Webb during the recent Global Business Travel Association annual convention in Atlanta spoke with BTN managing editor Chris Davis about the company’s efforts to simplify what he considers a business travel landscape that is increasing in complexity. Edited excerpts follow. 

    BTN: It’s been almost 18 months since Travelport acquired Deem. What’s the status of the integration, and what are your plans for it?

    Greg Webb: Travelport before I got here had a corporate online booking tool, which they eventually got rid of. I didn’t necessarily strategically set out to move back into the OBT space. At the same time, when we looked at Deem, we really did believe it was the best product out there and that with all the things that were going on in the industry, it would be a good fit in the portfolio. 

    It was owned by Enterprise Holdings, so it was doing some things specifically for Enterprise. … We [thought we] just needed to focus on the things that Deem does well and make them do that better. It took about a year in terms of real integration of staff and technology into the Travelport realm, but that went very smoothly. We’ve completed all that, and we’ve been very happy with it, and we think strategically it will continue to do very well. Kyle Moore now is the general manager there, and the strategy he’s laid out with the Deem team aligns with what we talk about more broadly, which is the theme of modern retailing, which is trying to make the complex simple and trying to make sure that it starts with the consumer.

    BTN: In terms of Deem’s global footprint, are you where you want to be, or is further expansion planned?

    Webb: Deem today is primarily North America-based, but we absolutely have expansion plans. We think it fits nicely into a number of what I would call first-cut countries that it’s basically ready for today, and we’ve got a list of expansion plans after that. So, I think we’ll absolutely take advantage of getting a larger global footprint. 

    BTN: Is there a timetable on that? 

    Webb: We’ll most likely say something later this year.


    I didn’t necessarily strategically set out to move back into the OBT space. At the same time, when we looked at Deem, we really did believe it was the best product out there and that with all the things that were going on in the industry it would be a good fit in the portfolio.”


    BTN: What’s the status of client migration to Travelport Plus?

    Webb: We’re 100 percent done with everything that’s non-U.S. In the U.S., we are kind of mid-80ish percent in terms of complete. We’ve got some of the more complex guys that will happen in the third and fourth quarter of this year. I don’t want to overcommit, but we’ll be more than 90 percent complete by the end of the year in North America, which means overall [we’ll be in] the mid-90s of complete with the upgrade to Travelport Plus. And so we should be complete in 2025.

    BTN: And in terms of the prior GDSs?

    Webb: In terms of Travelport Plus the platform, that’s not a destination, that’s a journey. We’re going to continue to enhance and update the overall platform as it grows as our next-gen system. 

    BTN: You’ve continued throughout this year wrapping in especially foreign carriers with more NDC programs. How is that progressing?

    Webb: It’s progressing really well. Since the beginning of the year we’ve signed and in many cases implemented EtihadEmirates—which just went live a month ago—Qatar, SAS and Virgin Atlantic. So, it’s been a steady stream. 

    NDC is supposed to be a standard, but it is a standard in name only, in that every carrier implements differently. We’re getting better at making sure we start with a standard template associated with the schema that they happen to be running and then build off that. We’ve also built some tools on our side to make sure that, post-signature headed toward implementation, we know the right questions to ask. Ask better questions, and you get better answers, and I think over time, not just us, but the industry has gotten better at asking the right questions about how carriers want to implement their version of NDC.

    BTN: Do you see a lot of variance in those versions of implementation?

    Webb: Yes. Despite the fact there are a handful of tech vendors that provide the software around it, the actual implementation, on an airline-to-airline basis, there’s a decent amount of variation. And that’s even on what I would call a standard implementation. Different carriers have different objectives that they’re trying to effectively use the technology to push through the new NDC standard. For some it’s ancillaries, for some it’s bundles, for some it’s dynamic pricing. As the objectives change the look and feel of the implementation changes. 

    BTN: Is the NDC share of volume increasing?

    Webb: It is increasing, and we expect it to continue to increase even more moving forward. At some point we expect it to start getting more rapid growth, instead of going a couple of points at a time, you’d expect it to jump.

    BTN: Is it a couple of points at a time now?

    Webb: Yes, but it depends on the carrier. Different carriers are moving faster, some are moving significantly slower. In some cases, it depends whether the carriers are being aggressive—less of a carrot, more of a stick. 

    I think NDC should move at the pace of both suppliers getting what they want out of it, which means better being able to put their offering through the channel in a way that makes sense, and a better buying experience for consumers. You can’t have one without the other. If I was trying to get happy travelers, I think the growth of NDC on the sell side should be based on the fact that I’m able to better offer things that consumers want.


    We have from beginning had a very strong partnership with American. We were willing to do whatever we needed to from a technical perspective to make them successful in the market. We continue to do that.”


    BTN: What do you make of American Airlines’ recalibration on this, and do you think it has a broader impact beyond American?

    Webb: In a broad sense, it’s no secret that the airline community has had a direct-to-consumer push over a very long period of time, 15 years or so, maybe longer. As travel gets more complex, we sit here at GBTA and everybody here travels all the time, and we know how to buy. … That’s not the general consumer. The general consumer flies maybe one time a year. And the idea of restricting their choice to a single carrier with a single way to look at it in this complex world today just becomes more and more impractical for the infrequent flyer.

    Because if you’re going to take your family of four on a vacation and you get one day of vacation a year, the idea of, “Well, I’ll just go look at pricing on one airline” makes zero sense. Most consumers spend hours and hours. We did an informal study at an airport, and there were crazy answers on “How much do you shop before you purchase a leisure trip?” The answers were astounding: “I shop seven different websites 21 times over four weeks before I make a buying decision.”

    There are perfectly good use cases for why people should go to an airline’s website. You do it all the time, simple point to point. There are lots of reasons that they should certainly consume those travelers in a direct-to-consumer manner.

    On the other hand, there are a lot of very complex things [for which] it makes sense to comparison-shop, to spend time talking to an expert, to make sure you have the best research you can find. And that doesn’t lend itself to that. I think what American got themselves wrapped up in was an idea of trying to really break consumer buying behavior. Ultimately, I think that’s what required a bit of the recalibration, which was just, “Hey, we still want to be where travelers are. We still want to make sure that we have supportive partners in the industry, supportive resellers of our product and people that can be advocates.” And I think at some point they decided they needed to make sure that they still had advocates in the industry for themselves and their product.

    BTN: Did American share any thoughts with you now that they’re back in EDIFACT channels?

    Webb: We have from beginning had a very strong partnership with American. We were willing to do whatever we needed to from a technical perspective to make them successful in the market. We continue to do that, and ultimately I think the issues that they ran into weren’t issues we were involved with, they were issues with others in the industry, so I think you’ll probably get a better answer from someone else. But we continued to, during that entire time, do what American needed us to support their strategy.

    BTN: How are you with Travelport’s position in GDS booking share?

    Webb: Over the last four years we’ve continued to grow share steadily. I think we’ll continue to do that. We’ve been really happy with the way that our product rollouts have gone recently. I think our vision for where we think the technological layers of [the industry] is going, our focus on making sure that we are going to be the best multi-source content aggregator out there, and that our use of both the core components of the technology and also some of the things that we’ve just announced, like the Content Curation layer and Content Optimizer, along with our use of AI and machine learning we think will give us an advantage.

    BTN: We’ve been talking a lot about air, but how about hotel? As chains look at attribute-based selling, are you prepared technologically if they want to start differentiating?

