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  • Alaska Partners for Schedule-Optimization Startup

    Alaska Partners for Schedule-Optimization Startup

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    Alaska Airlines has partnered with startup builder Up.Labs to launch a new company that offers an AI-powered flight schedule optimization solution. The company, called Odysee, launches with $5 million in seed funding led by Up.Labs parent Up.Partners. 

    Alaska and Up.Labs last year announced that they planned to build startups designed to “solve core strategic challenges for Alaska Airlines and the future of aviation,” with Odysee now the first result. Odysee can help carriers build flight schedules and “rapidly quantify the impacts of schedule changes on revenue, profitability and reliability,” Alaska said in a statement. “The platform can run hundreds of simulations within seconds to provide accurate flight-level insights to stress-test a future schedule.”

    Odysee’s CEO is Steve Casley, who according to his LinkedIn bio once served as CEO of travel data provider OAG and more recently served as a travel and hospitality data executive with Capgemini.

    Alaska said “over the next three years” it planned to launch through the Up.Labs partnership additional startups “focused on solving key challenges in aviation and mobility.”

    RELATED: Alaska Airlines Forms Lab to Seek Aviation Solutions

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  • ‘AI Agent’ SkyLink Wins BTN’s 2024 Innovation Faceoff

    ‘AI Agent’ SkyLink Wins BTN’s 2024 Innovation Faceoff

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    Judges named AI-powered corporate travel assistant SkyLink the winner of The BTN Group’s Innovation Faceoff at its 2024 Innovate conference in New York this week.

    SkyLink, which can help corporate travelers book travel and manage disruptions within enterprise chat channels, earned the top score from judges among 13 competitors this year. Travel Tech Consulting president Norm Rose, one of the four-member judging panel for the event, called SkyLink “true conversational commerce” in his remarks announcing the winner.

    “This is truly the next generation,” Rose said. “Have online booking tools really been automation, or are they passing on the duties of the travel agent to the individual? This is not the case with SkyLink.”

    SkyLink CEO and cofounder Atyab Bhatti said the tool was developed to simplify the typical corporate travel booking experience, which often involves travelers first searching options on consumer-grade tools, then chatting with their colleagues about those options on enterprise chat channels, such as Slack, before going to a corporate online booking tool or agency. With connections to the three major global distribution systems and supplier direct-connects, it can help travelers book in a conversational style within those chat channels.

    “It’s a highly configurable, enterprise-grade solution that sits inside your enterprise chat channels, and you can talk to it just like a person,” Bhatti said. “It applies policies, answers questions about travel and can make recommendations in the context of travel.”

    The tool is able to identify the traveler and use their profile to personalize the booking and recommend options that would be better for their travel experience or the company’s budget. It could, for example, recognize whether a traveler was authorized to book in first class or automatically suggest a hotel booking if a traveler books a flight without one, according to Bhatti.

    SkyLink also can help manage disruption. If a meeting is moved or canceled, for example, it can identify the flight associated with the meeting, determine the policy around changes or cancellations to the flight to make changes and suggest alternative options the fit with the new schedule. Bhatti said the company is working now to make disruption management even more automated so that “when we see disruption happen and push the message to you, we don’t just let you know but help you solve it, providing in-context discussion of what you can do to continue your trip without disruption.”

    Like AI solutions currently being tested and used by travel management companies, Bhatti said SkyLink’s aim is not to replace travel agents but to free their time up for more complex tasks that require the human touch while reducing the agent resources required by corporate travel programs. He said SkyLink is able to complete in about five minutes workflows that typically take between 10 to 30 minutes.

    “What SkyLink does for the industry is what online booking tools did in the 1990s: making it more efficient while providing a better travel experience,” Bhatti said. “That doesn’t mean we get rid of the agency.”

    SkyLink currently is working with large corporations and their TMCs—customers typically have several hundred millions in annual travel spending—and also is working with TMCs to be provided to their clients, according to Bhatti. He did not yet name which TMCs SkyLink is working with.

    Rose said the biggest challenge to SkyLink will be the “existing establishment.”

    “Although the TMCs are investing heavily in AI, in my experience, [it’s] not the best place for innovation,” Rose said. 

    People’s Choice and Honorable Mentions

    The judges also named three participants as honorable mentions in the Faceoff: event sourcing and booking tool Planned, which the judges named first runner-up; hotel sustainability data specialist Alō Index; and flight disruption management technology Lumo, which won the Innovation Faceoff at Business Travel Show Europe in London in June.

    The Innovate audience, meanwhile, voted for Emburse as the People’s Choice winner at Innovate 2024. Chief strategy officer Steve Reynolds presented for the travel and expense provider, showcasing the integrated travel and expense suite built from Emburse’s string of acquisitions over the years, including Reynolds’ Tripbam. This marked the third year in a row Reynolds won the People’s Choice award—again representing Emburse in 2023, and Tripbam earning the honor in 2022—and Tripbam also was the judges’ choice as the winner of the inaugural Innovate in 2013.

    Other participating companies in the Faceoff included Encore Corporate Travel, GroundSpan, Fox World Travel, HRS, Cornerstone, Mesh, Deem, and Travel Inc. and Amgine.

