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  • Wyndham Claims Q3 Infrastructure Demand Lift

    Wyndham Claims Q3 Infrastructure Demand Lift

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    Wyndham Hotels & Resorts’ systemwide third-quarter
    revenue per available room declined slightly but executives during a Thursday
    earnings call claimed increasing demand from its blue-collar base of business
    travelers, particularly in states with high infrastructure spending.

    Systemwide third-quarter RevPAR decreased by about 1 percent
    year over year, though it increased about 1 percent in constant currency,
    according to Wyndham, and U.S. RevPAR declined about 1 percent. However,
    Wyndham said weekday U.S. RevPAR increased by about 1 percent, an increase
    Wyndham CEO Geoff Ballotti attributed to “positive momentum in
    infrastructure-related business.”

    Specifically, Wyndham noted a RevPAR improvement of 250
    basis points—2.5 percent—across its oil and gas markets, and in five U.S.
    states that have received significant funding from the 2021 U.S. infrastructure
    bill—Texas, California, New York, Illinois, and New Mexico—RevPAR increased
    about 80 basis points, or 0.8 percent year over year, Ballotti said. 

    Blue-collar travel comprises the vast majority of Wyndham’s
    business travel volume. Infrastructure-related travel bookings made up 22
    percent of Wyndham’s 2023 gross room revenues, according to a presentation for
    investors, with “logistics and other” adding another 5 percent and
    corporate transient accounting for 2 percent.

    Meanwhile, Wyndham Rewards Business, the loyalty program for
    businesses the company introduced
    in April
    that allows corporate clients to accrue points for Wyndham hotel
    stays booked through direct channels or global distribution systems, “has gained significant traction, driving a double-digit year-to-date
    increase in our corporate contracted business from infrastructure-related
    accounts,” Ballotti said Thursday.

    Wyndham Q3 Metrics

    Wyndham’s third-quarter systemwide RevPAR declined 1 percent
    year over year to $49.33. U.S. RevPAR also declined 1 percent year over year to
    $57.98. U.S. occupancy “remained consistent,” according to the
    company. Wyndham projected full-year 2024 RevPAR to be roughly flat year over
    year.

    Third-quarter net revenue declined 1 percent year over year
    to $396 million, while net income was $102 million, down from $103 million one
    year prior.

    Wyndham’s total rooms at the end of the third quarter
    increased about 4 percent to 892,600, and its development pipeline increased
    about 5 percent to 2,100 hotels and 248,000 rooms. Echo, Wyndham’s new
    economy extended-stay brand
    , makes up about 14 percent of the pipeline,
    according to the company.

    RELATED: Wyndham
    Q2 performance

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  • American Furthering Corp. Amends, ‘Encouraged’ by Q3 Growth

    American Furthering Corp. Amends, ‘Encouraged’ by Q3 Growth

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    American Airlines’ defunct corporate distribution strategy led its corporate- and agency-flown revenue share in the second quarter to bottom out “11 percent below our historical share,” American CEO Robert Isom said Thursday during the company’s third quarter earnings call. Those indirect bookings, however, have “started to recover, and we estimate we are currently at 7 percent below historical levels, and we expect to see continued improvement in the months ahead. … The booking trajectory through the quarter [was] encouraging.”

    In echoing its second-quarter earnings call, American executives spent a fair amount of time Thursday addressing its since-repealed corporate distribution strategy, admitting once again that it cost the company $1.5 billion in revenue this year as well as corporate share and those previous moves “angered” customers. 

    For the quarter, American’s managed business revenue was up 6 percent year over year, and “we continue to see yield strength in the segment,” Isom said, adding that the carrier is tracking its recovery process by “measuring our agency and corporate booking performance, tracking the growth of our AAdvantage Business program, and listening to the feedback from our agency partners and corporate customers.”

    American aims to fully restore its revenue from indirect channels by the end of 2025, according to Isom. 

    Chief strategy officer Steve Johnson pointed to six company objectives around its reversed distribution strategy. The first was “to stabilize the ship and refocus the team,” he said. The carrier also needed to rebuild its foundation and infrastructure to participate in traditional sales and distribution channels since that had “largely been dismantled,” and it needed to be rebuilt in a lasting way “that our partners would trust.”

    Third, “and most importantly, we needed to reestablish and start redeveloping our relationships” by listening, Johnson said, “and ultimately getting past a stage that was really anger and reacquainting ourselves with these people and regaining their trust in a way that was really important.”

    The final three objectives were to shift share, outperform guidance, and achieve the latter “in a way that we didn’t lose additional ground to our principal competitors,” Johnson said. He noted that American had made progress on all fronts during the quarter.

    Isom added that in the third quarter, the carrier continued negotiations for new incentive-based agreements with the largest travel management companies. “We now have new competitive agreements in place with more than half of those and are in advanced negotiations with the rest,” he said. In addition, American has amended agreements with “many of our top corporate customers.”

    American Q3 Metrics

    American reported third-quarter passenger revenue of more than $12.5 billion, up 0.8 percent year over year, with total revenue up 1.2 percent for the period to more than $13.6 billion, a third-quarter record. The carrier also reported a net loss of $149 million, down from the $545 million reported in Q3 2023. Capacity increased 3.2 percent compared with a year prior, while the average fuel price was $2.50 per gallon.