    Webb: We’re in a good place on hotel, but we haven’t talked about this very publicly. But we think there’s opportunity in the hotel space, and behind the scenes have been spending time [on this] on the Travelport Plus upgrade. We’re completely replatforming our hotel components. And as we do that, all of the things that you’ve talked about—attribute shopping and selling, the ability for us to do cross-sell and upsell componentry in a better way than we have—we can do it today, but we’d like to be more efficient in the way that we do that. So we believe that that market will continue. 

    It’s another [area] where it’s getting more complex, and when you put complexity into it, the thing that you really want to drive, what consumers really look for is somebody to simplify that complexity. And I think there’s space out there to do that.

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    businesstravelnews@ntmllc.com (Business Travel News)

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  • Expensify Looks to 3Q for ‘New Expensify,’ Travel Revenue Boost

    Expensify Looks to 3Q for ‘New Expensify,’ Travel Revenue Boost

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    Payments and expense app Expensify reported a year-over-year drop in revenue and users during the second quarter, but executives expect its new app and travel booking capabilities to give it a boost in the third quarter.

    The company reported $33.3 million in revenue for the second quarter, down 14 percent year over year, and it had 684,000 paid members in the quarter, down 8 percent. In an earnings call on Thursday, CFO Ryan Schaffer noted that those numbers have “leveled off” and were “effectively flat” compared with the previous quarter. He also noted that paid members as of July were up to 689,000, despite it being a “traditionally soft” month for the company.

    For the third quarter, the company is in a position to begin generating revenue from its “New Expensify” app, which takes a “super app” strategy in combining capabilities for chat and expense—both business and personal—into a single platform. It also expects its travel booking capabilities, which it announced a few months ago, will contribute as a revenue stream for the quarter.

    “We think it can scale up to the top of the market,” CEO David Barrett said in the earnings call. “It has very powerful functionality that can go head-to-head with anyone out there.”

    The new Expensify Card program also will be a contributor to future revenues, as it earns 20 percent higher interchange for Expensify, and Expensify also is able to count that interchange as direct revenue, Schaffer said. So far, 34 percent of spend has migrated to the new card program, and total interchange for the quarter totaled $4 million—up 48 percent year over year.

    Expensify reported a net loss of $2.76 million for the quarter, compared with a net loss of $11.3 million in the second quarter of 2023.

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    mbaker@thebtngroup.com (Michael B. Baker)

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  • With Corp. Travel ‘Grinding Up,’ Hilton Gains in Q2

    With Corp. Travel ‘Grinding Up,’ Hilton Gains in Q2

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    Second-quarter systemwide Hilton Worldwide revenue per available room generated by large corporates increased 5 percent year over year, officials said during a Wednesday earnings call, adding that technology companies had a “notable recovery.”

    Hilton’s overall second-quarter systemwide RevPAR increased 3.5 percent year over year, CEO Christopher Nassetta said, and transient RevPAR—including business and leisure—increased 2 percent for the same period.

    “If you break apart the segments, group is still raging, business transient is still grinding up, not at a rapid pace, but still grinding up,” Nassetta said during the earnings call. “Both of those segments [are] maintaining great pricing power. And then leisure transient has been normalizing, because we’re just getting back to a more normal life, and it was at very elevated levels, particularly on weekends.”

    Second-quarter systemwide group RevPAR increased 10 percent year over year, Nassetta said, “led by strong demand for corporate and social meetings and events, and booking windows continued to lengthen.”

    Nassetta added that Hilton, as it adds group business to the books for the next few years, sees “no sense of slowing on demand and pricing.” 

    However, Hilton, like Hyatt Hotels Corp., Marriott International and Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, lowered its projected full-year RevPAR increase. Hilton now projects a 2 percent to 3 percent increase in 2024 RevPAR above 2023 levels, down from its prior projection of 2 percent to 4 percent.

    “We tempered the high end of our expectations versus prior guidance due to softer trends in certain international markets and normalizing leisure growth more broadly,” Nassetta said. “With continued strength in group and steady recovery in business transient, we expect higher-end chain scales to continue to outperform.”

    Hilton Q2 Metrics

    Hilton’s systemwide second-quarter occupancy increased 1.3 percentage points year over year to 75.3 percent, and its average daily rate increased 1.7 percent to $163.70. Systemwide second-quarter RevPAR was $123.30.

    In the United States, second-quarter occupancy increased 1.1 percentage points year over year to 76.8 percent, while ADR increased 1.4 percent to $172.36 and RevPAR rose 2.9 percent to $132.33.

    Second-quarter revenue increased about 11 percent year over year to $2.95 billion, and net income rose to $422 million from $413 million one year ago.

    Hilton also projects a 2 percent to 3 percent increase in third-quarter systemwide RevPAR year over year.

    Hilton’s development pipeline at the end of the second quarter totaled 3,870 hotels representing 508,300 rooms, up 15 percent year over year. 

    RELATED: Hilton Q1 performance

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    cdavis@thebtngroup.com (Chris Davis)

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  • Rising Business Travel Revenue Boosts Hyatt’s Q2

    Rising Business Travel Revenue Boosts Hyatt’s Q2

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    Three months after Hyatt Hotels Corp. CEO Mark Hoplamazian called business travel demand at the hotel company “extraordinarily encouraging,” officials said demand lived up to that promise in the second quarter, with systemwide business travel revenue up 14 percent year over year.

    “Group and business transient were our strongest customer segments in the quarter,” Hoplamazian said, noting second-quarter systemwide revenue per available room increased 4.7 percent year over year.

    In the United States, Hoplamazian said, business travel revenue increased 12 percent year over year, citing New York, Seattle, San Diego and Washington, D.C., as “top-performing markets.”

    It should be noted that second-quarter 2024 business travel figures are inflated by the shift of the Easter holiday from April last year to March this year. Still, Hoplamazian noted that “bookings for business travel over the next two months look very strong, led by corporate negotiated accounts.”

    Second-quarter group room revenue increased 8 percent year over year, he said, and “group pace for U.S full-service managed properties is up 7 percent for the second half of 2024.”

    Hoplamazian said Hyatt had “about 60 percent of our total [group] business on the books for next year,” pointing to pharmaceutical, technology and financial companies as key contributors. “This is not like association has taken over and is pulling up on average. This is very, very well-balanced and widespread,” he said. 

    Still, Hyatt, like Marriott International and Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, cut its projected 2024 RevPAR to 3 percent to 4 percent above 2023 levels, down from its prior forecast of a 3 percent to 5 percent increase. Hyatt CFO Joan Bottarini cited “lower incentive fee contribution in the second quarter from hotels in Greater China, weaker-than-expected demand in Maui and hotels under renovation” for the lowered projection, adding that “we expect group and business transient revenue growth to outpace leisure transient for the second half of the year.”

    Hyatt Q2 Metrics

    Hyatt’s systemwide second-quarter revenue per available room increased 4.7 percent year over year to $149.31, while average daily rate increased 1.1 percent to $204.73 and occupancy increased 2.4 percentage points to 72.9 percent.

    In the United States, RevPAR increased 2.3 percent year over year to $159.98, while ADR declined 0.1 percent to $213.33 and occupancy increased 1.8 percentage points to 75 percent.

    Hyatt’s total second-quarter revenue was $1.705 billion, down from $1.703 billion in the second quarter of 2023. Net income increased to $359 million from $68 billion one year prior. 

    Net rooms increased 4.6 percent year over year to more than 325,500, while Hyatt’s development pipeline increased 9 percent to about 130,000 rooms.