    Besides Rose, judges for the 2024 Innovation Faceoff included Takeda travel and meetings innovation leader Matthew Dignan; ITW director of strategic sourcing, global travel and expense management services Cathy Sharpe; and Susan Lichtenstein, VP of sales for HQ, which won the Faceoff at Innovate in 2023.

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  • Virgin Atlantic Overhauls Loyalty Program

    Virgin Atlantic Overhauls Loyalty Program

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    Virgin Atlantic beginning Oct. 30 will allow Flying Club loyalty program members to pay for any seat with Virgin Points, the carrier announced Monday, among other changes to the program.

    The carrier also said it would launch what it called “saver reward seats,” a tier offered “from prices even lower than reward seats today,” and will increase point-earning rates in Premium and Upper Class cabins.

    Flying Club members will be able to use Virgin Points to pay for any seat on any date. The price of the seats will vary in line with demand, according to the carrier. 

    In addition, members will be able to use their points to upgrade to any available Premium or Upper Class seat from standard or reward tickets, and be able to use their companion or upgrade vouchers on any seat.

    Further, the amount of Virgin Points earned on Upper Class tickets will increase by up to 50 percent and Premium tickets will increase by up to 75 precent, according to the carrier.

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  • DOT: July U.S. Flight Cancellations Increase

    DOT: July U.S. Flight Cancellations Increase

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    After decreasing in June, the percentage of U.S. passenger flights in July that were canceled increased to 2.9 percent, according to the latest U.S. Department of Transportation monthly Air Travel Consumer Report. That figure is up from the 2.5 percent canceled in July 2023 and the 1.3 percent rate from June 2024.

    One reason for the increase could be the July CrowdStrike IT outage, which also helps to explain why Delta Airlines Network led the carriers with the highest percentage of cancellations for the month (5.6 percent). Delta’s flights were significantly affected by the outage. Networks include branded codeshare partners.

    The other carriers with the highest percentage of cancellations included Spirit Airlines (5.2 percent) and Frontier Airlines (4.5 percent). 

    Carriers with the lowest July cancellation rates included Southwest Airlines (0.7 percent), Alaska Airlines Network (0.7 percent) and Hawaiian Airlines (0.8 percent). 

    U.S. carriers in July operated more than 657,000 flights, up 5.5 percent year over year and up 2.1 percent month over month. 

    Those carriers in July handled 45.6 million bags and had a mishandled baggage rate of 0.75 percent, equal to the rate reported in July 2023, but higher than the rate of 0.58 percent reported in June 2024. 

    On Sept. 19, DOT released airline service submissions data for the months of January to May 2024. The agency is reporting that information—which includes airline service complaints, inquiries and opinions—in lieu of detailed complaint data while it continues to upgrade its processing system.

    RELATED: DOT June 2024 air travel data

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  • Delta to Launch Salt Lake City-Seoul Service

    Delta to Launch Salt Lake City-Seoul Service

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    Delta Air Lines on June 12, 2025, will launch its first nonstop route between Salt Lake City and Seoul, South Korea, the carrier announced Friday. The daily service will operate year-round with Airbus A350-900 aircraft configured with four cabins: Delta One Suites, Premium Select, Comfort Plus and Main Cabin. 

    The new flights will be Delta’s fifth direct U.S. route to Seoul, joining Atlanta, Detroit, Minneapolis-St. Paul and Seattle. Together with partner Korean Air, Delta with the new flights will offer access to Seoul from 14 U.S. gateways, according to the carrier.

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  • Southwest’s Promised Changes Are Afoot, But Will They Be Enough?

    Southwest’s Promised Changes Are Afoot, But Will They Be Enough?

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    Southwest Airlines for months has teased Thursday’s investor day as a key date in its transformation, in terms of providing more detail on some of the carrier’s previously announced changes, like assigned seats and new premium cabins, as well as newly announced initiatives.

    But will the plan unveiled Thursday be enough to stave off an aggressive attempt by activist investor Elliott Management to replace most of the Southwest board and CEO Bob Jordan? It remains to be seen.

    Southwest provided more detail on the timeline to introduce assigned seating and premium options, and unveiled one new initiative: international airline partnerships, with Icelandair its first.

    Business Travel Trips Drop

    Southwest has more unique business travelers than it did before the pandemic, but they are not taking as many one-day or one-night trips as in the past, according to Southwest COO Andrew Watterson.

    The average number of monthly unique business travelers was up 20 percent in January 2024 compared with January 2020, while managed business trips per traveler declined 24 percent for the same period, according to a Southwest presentation.

    “Trips per unique business traveler are down,” Watterson said. “It’s structurally changed given the hybrid business office schedules. … Technology is also playing a role with trips sometimes being replaced by virtual meetings. Although we’re taking a bigger slice of a smaller pie called business travel, we still have business travelers occupying less seats [than they] did pre-Covid.”

    Watterson added this trend is not uniformly distributed through geography or time, but “it does mean we need to backfill those seats with new customers.” 

    As such, the carrier plans to restrict its network to match post-pandemic customer travel patterns, redeploy underperforming capacity to more profitable flying and improve network connectivity and efficiency, among other factors. Southwest plans to reduce Tuesday and Wednesday flying as well as shoulder-season flying, reduce service to some cities, and add redeye flying.