    The carrier in its guidance projected fourth-quarter capacity to be up 1 percent to 3 percent year over year, with full-year 2023 capacity to increase 5 percent to 6 percent. The average fuel price is projected to be $2.20 to $2.40 per gallon. American also expects 2025 capacity to grow in the low single digits year over year, with a focus on “markets that are still not restored to historical levels,” American CFO Devon May said.

    RELATED: American Q2 performance

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  • Travlr ID Partners with Umbrella for ‘Bridge’ to TMC Booking Tech

    Travlr ID Partners with Umbrella for ‘Bridge’ to TMC Booking Tech

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    Decentralized traveler identity network Travlr ID has partnered with traveler profile software company Midoco Group to “build the bridge” in connecting with travel management companies, the companies announced.

    Travlr ID, which won The BTN Group’s Innovation Faceoff at 2023’s Business Travel Show, offers blockchain-based identity management technology through which travelers can share profiles with various sources. In partnering with Midoco’s Umbrella software, which synchronizes business traveler profiles with travel management company booking technology, the companies will be able to “bring enhanced offerings to market,” the companies said.

    “By fusing Travlr ID’s product approach with Umbrella’s industry expertise, we’re set to unlock a new era of how traveler profiles are stored, transferred and enhanced with greater data,” Travlr ID CEO Gee Mann said in a statement.

    Listed customers of the Switzerland-based Umbrella include CTM, Christopherson Business Travel, Altour and Lufthansa City Center.

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  • Amadeus to Provide Upcoming Delta NDC Content

    Amadeus to Provide Upcoming Delta NDC Content

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    Following agreements with Sabre and Travelport, Delta Air Lines also will distribute its upcoming New Distribution Capability content through Amadeus, the companies announced Tuesday.

    “Delta is pleased to provide full content, including NDC, to our indirect channels as part of our comprehensive offering,” Delta managing director of distribution strategy and agency sales programs Jeff Lobl said in a statement. 

    Neither company said when the Delta NDC content would become available, but Delta has indicated previously that it would begin NDC testing in late 2024 and early 2025. The Amadeus travel platform will continue to offer Delta’s content across multiple channels including Amadeus Selling Platform Connect, Amadeus Web Services and Cytric Easy, according to Amadeus. 

    Amadeus also recently signed an agreement with United Airlines to offer “better NDC capabilities” as more travel agents adopt NDC.

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  • ATG Names Sales Leader for Asia-Pacific Region

    ATG Names Sales Leader for Asia-Pacific Region

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    Patsy Khoo

    ATG Travel Worldwide has named Patsy Khoo as sales and business management director for the Asia-Pacific region, the travel management company announced.

    Khoo, who has worked in TMCs for 30 years including serving as a general manager at Rosenbluth International, will be working with ATG’s clients in the region to help them build and manage their global business plans. She reports to ATG founder and CEO Tammy Krings.

    Over the past five years, ATG’s client base in the Asia-Pacific region has doubled, according to Krings, and Khoo “brings to ATG a wealth of marketing knowledge specific to the APAC reason.”

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  • BCE M&E: Tight 2025 Budgets to Challenge Mtg. Buyers

    BCE M&E: Tight 2025 Budgets to Challenge Mtg. Buyers

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    Meetings and events buyers are going to have to do more with less going into 2025—provide more “engagement” and “experience” with lower or flat budgets, that is, even as strong supply-side metrics continue to hold and increase rates. 

    That dynamic is playing out in most markets around the globe, according to meetings management firm BCD M&E, which continues to pursue its three-year plan to integrate meeting logistics, data management, production value and high service standards. According to an introductory statement attributed to BCE M&E global CEO Bruce Morgan, the company will focus on deepening its offerings, rather than expanding their scope and continue to roll out “consistency across all our regions.” 

    To that end, the company has rebranded and deepened a number of service offerings like “The Collective,” “Films,” and 2021’s rollout of its Life Sciences Center of Excellence. The first on that list is a brand experience agency limited today to the U.K. and United States, but which will expand to other regions in the coming year. Films is an in-house production agency that digs deep into creating onsite production experiences and pushing brand messaging over the line to brand engagement through storytelling. The Life Sciences Center of Excellence, which concentrates efforts on the unique needs of a single vertical, could expand to a Finance and Professional Services specialty in 2025.

    All of this points to a need in the meetings and events service industry, according to the report, to streamline efforts across geographies and utilize the burgeoning technology landscape to make meeting sourcing, planning, communications, logistics and production more efficient in a fast-paced world that is looking for cost control at the same time it needs service and production enhancements.

    BCD M&E’s report indicated the company would look to additional artificial intelligence integrations to mine event data, not just for individual event performance objectives, but also dig deeper into insights that will help tailor event experiences and design for optimized engagement. Generative AI will begin, the company wrote, to replace manual data entry and analysis and, instead, generate better insights that translate into action. 

    No matter what the region, it looks like clients will be needing more consolidated, efficiency-oriented services, because challenges in 2025 remain daunting in terms of budget and lead times and how those stack up against venue rates and attendee expectations.