    RELATED: Hyatt Q1 results

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    cdavis@thebtngroup.com (Chris Davis)

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  • Serko Ready to Capitalize Off ‘Foundations’

    Serko Ready to Capitalize Off ‘Foundations’

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    Serko’s Grafton discusses:

    • Hitting the accelerator on customer growth
    • Tackling hotel attachment
    • Executing a broad content strategy

    New Zealand-based travel technology supplier Serko, along with its Zeno corporate travel and expense platform, has been building a customer base both among large enterprise travel programs and, via its relationship with Booking.com for Business, small and midsized clients. Serko co-founder and CEO Darrin Grafton spoke with BTN executive editor Michael B. Baker during the recent Global Business Travel Association Convention in Atlanta about how Serko is making inroads with U.S. customers and the company’s content, servicing and development strategies. An edited transcript follows.

    BTN: What’s Serko’s current growth trajectory?

    Darrin Grafton: We’ve been on quite a big growth journey. We’ve been setting the foundations, coming out of Covid and waiting for the markets to fully recover. We signed a lot of deals during Covid to get the markets ready. We’ve had the renewal of Booking.com for another five years for Booking for Business. 

    On the managed travel side, we’ve been continually growing in our home markets, onboarding companies like Rio Tinto, and now in the U.S., we’ve been highly focused on getting the core group of companies as highly referenceable sites and having all of that put in place—companies like Visa. We’ve really focused on how we can hit the accelerator now and start to push forward. We’re working a lot with the midmarket travel management companies and also the megas as well. We’re really just starting to now find that sweet spot of how to go fast.

    BTN: What strategy are you using to draw in U.S.-based business?

    Grafton: We’re a public company, so we’re well-capitalized. One of the key parts of our technology is we sometimes feel new to businesses until they realize they use us in Australasia. They find that they can reference themselves. Some of it is a push from the Australian companies saying they want to use it in the U.S., and sometimes it’s a pull from the U.S. division. Our own customers can be our best advocates. From now, it’s how do we amplify that.

    BTN: Are you looking to expand more in other geographies outside of Australasia and the U.S.?

    Grafton: We’re in 180 countries with Booking.com. Our focus is to do well in the regions we are in and get a really strong base. Most American companies have some form of global rollout with customers, but being highly focused on being awesome in the area those customers need us to be right now. Our focus is always what the customer is actually going to need in that region, so we want to build a phenomenal system for North America then wider as they need us, Europe and wider.


    We have that ability to now bring the technology we’ve done for Booking to managed travel. They can bring consumer experience where they had leakage of hotels. We can bring that inside the system.”


    BTN: On the Booking side, is it largely previously unmanaged clients you are seeing?

    Grafton: You’ve got our unique selling proposition, which is what we do with Booking and other players. We have that ability to now bring the technology we’ve done for Booking to managed travel. They can bring consumer experience where they had leakage of hotels. We can bring that inside the system, and we can shift that monetization so that 40 to 60 percent leakage they may have been getting, we can bring that back into program, give them a great user experience and give them all the content frameworks. That’s quite huge, and that’s helped TMCs make money and is the main pain point for why they have to mop up all the expenses. We bring it back into the managed travel program, so that increases the savings and the profitability of the TMC. 

    BTN: What’s been your technology focus?

    Grafton: Comparison shopping is quite key. It’s one of the foundations of the Zeno platform. You can shop normal and [New Distribution Capability] at the same time and mix and match. It’s the same with hotel content, being able to compare your global distribution rates and your negotiated rates to your Booking.com rates. If the customer wants loyalty, they can go through that channel, and if they want savings for the business, they have the right process through that selection. If you have the right content and the consumer-grade experience, you have that ability to drive that through.

    We’ve learned a lot working with Booking.com and how you drive that experience. It’s taking the learnings from driving a big consumer brand site into the managed travel space. We add a bit of AI, and that’s working out. If you always stay [in a particular hotel], then we preference that and shop that automatically in the shopping cart, which means you are saving time as well. Rather than having to wade through 50 options, you get the 11 curated options that are doing that. 

    What we found is that people would shop flights and shop hotel later, and what happens is every day or week that goes by that you don’t attach the hotel, the rate increases. By the time you make the choice later on, you’re paying 15 or 20 percent more for that rate. The Zeno technology is about trying to shop that one transaction and get the right selection at the cheapest price. That’s the logic that creates huge savings for business.

    BTN: How has your content strategy changed in light of the fragmentation we are seeing?

    Grafton: We’ve been doing NDC since the start. We were one of the first certified applications on NDC. We’ve done Travelfusion, ATPCO, TPConnects, and now we’ve launched on Sabre. We’ve done all the Sabre connections. What we’re trying to do is make sure whatever systems the travel management companies are using, we’re connecting into those. It’s all about trying to get rid of the friction. If it’s easier for us to do it on Sabre or a GDS, then we’ll do it that way, or do it as a direct connect, whichever is the easier way to get the transaction through. Our NDC shopping is quite unique, because you can do the NDC fare and the low-cost and don’t have to do two shopping experiences.

    BTN: What about servicing capabilities?

    Grafton: We’ve done advance flight changes now. Our philosophy is, what is booked online stays online, so we’re trying to build all the technology that when disruption happens and change happens, we put that into the technology and make sure the traveler or travel manager can do it. We’re continually improving on that cycle. We’ve rolled out even more advanced change technology very recently over the last couple of months, rolling that through Australia and the U.S. at the moment. 

    BTN: What does your development roadmap look like?

    Grafton: We’re continually moving the product forward. It’s how you can do more forward-look at how you can manage disruption. If you’re flying in from New Zealand to New York, and you’re going by [Los Angeles], and your main flight is delayed, can AI automatically do the adjustment for us? We’re looking at all different aspects of AI around booking, reshopping, changes, reporting and sourcing. Those four AI engines are the foundation of how we look at the evolution of the platform. It’s continually enhancing for the U.S. market to bring more and more customers online. 

    BTN: In your most recent earnings, you mentioned the goal to become cash-positive this year. Is that on track?

    Grafton: We’ve guided that market that we’re trying to go to cash-flow break-even now into this financial year and get that whole scale of revenue where we want it to be. We haven’t had to increase the employee count too much because we’ve been building up the high-performance team, so we’re able to do so much more with the same team as we’ve gone through that curve. We’ve still been growing our topline revenue by 48 percent. It’s quite a good model right now.

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    businesstravelnews@ntmllc.com (Business Travel News)

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  • IAG: ‘Good Recovery’ for Corp. Travel in Q2

    IAG: ‘Good Recovery’ for Corp. Travel in Q2

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    International Airlines Group executives on a Friday second-quarter earnings call described the corporate travel segment as “resilient,” “steady” and in “good recovery.”

    Though corporate still trails the leisure demand recovery, it has “different recovery rates across the airlines,” IAG CEO Luis Gallego said. IAG is composed of British Airways, Iberia, Aer Lingus, Level and Vueling.

    “At BA, we are still in volume around 65 percent and revenue around 80 percent compared with 2019,” Gallego said of corporate demand, adding that capacity at British Airways also has not recovered to 2019 levels.

    “At Iberia, the volume is around 90 percent, and the revenue is above the revenue they had in 2019, with an increase in capacity,” Gallego said. For Aer Lingus, “volumes are close to 100 percent and revenue at 95 percent. So different performances, but a good recovery in general.”