    “We’ve closed cities as you know, and reduced cities,” Watterson said, noting Southwest on Wednesday announced further cuts to Atlanta, while also increasing Nashville flights. “Atlanta this summer, and then Oakland, Hawaii and Atlanta again beginning in spring of 2025. We moved our international gateway from Fort Lauderdale to Orlando.”

    Watterson added that, compared to April 2023, the schedule published for April 2025 shows “about 10 percent of routes were cut, about 10 percent of routes are new, and about 45 percent of routes have had capacity adjusted to an extent greater than 25 percent,” he said. “Overall, 65 percent, almost two-thirds of our routes have had consequential action during this period, and that will continue.”

    Assigned Seats, Premium Cabin Details

    Southwest previously announced it would add assigned seating and a premium cabin with extra legroom to attract more customers and increase ancillary revenue opportunities. In the research the carrier conducted over the past year, “looking at lapsed customers, the seating and boarding process is the No. 1 reason they haven’t returned to Southwest,” EVP of commercial transformation Ryan Green said. 

    As for reasons why customers chose Southwest over other carriers, schedule and price were the top two, but the carrier’s free checked-bag policy was a close third—and Southwest executives made it clear that the carrier would keep the much-valued perk.

    Southwest reviewed various bag-fee scenarios, and using one example that most mimics a basic economy fare on another airline with no bags included as part of the base product, “the loss in trips flown from customer defection overwhelms the value of the incremental ancillary revenue from bag fees and results in $300 million less in revenue” per year, Green said. 

    Change Timeline

    As for the availability of the seat assignments and extra legroom options, the carrier first needs certification from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration on its new cabin layouts. Southwest in a slide showed that no seats on its Boeing 737-8 and 737-800 aircraft would be lost with the cabin changes, with 68 of the 175 seats offering extended legroom. The Boeing 737-7 aircraft would lose two seats and have 48 of 148 seats with extended legroom, while the Boeing 737-700 would lose six seats and offer 40 of 137 seats with extended legroom. 

    Southwest in a timeline presented Thursday indicated technical changes to more than 60 customer- and employee-facing applications as well as changes to the back office would be required to accommodate the seating assignments and new cabins, as would training for 55,000 frontline employees in advance of its sell and operate dates. 

    The carrier plans to begin selling assigned seats in the second half of 2025 and to begin flying them in the first half of 2026, according to Green, who added that the increased revenue from these changes would more than offset the losses from the phase-out of current early-boarding products and seat removal from some aircraft.

    New Transcontinental Partner

    Southwest said it and Icelandair would begin a “bilateral partnership in 2025,” which will allow customers to easily connect between the two airlines’ networks. The initial gateway city for this partnership will be Baltimore.

    “Throughout 2025, we will expand the number of U.S. gateways on our network and are targeting adding at least one additional partner carrier next year,” Green said, adding that Southwest’s Rapid Rewards loyalty program “will also be integrated, giving members the ability to earn and redeem points for global destinations. We are in discussions with other transatlantic and transpacific carriers and look forward to sharing more details about all of that in the future.”

    Southwest also announced the addition of former Spirit Airlines and AirTran Holdings CEO Robert Fornaro as a member of the board, effective immediately. He has served as a consultant to Southwest Airlines from 2011 to 2014, and again from 2020 to 2024. The addition comes amid many recent board change announcements for Southwest.

    Elliott Management Responds

    Though the event was titled “Investor Day,” very little was said about Southwest’s highest-profile activist investor, Elliott Management, which is calling for a new board and CEO at the airline. Earlier this week, Elliott sent a second letter to Southwest shareholders indicating it would call a special meeting in the coming weeks and possibly as soon as next week. CEO Bob Jordan briefly addressed the issue.

    “We do not believe that a proxy fight is in the best interest of the company, and we remain willing to work with Elliott on a cooperative approach,” Jordan said. “We have demonstrated that willingness, time and again, through our attempts and engagement, but time and again, Elliott has demonstrated little or no interest in collaborating with Southwest on how to deliver more shareholder value, focusing instead as evidenced by their most recent letter and recent action on tactics and on gamesmanship. 

    “I hope you can tell that the plan that we presented today is intentional. It’s detailed, it’s well constructed, it’s integrated, and it has been in the works, including execution, for a long period of time. For Elliott to call that plan rushed and haphazard, in my opinion, is inane,” Jordan said.

    In a statement released on behalf of Elliott partner John Pike and portfolio manager Bobby Xu after the event ended, the management company reiterated its appeal to replace Jordan and to call a special meeting.

    “Today’s Investor Day will have a familiar ring for many shareholders: Another promise of a better tomorrow from the same people who have created the problems we face today,” Elliott said. “The Board continues to evade the most critical question facing Southwest: Why is Mr. Jordan—who has delivered years of unacceptable financial results and, until very recently, was dismissive of the actions announced today—the right leader to execute on these ‘transformative’ changes? The answer is clear: He is not.