    North America – BCD M&E claimed 20 percent-plus increases in 2024 meetings activity year over year for the North America region. But going into 2025, clients will be seeking “cost savings across the board,” according to the report. That may include outsourcing or flex-sourcing more meeting planning resources from their agency, rather than hiring in-house.

    In the strong supply-side environment, the sourcing process has been under pressure and will continue to be in 2025. That pressure is reflected in master services agreements that are trending toward demanding fewer concessions and focusing more on governance. Concessions will need to more frequently be negotiated on a per-event basis and tailored to individual event objectives, rather than delivered to all events similarly. 

    United Kingdom – Higher costs are challenging flat to slightly increased budgets in the region. Mergers and acquisitions also are eating up some of the smaller agencies in the market, so there are opportunities for BCD to expand its business if it can deliver the right product and value mix. The leisure market, in a piece of good news, is cooling. This hasn’t taken rates down, but it has lengthened lead times as hotels aren’t as covetous of saving rooms for last-minute, high-paying leisure business. Meeting space itself, according to the report, is easier to book in general. In London, however, prices continue at very high levels and are pricing many organizations out of the market. 

    Europe, Middle East, Africa – Wars in Ukraine and the Middle East continue to cause uncertainty. That’s coupled with double- and triple-digit inflation butting up against budgets that appear to be trending flat to slightly down in the region. Short lead times in this market and going head-to-head with long internal approval processes as costs scrutiny amps up within organizations. That is, however, leading to more strategic meetings management momentum. 

    Asia-Pacific – Aggressive meetings and events growth continues in the region, with 80 percent of events in 2024 happening in face-to-face formats (APAC held on to virtual and hybrid meetings longer than other regions). Budgets are flat, but buyers are demanding more creativity and production values in the region. At the same time, organizational restructuring internally in terms of which divisions own the meetings budgets has interfered with efficient execution. Continued labor pressures continue to impact some service levels in the market. 

    Latin America – Unpredictable socio-economic status, including violence, is undermining some meeting and event activities. Sustainability awareness has grown as well in the region, turning attention to greener events with less footprint and lighter impact on communities. There’s a big opportunity in life sciences, according to the report, and while the service market remains more fragmented in Latin America than in other regions, buyers are pushing for more integrated support resources. Incentive travel is a major trend as companies focus on driving sales revenue.

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  • STR: September U.S. Occupancy Slips as Rates Rise

    STR: September U.S. Occupancy Slips as Rates Rise

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    The average U.S. hotel rate increased year over year September as occupancy slipped, according to hotel analytics firm STR.

    The average daily U.S. hotel rate in September increased 1.2 percent year over year to $162.63, according to STR, while occupancy decreased 2.5 percent to 64.6 percent. U.S. revenue per available room declined 1.3 percent year over year to $105.04.

    STR again said its top 25 markets “showed higher occupancy and ADR than all other markets,” which it has noted for several months.

    New York posted the highest September occupancy figure among STR’s top 25 markets at 87 percent, though it declined 0.7 percent year over year. New Orleans had the lowest occupancy at 53.6 percent, followed by Tampa at 61.4 percent.

    RELATED: STR August 2024 performance figures

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  • Amex: Q3 Int’l Customer Spending Grows Amid Domestic ‘Stability’

    Amex: Q3 Int’l Customer Spending Grows Amid Domestic ‘Stability’

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    Year-over-year spending growth by American Express international customers continued to outpace that of U.S. customers in the third quarter, Amex reported in its earnings on Friday.

    Travel and entertainment spending was up 2 percent year over year for Amex’s U.S. commercial customers, compared with a 1 percent growth in spending on goods and services. Overall, commercial spending is “up modestly and consistent with what we’ve seen over the past few quarters,” Amex CFO Christophe Le Caillec said in an earnings call.

    Among small and midsized U.S. commercial customers, which make up 83 percent of Amex’s total U.S. commercial spending volume, total spending inclusive of T&E and goods and services was up 1 percent year over year in the third quarter. Spending by large and global companies in the U.S. was flat year over year.

    With U.S. commercial year-over-year spending growth up either 1 percent or 2 percent every quarter over the past year, Le Caillec indicated upcoming growth rates would be similar.

    “We see stability in terms of billings, in terms of the trends and no inflection points,” Le Caillec said. “We are only a few weeks into [the fourth quarter], but my projection for Q4 is to be a continuation of a lot of these trends.”

    Spending by Amex’s corporate customers outside of the U.S., meanwhile, was up 13 percent year over year in the third quarter, the same rate as consumer spending outside of the United States. Spending in T&E by corporate and commercial customers outside the U.S. was up 11 percent year over year as goods and services spending increased 14 percent year over year.

    “The breadth of this continued performance is especially worth noting,” Le Caillec said. “Every one of our top five markets is growing in double digits, with four out of the five in mid- to high teens. For example, Japan is up 17 percent and Mexico 15 percent, on a [currency exchange]-adjusted basis.”

    Amex reported total revenues of $1 6.6 billion in the third quarter, up 8 percent year over year. Third-quarter net income was $2.5 billion, up 2 percent compared with the third quarter of 2023.