    Iberia CEO Marco Sansavini said that the carrier’s second-quarter corporate revenue from and to Latin America was ahead of that in the second quarter of 2019. “That’s the first time that’s happened since Covid, demonstrating the resilience of demand over there,” he said.

    For BA, second-quarter North Atlantic business volume was up more than 13 percent year over year, BA chairman and CEO Sean Doyle said. “That really helped get a better mix of traffic across the network, and it helped us drive load factors up by a point to about 88 percent.”

    Doyle added, however, that while volume through corporate channels is 65 percent of 2019 levels, “when we look at the purpose of travel through all channels, it’s a little bit higher,” he said. “We think the volume of people traveling for business is probably up to above 70 percent and revenue more like 85 percent, because we do see traffic that used to book through a business channel, some of that now is booking through our direct channel. But generally speaking, it’s steady improvement and steady growth, particularly across the North Atlantic routes.”

    IAG Q2 Metrics

    IAG reported second-quarter passenger revenue of more than €7.4 billion, up 9.9 percent year over year. Total revenue was nearly €8.3 billion, up from €7.7 billion a year prior. The company’s operating profit for the quarter was more than €1.2 billion, down about 0.8 percent year over year. 

    Capacity for the second quarter increased 8 percent compared with Q2 2023 for the total network. The North Atlantic accounts for about 32 percent of capacity, which increased 6.1 percent year over year. Europe (not counting Spain and the United Kingdom) is next with 27 percent of capacity, which increased 5.8 percent. Latin America and the Caribbean accounts for 18 percent of IAG capacity, which increased 17 percent during the second quarter. Asia-Pacific accounts for just more than 4 percent of the company’s capacity, but it increased nearly 32 percent year over year in Q2. 

    The outlook for 2024 includes continued strong demand for IAG’s core markets of the North Atlantic, Latin America and intra-Europe. Full-year 2024 capacity growth is projected to be 7 percent year over year, the same as for the third quarter. 

    RELATED: IAG Q1 performance

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    dairoldi@thebtngroup.com (Donna M. Airoldi)

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  • Sturdy Q2 U.S. Hotel Pipeline Sets More Records

    Sturdy Q2 U.S. Hotel Pipeline Sets More Records

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    The pipeline of U.S. hotel properties under development remains robust, according to a new report from Lodging Econometrics, with nearly 6,100 hotels and more than 713,000 rooms at the end of the second quarter. The figures represent year-over-year increases of 9 percent and 8 percent, respectively, and each is a record high, as it was the prior quarter.

    Dallas yet again leads the U.S. as the city with the most hotels in the pipeline, with 189 projects and nearly 22,400 rooms, according to Lodging Econometrics. The city has led all others in pipeline count since the second quarter of 2021, when New York led.

    More than 1,170 U.S. projects comprising nearly 148,000 rooms were under construction at the end of the second quarter, up 10 percent and 4 percent, respectively, year over year. About 2,350 projects (up 5 percent) with nearly 269,000 rooms (up 3 percent) are scheduled to start construction in the next 12 months, according to Lodging Econometrics.

    “LE expects that as interest rates begin to decline, projects scheduled to start in the next 12 months will move to under construction rather quickly,” according to the company.

    Upscale and upper midscale properties comprise about 60 percent of all projects in the total pipeline, according to Lodging Econometrics, while extended-stay brands comprise 36 percent of the hotels under construction and 33 percent of the projects scheduled to start construction in the next 12 months.

    Dallas’ presence in the pipeline led Atlanta, which has 159 projects with 18,500 rooms, and the Inland Empire of California, which has 124 projects with nearly 12,600 rooms.

    Lodging Econometrics projected total 2024 U.S. openings of 650 new hotels with more than 74,200 rooms, with nearly 780 hotels with more than 87,400 rooms forecast to open in 2025 and nearly 930 projects with nearly 102,000 to open in 2026.

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    cdavis@thebtngroup.com (Chris Davis)

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  • Hertz in Midst of ‘Critical Transformation’

    Hertz in Midst of ‘Critical Transformation’

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    In what has become somewhat of a trend this earnings season, Hertz is in the “midst of a critical transformation for our company,” and its priority is “getting back to the basics, operational excellence and unmatched customer service,” Hertz CEO Gil West said during a Thursday earnings call. 

    The comments come one day after Lufthansa Group announced a “turnaround program” for its namesake carrier, two days after JetBlue unveiled its “refocused strategy,” and a week after Southwest Airlines promised “an ongoing strategic transformation” during their respective earnings calls.

    West had previously noted during its April earnings call that the company had “a lot of work to do.” He detailed what that entails further on Thursday during Hertz’s second-quarter call. 

    The company’s strategy “has three building blocks—our fleet, our revenue and cost management,” he said. West added that to accomplish its strategic priorities, the company needed to strengthen its balance sheet and “ensure a more stable liquidity position,” and to build a team and organizational design “that ensures we can execute our strategy. … We’ve quickly done both,” referring to the several executives recently named to the organization, including Scott Haralson as its new CFO and Sandeep Dube as its new chief commercial officer, among other additions.

    Hertz is in the process of accelerating its fleet rotation, “enabling us to lower our depreciation and maintenance cost, improve our customer experience and increase pricing power,” West said. As for electric vehicles, they currently make up less than 10 percent of Hertz’s fleet, “but I do believe EVs are key for the future. … We’ve gone through and rationalized our EV fleet, and we’re allocating it across our businesses to maximize, of course, [revenue per day], but also get the right product market fit to do that with our customers.”

    For revenue, the company is “focused on driving more quality revenue through our direct booking channels,” Dube said, with new optimization tools and structural improvements to the websites. Another component is improved customer service, “enabled by a self-service digital platform, where appropriate. This means that customers, both loyalty and non-loyalty, can skip the counter and go directly to their vehicles,” Dube added. Third, Hertz is beginning to leverage “smarter dynamic pricing tools and new ways of merchandizing the products,” Dube said.

    Haralson said Hertz was exiting high-depreciation-cost vehicles and bringing in ones with lower such costs more quickly, and the benefit of the fleet rotation will “push through a little more than $1 billion of non-cash depreciation through the P&L from Q3 of this year through probably the end of 2025,” he said. 

    Haralson didn’t give many details on changes for the cost management side other than to say Hertz would focus on direct operating expenses and selling, general and administrative expenses. “Becoming more efficient and reducing our operating cost is an important component of our transformation,” he said. “We’ve made some good progress so far, but overall this is more than just managing initiatives, it’s managing the entire cost structure with an efficiency mindset. We have some wood to chop here, but we made good progress quarter over quarter.”

    Hertz Q2 Metrics

    Hertz reported second-quarter revenue of nearly $2.4 billion, down about 3 percent year over year. It had a net loss of $865 million compared with a net profit of $139 million in Q2 2023. The company had on average about 546,200 rentable vehicles during the quarter, up 2.3 percent from Q2 2023. Revenue per day was down 3 percent year over year to $59.65.

    The Americas segment revenue for the quarter was more than $1.9 billion, down about 4 percent from a year ago. The number of average rentable vehicles increased 2 percent year over year to nearly 439,300. Revenue per day was down 3 percent to $59.94.

    The international segment revenue was $425 million, a slight increase from the $422 million reported in Q2 2023. The average number of rentable vehicles was nearly 107,000, up 5 percent from a year prior. Revenue per day was down 2 percent from a year prior to $58.38.