    “We came away from extensive engagement with Southwest’s leadership—including in-person meetings and more than a dozen phone calls—even more convinced that current leadership is incapable of delivering on Southwest’s potential. Today’s announcement that adding assigned seating and premium products will take multiple years to implement—when peers have implemented similar changes in much shorter timeframes—is further evidence that Mr. Jordan lacks the vision and capability to execute on these initiatives.”

    Meanwhile, Jordan took full responsibility for its current plan. “This is my plan, this is my vision for a new Southwest,” he said. “We have the right plan, we have the right team, and all of our efforts continue to be focused on transforming Southwest Airlines to create significant long-term value for our shareholders and to be your Southwest even better.”

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  • Southwest to Cut Atlanta Service

    Southwest to Cut Atlanta Service

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    Southwest Airlines plans to reduce its Atlanta footprint next year, cutting service, staff and airport gates, the carrier confirmed to BTN.

    CNBC originally reported the news.

    Southwest in April will reduce the number of cities it serves from Atlanta to 21 from 37. While CNBC reported that the carrier would reduce its gates at Atlanta to 11 from 18, the carrier said it hadn’t finalized that number with the airport, but confirmed there would be a reduction.

    “We continue to optimize our network to meet Customer demand, best utilize our fleet, and maximize revenue opportunities,” wrote a Southwest spokesperson. “Decisions like these are difficult for our Company because of the effects on our People, but we have a history of more than 53 years of ensuring they are taken care of.”

    As for staff, CNBC said reductions could reach up to 200 flight attendants and 140 pilots based on a company memo and separate pilots’ union memo it reviewed. Southwest didn’t confirm those numbers, but it said that less staff would be needed in Atlanta, and all employees will be given an opportunity to “transfer stations.”

    Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported the carrier warned employees of “tough decisions” to be announced in the “coming days” as the carrier works to restore profits and fend off the demands of an activist investor. Southwest’s Investor Day takes place Sept. 26. 

    The latest report comes a day after the activist investor, Elliott Management, sent a second letter to Southwest shareholders saying it would call a special meeting in the coming weeks and possibly as soon as next week as it tries to replace Southwest’s board and CEO Bob Jordan.

    New Nashville Service

    Meanwhile, Southwest on April 8, 2025, will add service between Nashville and six destinations, including intra-Tennessee service for the first time, the carrier announced Wednesday. 

    Southwest will add Nashville service for Albuquerque, N.M.; Albany, N.Y.; Jackson, Miss.; Memphis, Tenn.; Providence, R.I.; and Tulsa, Okla. Southwest last flew the Nashville-Albuquerque route on May 31, 1988, and the Nashville-Providence route on Nov. 5, 2011, according to the carrier.

    Expanded Redeye Flights

    Southwest also announced an expansion of its redeye offerings effective April 8, 2025, with overnight service from three Hawaiian airports to the U.S. mainland. Daily redeye service is schedule to launch from Honolulu to each Las Vegas and Phoenix, Kona to Las Vegas, and Kahului, Maui, to each Las Vegas and Phoenix, according to the carrier.

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

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

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    Elliott Management, which has been calling for leadership and board changes at Southwest Airlines since taking a $1.9 billion stake in the carrier in June, sent a second letter to Southwest shareholders on Tuesday, informing them of the investment company’s intent to call a special meeting in the coming weeks, and to encourage shareholders to ensure they have full voting rights. The first letter was sent in late August.

    “Given the reckless and chaotic actions that Southwest’s leaders keep taking in an attempt to preserve their jobs—and the resulting risk to the Company and its constituents—the need for change is urgent, and our request for a special meeting may come as soon as next week,” wrote Elliott partner John Pike and portfolio manager Bobby Xu in the letter.

    Southwest earlier this month announced sweeping changes to its board of directors, with six retiring in November, and chairman and former CEO Gary Kelly to step down after Southwest’s 2025 annual meeting. The carrier said it would consider up to three candidates of the 10 that Elliott put forth previously, but that CEO Bob Jordan would remain—a move that Elliott does not endorse.

    The carrier in July also announced it was to introduce assigned seating and a premium cabin with extra legroom as it looks for ways to increase revenue.

    Further, earlier this week, Southwest warned employees of the “tough decisions” to be announced in the “coming days” to restore profits and fend off the takeover challenge from Elliott, Bloomberg reported. Southwest is holding its investor day on Sept. 26.

    Elliott added in the letter that it does “not support the Company’s current course, which is being charted in a haphazard manner by a group of executives in full self-preservation mode.” It also encouraged shareholders to call back all their shares prior to Oct. 7, which is the current record date set by Southwest’s board, so they could vote those shares in any upcoming special meeting, according to Elliott. 

    “In the coming weeks, we will be formally requesting a special meeting to provide you with a choice between the new directors that we have put forward—who we believe possess the qualifications and skills to guide Southwest to a brighter future—or a Board that lacks relevant expertise and has pre-committed itself to supporting failed CEO Bob Jordan,” Pike and Xu wrote.

    Southwest did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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  • TravelPerk Adds Amtrak Content Via SilverRail

    TravelPerk Adds Amtrak Content Via SilverRail

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    TravelPerk has partnered with rail commerce platform SilverRail to provide Amtrak content to TravelPerk’s corporate clients, the companies announced. SilverRail is delivering Amtrak content to TravelPerk via its API and agent tool, according to the company. TravelPerk reports the share of rail bookings versus air bookings on its platform has increased to 33 percent of global bookings in 2023 compared with 17 percent in 2019.