    RELATED: Amex Q2 results

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  • Reed & Mackay Taps Ovation’s Peiser to Lead U.S. Business Development

    Reed & Mackay Taps Ovation’s Peiser to Lead U.S. Business Development

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    Reed & Mackay has hired former Ovation Travel executive Annie Peiser as VP of business development for the U.S., where Reed & Mackay has been growing its footprint and staff.

    Peiser had led business development at Ovation, now part of American Express Global Business Travel, for nearly 20 years, and at Reed & Mackay, she is tasked with strengthening client relationships and driving new business opportunities in the U.S., according to the travel management company. In particularly, she will be working to build Reed & Mackay’s presence with clients in financial services, law and other professional service firms.

    Reed & Mackay U.S. CEO John Keichline in a statement said Peiser “is a seasoned sales leader whose extensive experience and proven track record will be instrumental in accelerating our growth in the U.S.”

    Peiser is reporting to Jennifer Achim, the TMC’s SVP of U.S. sales and marketing and another former Ovation executive who joined Reed & Mackay last summer.

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  • Hilton Partners to Assist Visually Impaired Guests

    Hilton Partners to Assist Visually Impaired Guests

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    Hilton Worldwide has partnered with Be My Eyes, an app designed to assist the visually impaired, and will use live agents to help such travelers navigate participating hotels, the hotel company announced Tuesday.

    Be My Eyes connects visually impaired people with volunteers who use live video to help them accomplish tasks and manage surroundings. Hilton has established brand-specific teams of agents to assist through the app visually impaired guests with navigating the property’s layout and amenities, according to the hotel. Agents are part of Hilton’s Reservation and Customer Care team, according to a Hilton spokesperson, and are located in “multiple locations across the U.S.”

    The spokesperson declined to specify the number of hotels that are participating in the partnership but noted it is available in all brands except NoMadGraduateSmall Luxury Hotels of the World and the Autocamp camping brand.

    Hilton said it is the first hotel company to partner with the app, and the spokesperson said there are no charges associated with the service. 

    Hilton last year began working with Be My Eyes to help improve the ability of the app’s AI model to recognize hotel furniture and fixture, and this year expanded the partnership to train agents to help guide guests through video. 

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  • Elliott Calls for Southwest Special Meeting, Board Replacement

    Elliott Calls for Southwest Special Meeting, Board Replacement

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    Elliott Management has carried through on its previous vow to call for a special meeting of Southwest Airlines shareholders, the investment company announced Monday. Elliott requested a Dec. 10 meeting for a vote to replace eight of the carrier’s current board members.

    Those eight were part of the 10 nominees the company originally named in August and  include former Virgin America CEO and former American Airlines SVP of global sales David Cush, former Marriott International group president for the Americas Dave Grissen, former Air Canada CEO Robert Milton and former WestJet president and CEO Gregg Saretsky

    The remaining four are Michael Cawley, former deputy CEO, COO and CFO of Ryanair, Sarah Feinberg, former chief of staff to U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx, Josh Gotbaum, the former chapter 11 trustee of Hawaiian Airlines, and Patty Watson, NCR Atleos EVP and chief information and technology officer.

    The two not included in Monday’s announcement are Nancy Killefer, a former Obama administration chief performance officer and McKinsey & Co. director, and Eash Sundaram, a former JetBlue chief digital and technology officer.

    “We are taking this step today because the need for improved oversight at Southwest has never been more urgent,” Elliott partner John Pike and portfolio manager Bobby Xu wrote in a statement. “Following Elliott’s public push for changes, Southwest has responded with a series of long-overdue strategic and corporate-governance initiatives, promising that better performance will follow. However, Southwest’s shareholders have heard these sorts of promises before, and what they need today, at the outset of this attempted turnaround, is an experienced, highly qualified Board to oversee the changes and ensure successful execution.”

    Elliott wants to replace eight current Southwest directors: board chairman and former CEO Gary Kelly, Douglas Brooks, Eduardo Conrado, William Cunningham, Thomas Gilligan, David Hess, Elaine Mendoza and Jill Soltau. 

    Southwest in September announced a board “refreshment,” in part as a response to Elliott’s recommended board slate, in which three of the current members already agreed to leave: Kelly, after the carrier’s 2025 annual meeting, and Gilligan and Soltau, after the company’s scheduled board meeting in November. 

    Other members set to retire in November include David Biegler, the compensation committee chairman; Veronica Biggins, the nominating and corporate governance committee chair; Sen. Roy Blunt; and William Cunningham, the lead director.

    “Absent a thorough reconstitution of its Board, the story of Southwest will remain one of empty promises and unfulfilled potential,” Pike and Xu wrote. “The nominees we have put forward today are uniquely qualified to hold the Company’s executive leadership accountable and ensure that the Company delivers improved results.”

    Elliott also has called for the replacement of Southwest CEO Bob Jordan, but did not mention that in today’s announcement.

    The carrier also held its investor day on Sept. 26 and provided additional details on the changes it had previously announced, which include assigned seats and a premium cabin. Jordan also had addressed the Elliott proxy battle by saying that Southwest remained willing to work with the company, but that “Elliott has demonstrate little or no interest in collaborating with Southwest,” he said. 

    Southwest did not immediately respond Monday to a request for comment.