    RELATED: Hertz Q1 performance

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  • Marriott: Q2 Corp. Demand Again Grows

    Marriott: Q2 Corp. Demand Again Grows

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    Systemwide second-quarter business travel revenue per available room at Marriott properties increased 4 percent year over year, a trend executives project will continue throughout 2024, they said Wednesday during the company’s quarterly earnings call. 

    Total business transient room nights and average daily rate in the quarter also increased, Marriott president and CEO Anthony Capuano said. The sector comprised 33 percent of the company’s second-quarter room nights, he said. 

    Small and midsized enterprises in the second quarter accounted for “nearly 55 percent” of business transient room nights, Capuano said, noting the segment “has grown significantly over the last few years.” SMEs represented about 60 percent of business transient room nights in the second quarter of 2023, officials said last year. 

    Still, Marriott cut its projected full-year 2024 RevPAR to 3 percent to 4 percent above 2023 levels, down from its prior forecast of a 4 percent to 5 percent increase. Capuano said the change was mostly due to softening demand and rates in China.

    “Worldwide RevPAR growth is still anticipated to be driven by another year of strong growth in group revenue, continued improvement in business transient revenues, and slower but still growing leisure revenues,” Marriott CFO Leeny Oberg said on the call.

    Group revenue per available room in the second quarter increased 9 percent year over year, Capuano said, including a 4 percent increase in average daily rate and a 5 percent increase in occupancy. Oberg added that the company expects a slowdown in group business in November due to the U.S. presidential election.

    Business Access by Marriott Bonvoy, the company’s travel management program option for SMEs, which was announced July 8, “is already seeing great interest,” Capuano said. “We’re extremely pleased with the initial account signups and users of the platform, both of which have outpaced expectations.”

    Marriott Q2 Metrics

    Marriott’s second-quarter systemwide RevPAR increased 4.9 percent to $135.52, and RevPAR in the U.S. and Canada increased 2.8 percent to $130.96.

    Global occupancy increased 1.6 percentage points to 73.1 percent, while occupancy in the U.S. and Canada increased 0.4 percentage points to 70.1 percent.

    Second-quarter systemwide ADR increased 2.4 percent year over year to $211.16. ADR in the U.S. and Canada increased 2.2 percent to $186.70

    Total second-quarter revenue increased 6 percent year over year to more than $6.4 billion.

    Net income also increased 6 percent to $772 million. 

    As with its full-year projection, Marriott forecast third-quarter RevPAR also in increase 3 percent to 4 percent year over year.

    RELATED: Marriott Q1 performance

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  • JetBlue Downplays Corp. Network in New Profit Strategy

    JetBlue Downplays Corp. Network in New Profit Strategy

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    JetBlue executives unveiled a “refocused strategy” during the company’s Tuesday earnings call that is designed to increase the carrier’s profitability through a renewed focus on leisure operations, a change that already is affecting its network of business travel destinations.

    Dubbed JetForward, the plan is built on four pillars: providing reliable and caring service, building the best East Coast leisure network, offering products and perks that customers value, and creating a secure financial future, according to a JetBlue presentation. It aims to provide incremental earnings before interest and taxes of $800 million to $900 million between 2025 and 2027.

    Network changes will have the most drastic effect on corporate travel. Throughout, JetBlue has announced it is pulling out of 15 cities and exiting 54 routes. “Every route and station needs to earn its way into our network, and our push for profitability has lessened our patience for underperforming routes,” said JetBlue president Marty St. George. 

    The carrier’s “profit engine” is composed of leisure, visiting friends and relatives, and transcontinental routes to and from “core East Coast geographies” including New York, New England, Florida, Puerto Rico and the Caribbean, St. George said. “Many of the changes we’ve made to our network are driven by the stronger recovery and quicker ramp of leisure travel,” he added. “As a result, and specifically in New York, we’ve shifted capacity out of corporate-focused routes and into leisure and VFR routes.”

    That doesn’t mean the carrier will stop serving corporate customers.  

    “There’s no walking away from the corporate market,” St. George said. “The better way to describe it is we’re not really designing the network for corporate like we once did. And if you look at some of the changes we’ve made in New York, some of the routes we pulled, I think it’s very consistent with what we’ve seen as far as a slower recovery of corporate travel in New York.”

    St. George added that contracted corporate business revenue is up by “high single-digit” percentages compared with a year prior, “so it continues to grow. With the retreat that we have been doing over the last three quarters at LaGuardia, that was a bit of a pleasant surprise for us because those are much higher business-share markets when we flew those.”

    JetBlue earlier this year announced reduced flights to and from Los Angeles International and LaGuardia airports. 

    Still, St. George gave the example of JetBlue’s departure from the Minneapolis market, and noted that business revenue on the Boston-Minneapolis route was “pretty strong” and “more corporate” at 30 percent share of bookings instead of the historical 20 percent. “But I guess I would say it was not more corporate enough,” he said. “So as far as 1,000 flights a day, I don’t think it’s going to dramatically move that [corporate revenue] number from where it is now.”

    Aircraft Challenges

    The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration in 2023 and 2024 issued directives requiring planes with certain Pratt & Whitney GTF engines grounded until they can be inspected, a situation that “challenge[s] our ability to plan our business over the long term,” JetBlue CEO Joanna Geraghty said. “We now expect aircraft on the ground to significantly increase in 2025.” 

    Because the carrier “can’t afford to continue taking delivery of costly new aircraft that may need to be parked due to engine availability issues,” JetBlue and Airbus have come to an agreement in which JetBlue would defer delivery of 44 of its A321neo aircraft—the part of the fleet most affected by the Pratt & Whitney GTF issues—to 2030 and beyond, as opposed to receiving deliveries scheduled for 2025 to 2029. That will reduce capital expenditures by approximately $3 billion over the next five years, JetBlue CFO Ursula Hurley said.

    With the average number of grounded aircraft in 2025 projected to be in the mid- to high teens “with greater uncertainty in 2026 and beyond,” it will drive flat year-over-year capacity in 2025, Hurley added. And to reach flat growth, “we’ll need to continue investing to extend the lives of our [Airbus] A320 fleet. While it comes at a cost to buy out leases and extend the lives of aircraft, the return profile is more attractive than investing in new aircraft.”

    JetBlue Q2 Metrics

    JetBlue reported second-quarter passenger revenue of nearly $2.3 billion, down 7.9 percent year over year. Total revenue was down to $2.4 billion from $2.6 billion one year prior. The carrier’s net income for the quarter was $25 million, down from the $138 million reported in Q2 2023. 

    Second-quarter capacity decreased 2.7 percent compared with last year. The average fuel price was $2.87 per gallon. 

    Third-quarter guidance includes a year-over-year decline in revenue of 1.5 percent to 5.5 percent, with full-year revenue projected to be down 4 percent to 6 percent. JetBlue plans for third-quarter capacity to be down 3 percent to 6 percent year over year, with full-year 2024 capacity down 2.5 percent to 5 percent. 

    The average third-quarter fuel price is projected to be $2.82 to $2.97 per gallon, with full-year costs estimated at $2.80 to $3 per gallon.

    RELATED: JetBlue Q1 performance

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  • Accor Reports 6 Percent RevPAR Growth in H1 2024

    Accor Reports 6 Percent RevPAR Growth in H1 2024

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    Accor’s first half revenue per available room increased 6 percent year on year, while revenues grew 11 percent compared to the same time in 2023, according the company’s first-half earnings report.