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  • SAP Concur to Start Automatic Upgrades to New Travel Experience

    SAP Concur to Start Automatic Upgrades to New Travel Experience

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    SAP Concur in November will begin automatically upgrading customers in the U.S., Mexico and Canada using Sabre to the new Concur Travel experience and “limit support” for legacy Concur Travel, according to an update document published by Concur this week.

    It’s been about a year since the launch of Concur’s new booking experience, and to date, corporate and travel management company customers have been able to opt out of the upgrade to the new experience. Beginning Nov. 1, “opt-out status will no longer apply” for “eligible” customers on Sabre—the launch global distribution system for the new Concur Travel experience—with U.S., Mexico and Canada points of sale. That eligibility also will include additional criteria to ensure “no major limitations” with the new booking experience, according to the document.

    A Concur spokesperson said the upgrades would “be rolled out in phases over the coming months” and that “SAP will only upgrade eligible clients where the new Concur Travel offers equivalent capabilities to the legacy platform.”

    The spokesperson added that “the majority of our TMC partners have already opted in and are actively migrating customers.”

    Customers being upgraded will be notified both via direct communication and with in-product messaging to admins at least 30 days in advance of the upgrade, according to the document. They will not have any additional configuration steps with the upgrades, Concur said.

    Concur continues to expand the content and reach in its new booking experience, with the third-quarter release beginning to roll out next week, SAP Concur senior marketing manager Whitney McLellan said in a release recap published on Wednesday. The newest release includes expansion to “all remaining [Europe, the Middle East and Africa] markets” as well as Travelport Plus hotel content in select markets and air content with “limited low-cost carriers” through Travelfusion, she said. 

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  • Turkish Airlines to Add Santiago Service

    Turkish Airlines to Add Santiago Service

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    Turkish Airlines beginning Dec. 18 will launch flights between Istanbul and Santiago, Chile, with a stopover in São Paulo in both directions, the carrier announced Friday. The route will operate four times weekly and will bring the total number of destinations in the Americas served by Turkish Airlines to 26, according to the carrier.

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  • STR: August U.S. Hotel Rates, Occupancy Jump

    STR: August U.S. Hotel Rates, Occupancy Jump

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    The August average U.S. daily hotel rate and occupancy rate each increased notably year over year, according to hotel analytics firm STR, which separately noted midweek demand strength, a sign of solid business travel demand. 

    U.S. average daily rate in August increased 2.3 percent year over year to $157.84, while occupancy increased 1.5 percent to 66.9 percent. Revenue per available room increased 3.9 percent year over year to $105.67. Each metric’s monthly percentage increase was among the largest of 2024.

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

    In separate notes, STR said that weekly U.S. RevPAR increased year over year each week in August, including on each day of the week. “The recent strengthening in weekdays with the start of schools in many parts of the country serves as a positive indication that business travel is recovering and will help stabilize performance in the coming weeks and months,” STR noted.

    New York posted the highest August occupancy figure among STR’s top 25 markets at 87.3 percent, up 5.2 percent year over year. New Orleans had the lowest occupancy at 54.1 percent, followed by Phoenix at 58.4 percent. 

    RELATED: STR July 2024 U.S. hotel performance figures

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  • CWT: Don’t Count on Travel Savings in 2025

    CWT: Don’t Count on Travel Savings in 2025

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    Travel prices are moderating in most markets around the globe, according to a new forecast and report from CWT and the Global Business Travel Association. But business travel buyers should not expect, necessarily, to get a pricing reprieve that drops into the savings zone. 

    “Elevated business travel costs are now a reality to be factored into the cost of doing business overall,” read a commentary piece in the report credited to GBTA CEO Suzanne Neufang. “Thus, buyers are already adjusting their longer-term expectations on price as a significant factor in their travel programs.” 

    A number of factors are contributing to pricing trends. Straight-up supply and demand is one, according to the report. Supply chain issues are impacting the airline industry—the investigations into Boeing’s safety commitment being a major issue in that chain’s disruption, and tough financing in the hotel market is keeping developers in wait-and-see mode. 

    On the demand side, however, business travel buyers will appreciate the cooldown in leisure travel demand and may now be able to get a word in edgewise with prospective air, hotel and car rental partners looking to fill some gaps emerging in vacationer traffic with the reliable, repeat volume promised by business travel. And, of course, there’s overall inflation, which looks like more of a factor in some regions than others going into 2025.

    Still, in the cocktail of it all, year-over-year savings isn’t a given. Neufang called travel “more of a supplier’s market” for the foreseeable future (2025 and 2026), and one in which buyers will need to dig deep into their program strategies in order to make a dent on the cost side. 