    RELATED: Elliott Vows Southwest Shareholder Mtg. Request ‘as Soon as Next Week’

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  • TMC RFP Success in Current Market Requires Refined Strategy

    TMC RFP Success in Current Market Requires Refined Strategy

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    Travel buyer chatter at industry conferences over the past several months has revealed a healthy appetite for change and innovation with their travel management service provider, but the path to and market for that change is as difficult as ever.

    While BTN research in recent months showed, at least among the small and midsized travel program segment, that three-quarters have not changed TMCs in recent months, Mesh Payments CEO and co-founder Oded Zehavi spoke of a “wave of [requests for proposals]” for TMC services that he was seeing across the industry. Research by Corporate Traveler and the Global Business Travel Association last month supported that observation, with more than two-thirds of 299 SME stakeholder respondents saying they currently are looking for a new TMC.

    At the same time, with the Covid-19 travel restrictions largely in the rearview mirror, the travel management company landscape has endured without the widescale closures and consolidations some had predicted during the pandemic’s darkest hours, but it’s certainly a shifting landscape nonetheless. American Express Global Business Travel’s planned acquisition of CWT, of course, would be the biggest shift, but a number of other transactions are either underway or recently completed, including Direct Travel’s acquisition by a group of investors led by Steve Singh and TravelPerk’s acquisition of AmTrav.

    Is an RFP Worth It?

    As such, the role of the TMC RFP is shifting as well, as some buyers question its value. In a recent BTN benchmarking session among Corporate Travel 100 buyers, one questioned “the value in doing an RFP … when there’s a virtual duopoly.”


    With all the activity happening with consolidation, TMCs are not really willing to enter into a bid without some level of engagement.”

    – BCD Travel’s Rossana Martin


    The capability of serving large global programs is at the crux of the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority’s investigation into the Amex GBT-CWT merger, to which Amex GBT has responded to dispute the claims of limited competition. In that response, Amex GBT and CWT referred to the growing slate of providers who are pursuing global multinationals, including tech-led companies, such as Navan, or midsized TMCs broadening their ambitions, such as Fox World Travel.

    Whether a TMC is able to meet a company’s global needs, however, the RFP process is not the place to figure that out. Travel buyers should go into the process knowing exactly what they need from a TMC, with those who are not able to fulfill those needs excluded from the process, Rossana Martin, BCD Travel’s North America SVP of global sales, said during an education session at this year’s GBTA Convention in Atlanta.

    “Don’t send out a blanket RFP,” Martin said. “If a TMC wants to put together the right value proposition, they need to understand what’s important and need to keep an organization’s goals firmly in mind.”

    If a company needs an end-to-end solution, for example, that should eliminate some potential bidders from the onset, she said. If sustainability goals are a top priority for a company, TMCs that aren’t able to help a company deliver on those goals shouldn’t be in the bid.

    Doing that work ahead of an RFP can save a significant amount of effort, Martin said. Through workshops and discovery, a large portion of bids “are won before the RFP is issued,” she said. “We met with a customer who did the pre-work, and they told us we won in that first meeting.”

    Conversely, the majority of customers who develop RFPs for TMC services end up staying with the incumbent, she said, another indication that the process could be a waste of resources if proper planning is not done.

    With the current environment for TMCs, there might not be much of a response without sufficient preparation, either.

    “Going to bid, it’s a huge exercise,” Martin said. “With all the activity happening with consolidation, TMCs are not really willing to enter into a bid without some level of engagement.”

    Stakeholder Importance

    Having the necessary stakeholders—including senior leadership and anyone who would be involved throughout the process, such as IT or the executive assistants who handle a large volume of bookings—involved at the onset is a key to success for a TMC RFP, buyers said during the GBTA education session. Those stakeholders also need to understand the complexity of a TMC decision.


    We’re not buying computers; we’re buying travel, which has many more layers: technology, ESG, the agent team. You’re not just buying one thing. You’re buying 10 things all in one.”

    – General Atlantic’s Grace Knowlton


    Grace Knowlton, director of global travel and expense for General Atlantic, said she had to make it clear to those in the company who thought the process would take three months that it would not be the case.

    “We’re not buying computers; we’re buying travel, which has many more layers: technology, ESG, the agent team,” she said. “You’re not just buying one thing. You’re buying 10 things all in one, and you’re taking the time to make sure that it’s something that is going to last three, five, 10 or 15 years.”

    Having that involvement at the RFP stage will make the next steps happen more smoothly once a bid is awarded, she said. “Bringing them in and giving them the voice makes them feel like they are involved in the decisions,” Knowlton said. “When you move into implementation, having that buy-in, you make change-management decisions much easier.”

    Intuitive corporate travel and M&E manager Katie Hollien said that preparation work “helped us be successful” with the company’s TMC RFP. “We had the right stakeholders, made sure we had the timeline and dates agreed upon and achieved our goals,” she said.

    Failure to bring in stakeholders at the onset, on the other hand, can be a grave error, Martin said. She said she had one client with whom she had won the bid, but when they spoke to IT about implementation, they discovered IT was so backed up that they wouldn’t be able to start for two years.

    “If you don’t understand what every stakeholder is doing, if they don’t have time to implement the TMC, that can derail your whole process,” she said.