    The France-based hospitality group reported “record” revenues of €2.7 billion for the first six months of 2024, and €393 million in operating profit, up from €351 million reported in H1 2023.

    This growth represented 4 percent year-on-year revenue increase for the group’s premium, midscale and economy (PM&E) division and a 22 percent increase for its luxury and lifestyle division.

    Accor’s systemwide RevPAR for the year’s first half was €72, up 6 percent year over year. RevPAR for the PM&E division was €59, up 5.6 percent, while the luxury and lifestyle segment saw a 7.1 percent year-on-year increase to €154.

    Group earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization amounted to €504 million for the first half of 2024, up 13 percent compared to the same period in 2023.

    Accor CEO and chairman Sébastien Bazin said the results are “in line” with the group’s medium-term outlook and, following “strong” activity in all regions throughout the second quarter, the group has raised its annual RevPAR target to between 4 percent and 5 percent growth, up from a previous estimate of between 3 percent and 4 percent year over year.

    RevPAR in the second quarter saw a 4 percent year-on-year increase across the PM&E division to €64, mostly driven by prices rather than by occupancy rates, the group said. The luxury and lifestyle division, meanwhile, saw RevPAR increase 8 percent year on year to €163, largely due to higher occupancy rate.

    During the first half of 2024, Accor opened 146 hotels, representing 24,000 rooms. At the end of June, the group’s portfolio included 5,682 properties (838,722 rooms), with an additional 1,297 hotels in the pipeline.

    Originally published by BTN Europe.

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    Lauren Arena

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  • Groups360 Launches Enterprise Meetings Solution

    Groups360 Launches Enterprise Meetings Solution

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    Meeting planning platform provider Groups360 this week launched GroupSync Planner Plus, a meeting planning and booking solution the company said has a “specialized set of features” that are “designed for corporate teams needing a standardized request and booking process.”

    The platform appears to be tailored to matrixed organizations that may require multiple approval processes to initiate a meeting, followed by a planning process controlled by policy and cost guardrails configured into the planning and booking workflow. The platform includes a meeting request form and reporting tools for financial accountability. The company said additional features would be available “soon,” including the ability to apply a master service agreement to all request-for-proposal and booking activities and the ability to flag or preference a given company’s pre-negotiated hotel properties, brands or chains.

    One of the differentiators for Groups360 is the ability to display live, real-time rates and available rooms and meetings at hotels participating in its marketplace. That said, the number of properties is lower at 25,000 globally than in some other comparative meeting planning tools. Groupize—another platform that announced enterprise-level upgrades this week—for example, says it offers more than 250,000 hotels and venues in its global marketplace, but it may not have access to real-time shelves for content availability. That requires key integrations with hotel property management systems and, given the nature of hotel franchise and management models, isn’t necessarily straightforward and requires at minimum a chain-by-chain approach. 

    Even with the smaller marketplace, Groups360’s Planner Plus could offer some advantages. The integrated nature of the content retrieval enables instant booking for small meetings of 10 to 25 sleeping rooms and event space for up to 50 attendees, but that is only for “participating” properties—not everything in the Groups360 marketplace. Instant-book tools include audiovisual requirements, catering and other services without the need to engage in the RFP process. 

    The enterprise tools, with MSAs applied and preferred property lists, won’t necessarily overlap with that instant-book proposition. However, the more sophisticated toolset will support in other ways, allowing enterprise companies to define meeting types and set standards and policies around those types—to manage costs, quality and attendee experience. Once the meeting type standards are applied and requirements for the individual meeting are established, a simplified RFP process tracks and organizes hotel responses into a single dashboard for the organizer to compare and ease decision making.

    “One of the inherent challenges that Planner Plus solves for company meeting and event planners is organizing and standardizing the disparate processes that companies use to plan and track various types of events,” said Groups360 SVP product Christian Oliver. “We have developed a comprehensive system that allows corporate planners and teams to easily build and track all meeting data, including event criteria, budgets, expenditure and tiered approvals within a single portal that is accessible to all company stakeholders. Since it’s built within GroupSync, it also provides powerful hotel sourcing and booking capabilities that have been proven to save significant time and money—both valuable resources for any size organization.”

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  • Air France-KLM Notes ‘Challenging’ Q2 Environment

    Air France-KLM Notes ‘Challenging’ Q2 Environment

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    One quarter ago, executives at Air France-KLM were looking forward to a “promising summer season,” particularly with the Olympics and Paralympic Games being held in Paris. In a Thursday second-quarter earnings release, however, Air France-KLM CEO Benjamin Smith noted the “negative effect of the Olympic Games,” particularly for Air France.

    The company estimated that negative impact in June to be €40 million, contributed by less international inbound traffic to Paris as a “consequence of the Olympic Games.” It also projects a negative effect on unit revenues in the third quarter of €150 million to €170 million. 

    But the sporting events were not the only factors contributing to the company’s results.

    “The second quarter of 2024 confirmed an increasingly challenging environment for aviation, with rising fuel prices and a continued pressure on costs,” Smith said in a statement. “In this context, KLM and Transavia delivered a stable yet sluggish performance, while Air France was in addition impacted by exceptional events,” including the Games.

    The company has taken measures to address the situation, including a hiring freeze and additional cost cuts, according to Smith, who added that it is “preserving its major investments to renew its fleet. … Our business model is robust and resilient, and we remain confident in our ability to achieve our mid- and long-term objectives, notably by leveraging our strong assets and unique competitive position.”

    Air France-KLM Q2 Metrics

    Air France-KLM reported second-quarter passenger revenue of €6.1 billion, up 2.8 percent year over year, or 3.2 percent on a constant currency basis. The group’s total revenue was more than €7.9 billion, up 4.3 percent year over year, or 4.6 percent in constant currency. Net income was €165 million, down €447 million from Q2 2023. 

    The company’s group capacity increased 4.1 percent year over year and had a load factor of 88 percent. During the quarter, the company’s carriers transported 25.7 million passengers, 4.4 percent more than a year prior. Group passenger unit revenue per available seat kilometer was up 0.2 percent in constant currency to €8.30 despite less international inbound traffic. 

    Air France-KLM projects capacity to increase 4 percent for full-year 2024 compared with 2023. The previous guidance was for a 5 percent increase.

    RELATED: Air France-KLM Q1 performance

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  • Oversee Launches AI Tool for TMCs

    Oversee Launches AI Tool for TMCs

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    Travel analytics and technology provider Oversee has developed a “co-pilot” for agents to assist them on routine tasks, the company announced.

    Oversee, formerly FairFly, said its AgentAI is capable of using natural language processing to engage with travelers and can remember and refer to traveler preferences and details. It can assist agents by reading and responding to traveler emails and automating such common tasks as flight and hotel booking, exchanges, seat requests and invoice requests.

    As such, it can “address corporate customers demanding [service level agreements] and expected travel experience while also supporting [travel management companies] who need to cope with seasonality, training and headcount shortages,” Oversee founder and CEO Aviel Siman-Tov said in a statement.

    AgentAI can integrate both with global distribution systems and New Distribution Capability APIs, and it can be customized to fit a TMC’s unique operations, according to Oversee. It also can incorporate travel policies, profiles and other specifics to the corporate travel experience.

    An Oversee spokesperson said there have already been “multiple pilots” with TMCs for the AgentAI tool.