    Pricing in Brief

    Airfares in North America are projected to show moderate year-over-year growth of 3.5 percent in 2024 and slow to 0.5 percent in 2025, according to the CWT report. In Asia-Pacific, 2024 will ultimately see 2.3 percent growth and then downshift to 1.6 percent in 2025. Europe, Middle East and Africa had the highest average ticket price in 2023, but pricing growth moderated to 1.5 percent this year and CWT projects a 1.4 percent increase in airfares for this region in 2025. Airfare growth in Latin America, in contrast to all other global regions, actually ramped up in 2024, with a rise of 2.6 percent projected for this year compared to a 2.2 percent rise last year.  2025 will see more muted growth at only 1.6 percent, according to the forecast

    CWT projects average daily hotel rates in North America will rise to $184 in 2024 and to $187 in 2025. This represents year-over-year growth rates of 2.8 percent and 2.2 percent respectively. This will be uneven with upscale properties facing less downward pressure than the midscale and economy tiers. Meetings and group travel will continue to compete with transient business travel for rooms and with each other for event space. 

    Asia-Pacific will see year-over-year growth of 3.8 percent on average to $136 in 2024, and 2.2 percent to $139 in 2025, with both group and transient business travel rebounding.  EMEA in 2024 and 2025 is looking at more moderate 1.9 percent growth for both years; a cost-of-living crisis is curbing some leisure demand. Latin America hotel rates are growing much faster than any other region, but also on a lower base of $93 in 2023. They are expected to climb 9.7 percent in 2024 and another 7.8 percent in 2025, with an influx of labor relocation from higher-cost markets.

    Ground transportation was the only category that CWT appeared to view as an opportunity for travel buyers in 2025, with significantly cooling leisure demand and recent selloffs of electric vehicle fleets signaling some strategy issues for this sector. 

    In North America, car rental rates, according to CWT, are forecast to rise 1.5 percent year over year in 2024 and just 1.3 percent in 2025. In EMEA the growth rate is expected to ease to a gain of just 1.7 percent this year and 0.9 percent next, with the appetite for public transit becoming more prominent. LATAM’s inflation issues are driving up car rental rates more than in other regions. On a base of $35 per day, travel buyers will likely see an 11 percent increase for 2024 and another 7.9 percent in 2025, but that would still end lower than the daily rate in Europe and North America, and possibly Asia as well, where ground transportation prices are actually projected to drop about 6.8 percent in 2024 and another 3.4 percent in 2025 to end around $46 per day.

    Asia-Pacific ground transportation was the only travel purchasing category and the only region where there was any retrenchment in pricing projected for 2025.

    What to Do 

    While the “pricing environment is stabilizing,” said CWT global head of consulting services Richard Johnson, travel buyers will need to dig deep into their partnership strategies to drive savings. Airlines are perhaps the least likely of all categories to budge on pricing. 

    Labor and fuel costs have gone up and geopolitical issues in Ukraine, Russia and the Middle East are forcing them to fly longer routes to avoid airspace. These are hard costs they can’t get around. That said, some airlines are driving stronger profits than they have in decades, and they aren’t looking to reduce those margins. They are controlling capacity—and supply chain issues, anyway, are contributing to that. In Europe, renewable aviation fuel surcharges are adding to the airfare scenario.

    Asked about the role of New Distribution Capability in the pricing scenario, Johnson said it adds more agility with continuous pricing options that are not supported in EDIFACT environments. Buyers whose  companies have implemented NDC content at scale, have told BTN of relative savings compared to what “would have been spent” in EDIFACT channels. As NDC develops, Johnson said, there may be opportunities for targeted discussions around sustainability features or certain in-flight costs that start to be negotiated. As retailing strategies mature, however, NDC-driven transactions will likely present more ancillary offers to business travelers, and that will need to be monitored in both policy, automation tools and expense reporting.  

    Hotel rooms are looking pricey as well, but with a slight cooldown of leisure travel, hoteliers may be looking more openly at more reliable corporate travel, but only to a point. Buyers will need to have strong data to engage in rate discussions, and hoteliers are engaging strong yield-management strategies to ensure their margins. Plus, they are willing to consider holding the line on rate even if it means lower occupancy—and that’s a change since prior to the pandemic. 

    The report authors recommend looking to partner with broader-brand portfolios and consider “trading down” to other brands if pricing seems out of reach. Johnson clarified that recommendation, however, advising buyers to tread carefully when it comes to downgrading the traveler experience wholesale.

    “Our customers … take a more kind of holistic approach and say, what’s the best fit for our program based on the things that we need,” he said, suggesting that buyers could consider consolidating with fewer brands, then “segmenting the traveler community to access certain brands according to job type, seniority or frequency of travel.

    What the report did say affirmatively is that if pricing seems really high, buyers should not hesitate to address it. Leveraging your strongest evidence-based volume and share shift capabilities is the best path to success. 

    Ground transportation, with its lower projected rate increases, looks like it could offer the most opportunities for travel buyers. Fleets have been brought back up to size and car rental companies have realized some efficiencies since the pandemic. Some, however, are reeling a bit from overinvesting in electric vehicles. If a corporate program is looking to go that direction, it could be a good time to do so—but make sure the charging infrastructure is robust in target driving geographies. Finding real rate relief in the ground transport market may require a more drastic move, however; report authors suggested changing suppliers might be the way to draw out the most competitive rates. 

    Finding Value When the Bottom Line Isn’t the Bottom Line

    The CWT-GBTA report recommended that buyers be “ruthless and bold” in their approach to cost, but also to “go for the long-term approach, and reenergize supplier relationships so you can mitigate price increases and extract value.” Still, in this suppliers’ market, that may not yield the bottom-line results as in some years past. 