    Expecting More

    The RFP is an opportunity to highlight what a TMC can do beyond the core services, and analysts said they should be tailored to those specific needs. Providing a long list of questions that are not relevant to a company’s core goals is not as fruitful.

    “They can say yes, yes, yes, but it does not add any value,” Travel Consulting Group managing partner Jens Vongehr said during a session at Business Travel Show Europe this summer. “It’s about analysis, it’s about focus, it’s about consultancy.”

    Buyers in the CT100 benchmarking session spoke of some of ways they are maximizing the potential of their TMC services. The buyer who spoke of the “duopoly” also said they are getting a “pretty big bang for [their] buck” with consulting services, due to Amex GBT’s investment in its consulting arm. Another buyer said they are using their agency to manage their soft-dollar program with their airline partner. A third buyer said when they implemented their TMC, they tasked them with building them a new portal as well as work with marketing and communications.

    “We’re getting so much more service out of our TMC, and we’re getting innovation,” the buyer said.

    As those expectations expand, however, buyers should not lose focus on that core ability of agent service. One CT100 buyer noted that no matter how many agents are serving an account, only a small percentage will be comfortable with VIP services, and the buyer suggested getting those expectations upfront in writing.

    Hollien said making sure she had the right agents on her account was a key part of her negotiations.

    “You can put in the best online booking too and the best portal, but the first step of a success TMC relationship is having the ability to book travel,” she said. “If the agents aren’t the best you can get, you might as well throw everything else out of the window.”

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  • AmTrav’s Perlstein Rejoins to Oversee Relationship Management

    AmTrav’s Perlstein Rejoins to Oversee Relationship Management

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    Ted Perlstein

    Former AmTrav sales executive Ted Perlstein has returned to the travel management company to lead its relationship management team, AmTrav announced.

    As SVP of relationship management, Perlstein is in charge of AmTrav’s “relationship managers” who work with clients on implementation, provide guidance on policy and sourcing and offer other strategic insights, according to AmTrav. Currently, AmTrav has 10 relationship managers, and Perlstein will help that team “continue to grow and identify new opportunities to deliver value to customers,” AmTrav co-founder, president and COO Craig Fichtelberg said in a statement.

    Perlstein, who began his new role in September, previously was with AmTrav for nine years, most recently as SVP of growth and retention, and left in late 2021 to serve as COO of luxury travel operators Gohagan and AHI Travel. He also has had roles at Orbitz, LastMinuteTravel.com and Career Education Corp.

    AmTrav earlier this year was acquired by TravelPerk but has continued to operate as a distinct brand.

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    mbaker@thebtngroup.com (Michael B. Baker)

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  • United to Add Eight New Destinations Next Summer

    United to Add Eight New Destinations Next Summer

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    United Airlines for the summer 2025 season will add eight new destinations, the carrier announced Thursday, making it the “largest international expansion in its history.”

    New destinations with direct service to and from Newark Liberty International Airport include Palermo, Italy, launching May 21 and operating three times weekly; Bilbao, Spain, launching May 31 and operating three times weekly; Nuuk, Greenland, beginning June 14 and operating two times weekly via the city’s new international airport, which is scheduled to open in November; and Faro and Madeira Island in Portugal. The former will launch May 16 and operate four times weekly; the latter will launch June 7 and operate three times weekly.

    United on May 23 will begin year-round service between Washington, D.C.’s Dulles International Airport and Dakar, Senegal, operating three times weekly. 

    The two remaining cities being added to the United network will operate via Tokyo’s Narita International Airport and serve Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, beginning May 1 and Kaohsiung, Taiwan, beginning July 11. The latter will operate year-round. 

    The carrier also is adding new routes, including direct seasonal service between Dulles and each Venice, Italy, beginning May 22 and operating daily, and Nice, France, beginning May 24 and operating four times weekly. Starting May 22, United also will add new daily service between San Francisco and San Jose, Costa Rica. 

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  • FCM Targets Global Growth for Meetings & Events Business

    FCM Targets Global Growth for Meetings & Events Business

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    Australia-based FCM Meetings & Events is leaning into global ambitions, relaunching its meetings and events business with major growth plans for Asia, Europe and North America. The company will look to leverage its position as a subsidiary of FCM Travel to reach business customers who need to harness their travel and meetings volume for global scale. But, the company said, FCM M&E will continue to pursue a strategy of regional customization.

    “Globalizing the FCM M&E business will allow us to
    add consistency and scale for customers looking for a global meetings and
    events provider,” said FCM M&E global general manager Simone Seiler in a statement. The company will operate from hub cities in Asia Pacific, Europe and Middle East and North and South America, with a drive toward global consistency “but
    with local nuance to understand specific client needs,” said Seiler.

    The move comes as FCM market survey of 562 customers showed that meetings and events spending represented more than 50 percent of business travel spend for more than a quarter of those businesses. It also comes as global meetings and events services may soon shrink to include fewer providers, thanks to the proposed acquisition of CWT by American Express Global Business Travel, which would include CWT’s meetings and events division. That acquisition is subject to escalated regulatory scrutiny in the U.K.