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  • Hubli and Radisson Enable Real-Time Meetings Bookings

    Hubli and Radisson Enable Real-Time Meetings Bookings

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    Radisson Hotel Group and enterprise meetings booking platform Hubli have unwrapped a real-time integration to Radisson’s property management system that automates responses and the booking process for Hubli-facilitated requests for proposals. The entities are bridged by AI-powered pricing and revenue management engine hivr.ai. 

    According to the hivr.ai website, the technology allows hotels to consolidate meeting and group booking requests “across all portals” and place them into context with one another with data visualization dashboards. The AI-based tech automates availability and capacity checks, fills out the RFP forms, sends follow-up emails and overlays its pricing engine, which automatically submits bids for RFPs. 

    If the RFP terms are met—and the meeting organizer accepts the pricing—the integrated systems automatically book the event and remove the meeting and sleeping rooms from the property’s available inventory. 

    The Hubli announcement emphasized the technology was in place up and down the Radisson Hotel Group brand portfolio, providing meeting hosts of all types a fit-to-purpose hotel service category for each meeting. Once the meeting is booked, Hubli planning and management technology applies to the meeting specifics with in-built policy, savings and sustainability controls.

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  • Oversee Adds AI-Powered Auditing, Benchmarking Features

    Oversee Adds AI-Powered Auditing, Benchmarking Features

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    Travel spending analytics platform Oversee has launched new AI-powered and air contract auditing and airfare benchmarking tools, the company announced.

    For its Airfare Benchmarking tool, Oversee—formerly FairFly—pulls data from billions of passenger name records and fares to give companies a comparison of their program and contract performance against peers, with data to the level of carrier, market and class of service, according to the company. The tool also considers each program’s advance purchase behavior.

    The Air Contract Auditing tool uses AI automation to digitize and analyze air contracts and audit discounts on each segment fare basis, according to Oversee. Users can view the data in dashboards and detailed reports, with which they can work with their airline suppliers to resolve discount errors.

    With the tool, Oversee is “the first to fully automate contract enforcement by instantly troubleshooting mistakes in how discounts are applied,” Oversee CEO and founder Aviel Siman-Tov said in a statement.

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  • Global Hotel Alliance, Now 20, Seeks Corporate Niche

    Global Hotel Alliance, Now 20, Seeks Corporate Niche

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    Global Hotel Alliance CEO Chris Hartley talks: 

    • The alliance’s growth strategy
    • The nature of the network’s TMC partnerships
    • The state of international business travel demand

    The Global Hotel Alliance network of independent hotels, founded 20 years ago, in recent years has continues to grow, adding properties throughout the world and reaching a new peak in 2023 in bookings under its GHA Discovery loyalty program. The network, which includes hotel companies like Kempinski Hotels, NH Hotels and Pan Pacific Hotels and Resorts among dozens of others, has established partnerships with travel management companies including American Express Global Business Travel and BCD Travel to help it compete against large global chains for a share of international business travel. GHA CEO Chris Hartley last month during New York University’s annual International Hospitality Industry Investment Conference in New York spoke with BTN managing editor Chris Davis about the state of the network, business travel trends and the promise of direct booking. Edited excerpts follow. 

    BTN: What’s the status of the alliance in terms of membership?

    Chris Hartley: The alliance is now celebrating its 20th anniversary. We’ve been around a long time, but it’s a little bit like the oil tanker analogy: We’ve been moving very slowly, and we’re not necessarily the most recognizable brand out there. But we’ve, nevertheless, over the last 20 years, managed to not only bring in but mostly retain lots of wonderful independent brands. We’ve now got 40 independent brands participating in the alliance, representing around 800 hotels. We are mostly owner-operators, which is quite unique in the industry today. Out of the 800 hotels, probably over 500 of them are owner-operated.

    They all have a lot in common, namely this desire to self-preserve as independent. The alliance has been pretty successful at providing a platform for them to collaborate. We are basically a sharing economy. As we share data, we share technology, we share a common currency under the loyalty program. Every alliance member has to adopt that sort of marketing technology platform that we provide.

    The loyalty program is our core product, but we’re very much supporting them in terms of driving business travel through relationships with TMCs, which we manage on behalf of the alliance members.

    BTN: Are you still looking to actively expand the alliance?

    Hartley: Very much. We have 800 hotels today. My current optimistic prediction is that by the end of next year we’ll hit 1,000 hotels. I am pretty confident that with the current growth path we’ll achieve that number. Not that we really have a growth objective. … We’re not going to just sign a brand because it’s nice to have an extra brand. It’s got to fit with the spirit and mindset of what the alliance is all about.

    This market is difficult because there’s not a lot of independents left. The challenge for us is, the U.S. is our No. 1 outbound market by far. But unfortunately the U.S. market is a difficult one to get a strong hotel presence, because like every brand is affiliated to Hilton or Marriott or wherever. We’re looking at opportunities in this market to build relationships through partnerships. TMCs are a very good way. … It gives us huge customer base volume in this market, which is great. It helps build awareness of the alliance across North America.

    But certainly in terms of outbound business travel from the U.S., in the absence of a strong brand presence, we focus on relationships like with American Express and BCD.


    Corporate travelers are very loyal, especially U.S. corporate travelers. We are playing on a much smaller scale, but we want to be able to offer the visibility to our brands and a loyalty program that at least semi-competes with some of the big programs.”


    BTN: What do the partnerships with TMCs entail? How do they actually work?

    Hartley: We’re effectively doing leverage buying on behalf of the alliance. We’re going to Amex and saying, we would like to do a global referred partnership for all of our hotels, or all the ones that want to participate, which are most of them. We would like to get a preferred deal whereby we’re global preferred status, which will give us more visibility.

    For Amex, the advantage is that for them to knock on the door of 40 independent small brands and do a sensible partnership with them is not really in their interest, efficiency-wise. It’s a win-win. We come to Amex and say, here’s 800 hotels that want to participate. In return, they’re giving smaller brands access to this global partnership deal.

    Then secondly, the loyalty program is important. Corporate travelers are very loyal, especially U.S. corporate travelers. We are playing on a much smaller scale, but we want to be able to offer the visibility to our brands and a loyalty program that at least semi-competes with some of the big programs.

    BTN: Does the loyalty program allow you to market directly to the corporate traveler, bypassing the TMC?

    Hartley: It does. Obviously the TMC partnerships and other partnerships with their travel agency communities is important and sacrosanct. We recognize those customers. But yes, to answer your question, we now have a database of 27 million, 2.2 million here in the U.S., and we have the rights to market to all of them. That means we can create consumer-direct relationship with people, especially leisure travelers.

    For example, Anantara Hotels & Resorts is more a of resort brand, so you’re not getting a lot of business travel going to their hotels. Through the loyalty program, we have the ability to market to consumers who are maybe going skiing, or playing golf, or going to the Maldives, or whatever it is. The loyalty program is then the hook to get consumers to give us that data. Then from there we’re able to market across all the brands.We’re very much measuring as a KPI cross-brand movement.

    BTN: What’s your view of the business travel market and demand?

    Hartley: First I would say business travel was, for us globally, very slow to recover. You’ve heard that everywhere. The U.S. market recovered the fastest and domestic everywhere—Australia, China, U.S., U.K.—all of those markets recovered to 100 percent of 2019 levels by the end of 2022, domestic only.

    But if you look at international, we’ve only seen 60 percent to 70 percent recovery. Markets like China, it’s only this year that we’re getting to about 60 percent recovery for international business travel.

    BTN: Is that bookings or revenue?

    Hartley: Both, really. But I’m generally looking at revenue figures. … Strong rates have helped the optics of the recovery, because the revenues have been good or better.