    The alternatives are to try to define the value of business travel across the organization, according to CWT. BTN has seen travel buyers effectively collaborate with facilities management for remote work enablement strategies and work with sustainability teams. CWT suggested creating new key performance indicators for travel that show an impact on these strategic efforts—potentially, on employee retention rates or satisfaction among younger employees, who have shown as a whole a zeal for work travel as a way to enrich their lives.

    Globalizing a program to extract pricing considerations from new purchasing scales was another opportunity identified in the report, and, finally, to keep an eye out for change. Suppliers are always looking for that competitive move. So, when one supplier breaks the phalanx on pricing to make a move for market share, buyers need to be ready for that opportunity.

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  • ARC Integrates Turkish Airlines NDC in Direct Connect

    ARC Integrates Turkish Airlines NDC in Direct Connect

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    Airlines Reporting Corp. has implemented Turkish Airways’ New Distribution Capability offering into the ARC Direct Connect program, ARC announced Tuesday. 

    The partnership enables Turkish Airlines to deliver “a more personalized traveler experience while giving agencies and corporate buyers more options to manage transactions, minimize risk and track data within ARC’s settlement platform,” according to ARC.

    Concurrently, Turkish Airlines, as it readies to roll out on Oct. 1 TKConnect, its new NDC distribution channel, announced that beginning on that date, it will charge a fee of $24 per ticket to all reservations made via global distribution system EDIFACT channels, which include Amadeus, Travelport, Hitit, Travelsky, Infini and Sirena. Turkish Airlines content in Sabre went dark on Sept. 1 after the companies have yet to come to a renewal agreement.

    Earlier this month, Turkish Airlines also named its aggregator partners for its NDC expansion.

    RELATED: Turkish Airlines Names Aggregator Partners for NDC Expansion

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  • Omni Names Bales VP Sales

    Omni Names Bales VP Sales

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    Omni Hotels & Resorts has named former Marriott International executive Annette Bales its new VP sales, effective immediately, the company announced.

    Bales in her new role “will spearhead the development and execution of strategic sales plans,” and she is charged with “optimizing revenue performance at all Omni-operated properties,” according to the company.

    Bales most recently served as the executive director of sales, service and experience at Charlotte Harbor, Fla.-based Sunseeker Resort, and before that worked for several years at in sales positions for Marriott and its Gaylord Hotels subsidiary.

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  • Business Travel Demand ‘Strong,’ Say Delta, United

    Business Travel Demand ‘Strong,’ Say Delta, United

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    Corporate travel remains “strong,” according to executives from Delta Air Lines and United Airlines who spoke Thursday during Morgan Stanley’s 12th annual Laguna conference.

    “Business travel is quite strong on a year-over-year basis, up high single digits, low double digits,” Delta president Glen Hauenstein said. “That appears as though it’s accelerating as we head into the fall. … Business travel in totality is already way above where it was pre-pandemic levels. But managed corporate travel has been a laggard, but it is really approaching—well, [it] is at 2019 levels, [and] now going beyond that.”

    When asked to break down trends in domestic, international and corporate segments, United CFO Mike Leskinen said that as seen from the releases of the carrier’s competitors, “the incremental news has been positive across the board,” adding, “we expected that, but it’s nice to see it come to fruition.”

    “Corporate revenue for us is up 15 percent,” Leskinen added, not identifying the timeframe for that comparison. “Really proud of that. So strong corporate results, domestic results are inflecting very nicely.”

    Hauenstein also said that based on its most recent corporate client survey, about “80-some-odd percent” of customers expected to maintain or increase their spend. “That wasn’t quite a record, but it was much higher than the norm,” he said. “We expect continued demand strength through the fall.”

    End-Customer Focus

    Further, sounding not unlike former American Airlines chief operating officer Vasu Raja, Hauenstein noted that Delta has “decided” it wants to “attach ourselves not only to the corporation and not only to the travel management company, but we really want to work on that relationship with the end consumer,” he said. “Because in the end, the end consumer is the one who really chooses what flight they want to be on and what airline they want to be on. And historically, our sales teams were geared to just make sure we had the right agreements with the corporation, and we had the right agreements with their travel management company to ensure that Delta was in the mix.

    “I think moving forward, we realize that loyalty resides more at the personal level than at the corporate level,” Hauenstein continued. “When you’re on us for corporate, your probability of being on us for leisure is extremely high. And the people who are buying the higher-end leisure fares tend to be the people who are buying the corporate fares. So there’s a synergy and getting that synergy to work better for Delta and better for you is something we’re very, very focused on, ensuring that it’s not only B-to-B, but it’s B-to-B-to-C.”

    Delta, which was significantly affected by the July 19 Crowdstrike and Microsoft IT outage, released updated third-quarter guidance on Thursday. The carrier now projects revenue to be flat to up 1 percent year over year, compared with prior guidance of a 2 percent to 4 percent increase. Delta’s third-quarter capacity outlook is up about 4 percent year over year, compared with 5 percent to 6 percent previously.