    As part of the global relaunch, FCM M&E has named 10-year company veteran Gabriella Antoniotti as the business leader for the Americas, where she will oversee the entire meetings and events division across the United States and Canada. Antoniotti most recently served as FCM M&E’s head of operations, responsible for leading operations,
    managing the company’s Event
    Travel, Sourcing & Managed Meetings and Event Management departments.

    FCM
    M&E has also named Joanne Shaw global director of enterprise
    sales.

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  • ARC Integrates Oman Air NDC in Direct Connect

    ARC Integrates Oman Air NDC in Direct Connect

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    Airlines Reporting Corp. has implemented Oman Air’s New Distribution Capability offering in the ARC Direct Connect program, ARC announced Tuesday.

    The partnership “allows us to expand our global footprint by offering NDC-enabled transactions beyond our existing network, providing great accessibility, choice and flexibility to travelers across the United States,” Oman Air chief commercial officer Mike Rutter said in a statement.

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    dairoldi@thebtngroup.com (Donna M. Airoldi)

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  • Amex GBT, CWT Challenge CMA Merger Investigation Findings

    Amex GBT, CWT Challenge CMA Merger Investigation Findings

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    American Express Global Business Travel and CWT have raised a series of objections to the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority’s decision to escalate its investigation into their proposed $570 million merger.

    In a joint response submitted on Aug. 23 August but made public Friday as part of the ongoing investigation, the TMCs refuted multiple findings of the CMA’s Phase 1 investigation, arguing among other points that the authority’s concerns over a substantial lessening of competition are unfounded.

    The TMCs also claimed the CMA overstated the TMCs’ combined market share, overplayed the barriers to entry of new entrants to the market, and “accepted without question certain suppliers’ arguments that GBT could slow the development of NDC, which has no basis in fact.”

    The 55-page written response, with numerous redacted sections, also argued that the TMCs are not currently each other’s closest competitor—instead pointing to BCD Travel—and endorsed the ability of several rivals to compete for global multinational, or GMN, customers.

    “The market for business travel services is highly competitive with a large number of strong competitors for customers of all sizes,” wrote the TMCs. The combined entity would “continue to face strong competition from at least four global competitors,” the statement said, pointing to BCD Travel, FCM, CTM and Navan, who have “the credibility and track record to fight for and win contracts to serve customers of all sizes with the most complex needs, as well as those with simpler requirements.”

    The statement added: “The decision [to escalate the investigation] did not take into account the highly dynamic nature of the market,” with “customers increasingly demanding digital solutions” and “TMCs providing global coverage through tech solutions, travel partner networks, and business process outsourcing solutions.”

    The TMCs also contended that there is no separate market for global multinationals and SMEs with complex needs, arguing that companies of all sizes have “a continuum of requirements that all TMCs are able to serve.”

    According to the TMCs, the CMA was also over-reliant on information published in BTN’s Corporate Travel 100 and Europe’s Leading TMCs reports. “The decision relied on BTN’s 2023 Corporate Travel 100 survey to decide that ‘only few TMCs’ can cater to GMN needs. Yet, the survey’s results are heavily US-centric and relate only to air-volume. … Consequently, the survey is not representative of the global geographic market used in the decision.”

    The statement concluded: “The decision’s competitive assessment and conclusions were incorrect in numerous respects. The transaction will not result in an SLC in the supply of BTA [business travel agency] services to GMN customers or any other customers.”

    It continued: “The evidence shows that business travel is a highly competitive, fragmented, and dynamic market, that the parties are not each other’s closest competitors … and that the merged entity will be constrained by more than five strong competitors, as well as its powerful and sophisticated customers, post-transaction.”

    The CMA is due to report its Phase 2 verdict by Jan. 26, 2025, and the acquisition will also have to secure regulatory clearance in the US. Following confirmation of the Phase 2 probe in August, Amex GBT said it expects to complete the acquisition of CWT in the first quarter of 2025. When first announced in March, the TMC said it hoped to close the deal in the second half of 2024.

    Originally published by BTN Europe.

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    ahoskins@thebtngroup.com (Andy Hoskins)

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  • American Extends TMC NDC Commissions

    American Extends TMC NDC Commissions

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    American Airlines has extended its travel management company incentives for New Distribution Capability bookings through the end of the year, the carrier confirmed. 

    The bonus commissions, originally set to expire Sept. 30, are for NDC bookings of Main Select, Main Plus and Flagship Business Plus bundles. BTN stablemate The Beat reported in June that the commissions would be 10 percent, which American confirmed to BTN Friday. 

    The incentive program was announced after American ditched its preferred agency plans amid a reexamination of its aggressive NDC strategy of the previous 14 months—which created a lot of ill will among TMCs and corporate customers—and began to return content to EDIFACT. 

    BTN stablemate Travel Weekly first reported the commission extension. 

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    dairoldi@thebtngroup.com (Donna M. Airoldi)

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  • SAS, Virgin Atlantic Agree to Codeshare

    SAS, Virgin Atlantic Agree to Codeshare

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    SAS and Virgin Atlantic have entered into a codeshare agreement, scheduled to take effect Oct. 7, the carriers announced Friday. 