    But if you’re looking to this year, we’ve seen a slowdown in U.S. business travel, but we are still seeing strong growth internationally. So international business travel is about 11 percent up this year over last year, which for us is good. That is driven by China and India still recovering. Other markets like the U.S., Australia, and others seem to have plateaued at this point. 

    BTN: Does the alliance receive requests for proposals? Do you deal with corporate market on that level?

    Hartley: All the RFP processes are done by the brands themselves. We basically created the TMC relationship, the pricing model, the contracting, the reporting, the event marketing, the direct marketing that the TMCs are doing, we do all of that. Then they do their own RFPs.

    For example, let’s say we’ve got a hotel in Sydney that says, I want to get Amazon, can you help us get the right people [at the TMC] to bid on this RFP for the Amazon deal in Sydney?” Then we are involved in helping them, but we’re not actually doing the process.

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  • Adtrav Awarded GSA’s FedRooms Contract

    Adtrav Awarded GSA’s FedRooms Contract

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    The U.S. General Services Administration has awarded a
    five-year contract to manage the FedRooms government lodging program to Birmingham,
    Ala.-based travel management company Adtrav, a GSA spokesperson this week
    confirmed to BTN. However, incumbent provider CWTSatoTravel has protested the
    award, according to a filing with the U.S. General Accountability Office. 

    FedRooms is an optional hotel program offered by GSA to any U.S.
    government and military personnel traveling on official business of fewer than
    30 nights. More than 10,900 properties in more than 3,000 markets are included
    in the program, according to GSA. Participating hotels must offer certain
    benefits including negotiates rated that do not exceed federal per diem
    guidelines and amenities including the availability of day-of-arrival
    cancellation by 4:00 p.m. and no early departure fees.

    Adtrav’s role will be to manage the program’s sourcing,
    including negotiations with participating hotels, and overseeing data
    management and reporting, Adtrav president and CEO Roger Hale told BTN on
    Thursday. Travelers using FedRooms properties would not book through Adtrav,
    however, instead using authorized government booking tools—ConcurGov, E2
    Solutions or the Defense Booking Tools—or individual federal agency TMCs.


    This is something that we’ve had our eyes on for a for a number of years because it’s something that mirrors what we currently do for a number of our corporate customers. And so this was a natural extension for us.”

    – Adtrav CEO Roger Hale


    Adtrav also will be charged with increasing FedRooms use by
    government travelers, Hale said. “One of the challenges for us is to
    increase its usage, and that’s going to be accomplished by working with federal
    agencies and working with the hoteliers to make the program as attractive as
    possible and widely communicated out to the federal travel workforce,” he
    said.

    The contract long has been sought by Adtrav, Hale said,
    noting that the TMC has experience running state-level government travel
    programs as well as corporate programs.

    “This is something that we’ve had our eyes on for a for
    a number of years because it’s something that mirrors what we currently do for
    a number of our corporate customers. And so this was a natural extension for us,”
    he said. “This is obviously much larger than a standard corporate program
    of a state program, but the principles are very, very, very similar.”

    The five-year deal includes a base two-year contract with
    three option years, a GSA spokesperson told BTN via email. Adtrav’s contract
    was to have begun Oct. 1, but Hale noted that CWTSatoTravel’s protest of the
    bid award would delay that date.

    CWTSato has served as incumbent FedRooms provider for many
    years, and most recently was awarded
    a five-year contract in 2019
    .

    CWTSato has protested the GSA’s decision to award Adtrav the
    FedRooms contract, according to a filing with the GAO. CWT did not return a
    request for comment on the award.

    This is not the first time in recent years CWTSatoTravel has
    protested losing a federal travel-related contract. CWT in 2020 protested the
    award of the U.S. Army’s travel management services business for the contiguous
    United States to BCD Travel, first with the GAO, then with the U.S. Court of
    Federal Claims. The court
    backed CWT’s protest
    , blocked BCD from beginning service, and the Army in
    2022 awarded
    CWTSatoTravel a five-year contract
    after revising its bidding process. 

    Along with the scheduled Sept. 30 expiration of CWTSatoTravel’s
    FedRooms contract will be the demise of the FedRooms.com website, through which
    government travelers could book discounted leisure travel, according
    to the Federal Times
    .

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    cdavis@thebtngroup.com (Chris Davis)

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  • Wyndham Opens First Echo, Adds Ext.-Stay Head

    Wyndham Opens First Echo, Adds Ext.-Stay Head

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    Wyndham Hotels
    & Resorts has opened the first property under its new Echo extended-stay
    brand in Spartanburg, S.C., the company announced Thursday. Additionally,
    Wyndham has hired a head of extended-stay operations. 

    Mandeep Singh has
    joined Wyndham as vice president of extended stay operations, a new position
    for the company, and will oversee Echo as well as Waterwalk Extended Stay, a
    brand that joined Wyndham’s portfolio earlier this year. Singh has “over
    20 years of global experience in extended-stay hotels, corporate housing,
    serviced apartments and multi-family properties,” according to Wyndham,
    including stints as COO of apartment-style extended-stay lodging provider
    StayAPT Suites and senior vice president of operations for WoodSpring Suites.

    Wyndham announced
    the development of economy-tier Echo, its first extended-stay brand, in 2022.
    The new-build Echo Suites Spartanburg follows the brand’s prototype of 124
    rooms with “single- and two-queen studio suites with kitchens” with
    public spaces including a fitness center and guest laundry.

    Wyndham anticipates
    additional Echo openings this year in Texas and Virginia and plans for 75
    properties open or under construction by 2026. Its current development pipeline
    includes “nearly 270 hotels and over 33,000 rooms across the U.S. and
    Canada,” according to Wyndham. The company pointed to blue-collar business
    travel as a key market for the brand, noting the increase in U.S.
    infrastructure projects authorized
    by the 2021
    infrastructure bill
    and 2022 CHIPS and Science Act.

    “Together, these projects are creating a tailwind for Wyndham
    and the everyday business traveler, particularly construction and other trade
    workers, many of whom are in need of long-term accommodations as they travel to
    job sites across the country,” Wyndham said in a statement. “The work
    is expected to bring a $3.3 billion opportunity in additional room revenue to
    Wyndham franchisees over the multi-year period of spend.”

    Infrastructure-related
    travel bookings made up 22 percent of Wyndham’s 2023 gross room revenues,
    according to a first-quarter presentation for investors, with “logistics and other”
    adding another 5 percent and corporate transient accounting for 2 percent.

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    cdavis@thebtngroup.com (Chris Davis)

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  • Conferma, Pliant Partner on Virtual Payments Offering

    Conferma, Pliant Partner on Virtual Payments Offering

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    Virtual card provider Conferma is partnering to issue virtual cards through digital corporate card issuer Pliant’s app.

    Pliant, which was founded in 2020, lets companies issue physical and virtual cards, on which they can track spending and integrate into their finance stack, through app and API-based solutions. Enabling Conferma to generate virtual cards through the app will add more virtual access to travel management companies and online travel agents throughout Europe, enabling corporate customers to connect and pay.

    “The partnership builds on the existing investment into our platform that allows us to connect more businesses to enable commerce,” Conferma chief commercial officer Sonya Geelon said in a statement.

    Among Pliant’s offerings is Pliant Earth, which provides automatic carbon emission tracking on travel-related payments, which enables companies to offset those emissions, according to the company.

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    mbaker@thebtngroup.com (Michael B. Baker)

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