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  • SBTi OKs Amex GBT Emissions-Reduction Goals

    SBTi OKs Amex GBT Emissions-Reduction Goals

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    The Science Based Targets initiative has validated American Express Global Business Travel’s plans to reduce carbon emissions, the travel management company announced Thursday.

    Amex GBT has pledged to reduce 80 percent of its Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030 from a 2019 base year, and to reduce Scope 3 emissions by 30 percent in the same timeframe. Additionally, the TMC committed to “engaging 67 percent of its airline suppliers by emissions, covering use of sold products, to set science-based targets by 2028.”

    On a longer-term basis, Amex GBT committed to reduce Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions by 2050 by 90 percent from a 2019 base.

    The SBTi is an initiative of several climate-related groups that assists companies in setting science-based greenhouse gas emissions-reduction targets to achieve net-zero goals. The group requires companies to submit plans to achieve such goals within 24 months of a net-zero commitment. Validation is no certainty; earlier this year, the group removed the commitments of scores of companies for failure to develop plans for sufficient mitigation

    Marriott International secured similar validation earlier this year. 

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  • United, Starlink Deal to Provide Free Wi-Fi

    United, Starlink Deal to Provide Free Wi-Fi

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    United Airlines plans to introduce in 2025 free “fast, reliable Wi-Fi service” provided by Starlink to the airline’s mainline and regional aircraft fleet, the carrier announced Friday. 

    United would be the second major U.S. carrier to offer free Wi-Fi, following Delta Air Lines, which began offering free Wi-Fi for SkyMiles members in February 2023.

    The new “gate-to-gate connectivity” will be added on all United aircraft (more than 1,000 planes) over the next several years. Testing is scheduled to begin in early 2025 with the first passenger flights to include the service expected later that year, according to United. Customers will be able to use the Starlink connectivity on personal devices as well as on seatback screens.

    As for whether there will be any requirements to access the free Wi-Fi, such as being a member of United’s MileagePlus loyalty program, “the exact details of this are still under development,” according to a United spokesperson.

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  • Flight Centre: Positive Business Travel Snapshot for Fiscal 2025

    Flight Centre: Positive Business Travel Snapshot for Fiscal 2025

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    Flight Centre Travel Group in its first forecast of upcoming
    business travel spend surveyed its client base from business travel brands FCM
    and Corporate Traveler to gauge the trajectory of business travel volume for
    its fiscal year 2025, which began in July.

    Among 562 clients in major global markets, 40 percent said
    they plan to increase their travel volume in the year ahead (through June 2025),
    compared to the same year-ago time period. Forty-two percent globally said they
    plan to increase their travel spend for the same period.

    Among clients based in the Americas region, the numbers were
    slightly different. They showed heightened expectations of increased spend
    compared to the global numbers, even if some of these companies didn’t plan to
    increase trip volume. Forty-one percent of companies based in the Americas said
    they would increase trip volume, while 47 percent expect they will spend more
    on travel in the coming year.

    The percent of growth will be significant for a subset of
    those respondents. Ten percent of companies globally and 12 percent in the
    Americas intend to increase trip volume by more than 20 percent. Six percent
    globally and 8 percent in the Americas expect their business travel spend will
    rise by more than 20 percent as well.

    “It’s
    exciting to see the positive momentum and continued growth in business travel,”
    said Flight Centre Travel Group Americas president Charlene Leiss. “[It’s] a
    welcome sign for employees that strategically leverage travel to foster
    connections, increase collaboration, and drive innovation for their
    businesses.”

    On the flip
    side, 10 percent of responding companies anticipated a reduction in travel in the
    coming year, while 15 percent were uncertain about plans. Regarding spend,
    11 percent expected a reduction and 16 percent were uncertain. In the Americas,
    just 9 percent expected a reduction in trips and 8 percent expected a reduction
    in spend. Eight percent and 13 percent, accordingly, were uncertain about those
    metrics.

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  • Navan to Offer Travel, Expense Tools to Citizens Clients

    Navan to Offer Travel, Expense Tools to Citizens Clients

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    Navan will offer its travel and expense management tools to Citizens Financial Group corporate cardholders under the terms of a new agreement, the companies announced Tuesday.

    Navan’s Connect technology will allow Citizens’ corporate card clients integrated access to a travel and expense platform with joint branding, Navan said in a blog post. 

    “The new co-branded travel and expense platform is designed specifically for Citizens, offering its commercial card customers a T&E solution with the modern experience they have come to expect,” Navan Expense CEO Michael Sindicich said in a statement.

    Available now, Navan will bill Citizens clients for use of the platform, a spokesperson confirmed to BTN, adding that Citizens “is considering” the possibility of using the feature as a value-add at some point.

    Citizens is a U.S regional bank that operates predominantly in New England, the Northeast and the Mid-Atlantic regions. 

    The partnership is the latest between Navan and a large financial services provider. Navan last year partnered with Citi to offer Citi Commercial Bank cardholders jointly branded travel and expense product using Navan Connect technology.

    It also furthers a trend of tying travel and expense features to corporate cards, a key angle that some travel suppliers are using to approach in particular the small and midsized market. Navan CEO Ariel Cohen last year told BTN that the company’s travel value proposition can attract CFOs to the notion of a well-managed program.

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