    Virgin Atlantic customers traveling from the U.S. and Canada can purchase onward connections through London Heathrow and Manchester onto SAS services to Stockholm, Copenhagen, and Oslo, Stavanger and Bergen in Norway. SAS customers through Heathrow will be able to connect to additional Virgin Atlantic destinations. 

    Each airline now is part of the SkyTeam alliance, as SAS joined Sept. 1. SAS EuroBonus loyalty members and Virgin Atlantic Flying Club members each will be able to earn and redeem points across the carriers. 

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    dairoldi@thebtngroup.com (Donna M. Airoldi)

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  • Blockskye Ready for the Long Journey to Transformation

    Blockskye Ready for the Long Journey to Transformation

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    With a handful of publicly announced customers, the Kayak for Business Enterprise tool is taking a selective approach in bringing on new clients, Blockskye co-CEO and cofounder Brook Armstrong said during the BTN Innovate conference this week.

    Built from collaboration between blockchain technology provider Blockskye, Kayak for Business and initial client PwC U.S., the Enterprise solution is in an “innovative period” where adding a large roster of clients is not the goal. When asked about current clients, Armstrong mentioned two announced by Kayak CEO Steve Hafner at last year’s Phocuswright Conference: multinational alcoholic beverage company Diageo and TripAdvisor. They also are contracting now to implement “three large global clients in a range of industries” as well as some medium-sized clients, he said.

    It’s not yet the time for “hockey-stick” growth for the solution, according to Armstrong.

    “We’ve really been looking for the right partners,” Armstrong said. “What we are doing is so innovative, and it’s crucial in this innovative period to pick folks who really want to change and solve these problems, so we’ve said no to a couple of folks. Over the next year, we’re really focused on the right set of customers and right partners and getting the platform globally operating.”


    What we are doing is so innovative, and it’s crucial in this innovative period to pick folks who really want to change and solve these problems, so we’ve said no to a couple of folks.”

    – Blockskye’s Brook Armstrong


    The patient approach comes as Blockskye remains as one of the few widely publicized efforts to incorporate blockchain technology into corporate travel still standing from the days when the technology emerged as an industry buzzword. One of the more active players, Winding Tree, shut down earlier this year as CEO Maksim Izmaylov cited a lack of readiness in the travel industry to embrace the technology.

    Other efforts with the technology have been more quietly put on hold or halted. HRS had been doing some work with blockchain around traveler profiles and identification authorization, but the company “made a pivoting decision in the 2021-2022 timeframe to focus on AI features and functionality,” according to an HRS spokesperson. Similarly, a collaboration between Travelport and IBM to use blockchain for hotel commission reconciliation was “paused” at the advent of the Covid-19 pandemic as “our priorities shifted to focus on the most urgent customer needs,” according to a Travelport spokesperson.

    “We’re still actively working with IBM to explore AI and blockchain applications in travel, but there are no specific project details we can share at this time,” the spokesperson said.

    Asked whether setbacks like Winding Tree gave him pause, Armstrong said he came into the business understanding the complexities of the travel industry and that change would take some time.

    “If you are the type of entrepreneur that’s going to blame the failure on the lack of readiness [of the industry,] you should not have taken money from people,” Armstrong said. “The bar is higher than that.”

    Ultimately, Armstrong said that change would come “gradually then suddenly.” Even as New Distribution Capability adoption grows, travelers will be drawn to direct bookings, so ease of servicing those bookings will remain a need, he said.

    “We are very big believers that the Uniteds, the Bonvoys, the Southwests, they are going to do stuff on their app that’s never going to be in NDC,” Armstrong said. “Travelers using them in their personal travel will see stuff there that will never be in NDC. Our work is to make sure we are bringing you all that functionality back into the third-party [travel management company].”

    He said he doesn’t even like to call bookings outside corporate channels “leakage.”

    “Travelers do what they want; that’s just the market speaking,” Armstrong said. “People should be able to book on United or Bonvoy if they want, with policy and duty of care, and a third-party agency should be able to service it.”

    With PwC U.S. as the pioneer, the company already has some numbers to hang its claims on. In a recent webinar with BTN, PwC senior manager of procurement and travel operations for the U.S. and Mexico Danielle Cavnor said the project has resulted in a 10 percent reduction in intermediary fees on typical airline ticket purchases and a 92 percent reduction in agent interactions for non-global-distribution-system bookings.

    Armstrong also was asked if Blockskye was looking to work with agency partners beyond Kayak. He said Blockskye is “happy to work with any other TMC” but indicated he was seeing hesitancy from the TMCs, who he said are in a “tough spot” coming out of the hard hit from the Covid-19 pandemic and faced with a change that would require alteration of business models.

    “Regardless of whether it’s tough or not, travelers want what they want, buyers want what they want, and suppliers want what they want,” Armstrong said. “We’re going to see TMCs who have the balance sheet and the right relationship with their investor and suppliers who can navigate into a new commercial model that’s more transparent, open and agnostic as far as fares.”

    In the meantime, Armstrong said Kayak is a “wonderful partner” for Blockskye, and the company is “very dedicated to them.”

    “They share the disruptive business model in the same way we do,” Armstrong said. “They bring to bear everything they’ve built on the leisure side. “We’ve been joined at the hip with them, and they’ve been a fantastic partner.”

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