The Importance of, and Path to, Airline Distribution and Technology Freedom
OpenJaw Technologies
OpenJaw Technologies is a global leader in delivering retail and data technology and services to the travel industry.
Part 2: Uprooting Traditional OTA Relationships
Commercial relationships with online travel agencies can be a double-edged sword. On one hand, they can provide airlines with a significant number of bookings to help fill their economy cabins.? On the other hand, they can become such a substantial contributor to an airline’s load factor that it can be difficult to consider any commercial strategies which may upset them. The smaller and more leisure-oriented the airline, the more relevant the dichotomy.
As online travel agencies grow their influence over an airline, distribution costs can drift higher, hopes for higher fare upsell and ancillary attachment can fade, and control over other elements of the airline’s business – especially holiday packaging on its website – can erode, further deteriorating margins. It is a difficult business problem that can be very intimidating to solve.
How can an airline achieve distribution freedom despite seemingly long odds? And what rewards might wait for those willing to invest the effort?
The Barriers to Freedom
The sheer size of the major online travel agencies is the key barrier, and nobody knows that better than the online travel agencies themselves. They have built very large global businesses over a long time, spent billions on search engine marketing, and invested in their own loyalty programs to ensure customers keep coming back.? It is not uncommon for a large online travel agency to threaten delisting a small to mid-sized airline to protect their commercial interests.
The typical online travel agencies’ main commercial interest is maximizing hotel commissions. Many of these agencies source 80-90 percent of their revenue from hotels. Why, then, would they be so forceful with airlines? Retaining access to the broadest airline content with the least effort (i.e., via existing GDS connections) helps online travel agencies draw more organic traffic to their websites, thereby mitigating search engine marketing costs and increasing their opportunity to attach lucrative hotel reservations to their air bookings.
And, yes, if online travel agencies can also extract high commissions from the airline, then that is the icing on the cake! Airlines that crumble at the threat of delisting may continue to face rising online travel agency commissions, even as overall airline commission rates from these agencies have decreased over the years.
While the direct cost of commissions can be quite high, the opportunity costs resulting from the negotiating leverage of online travel agencies can be even higher:
The barrier of the online travel agencies’ sheer size can therefore beget more barriers in the form of additional content commitments, inertia to continue using legacy distribution technology, and entanglements within the airline’s own website, operational processes, and organisation. What does it look like when an airline escapes these entanglements?
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The Business Case for Freedom
Over the past decade, the competitive gap has widened between airlines that have achieved online distribution freedom and those that have not. We spoke with airline distribution expert Cory Garner of Garner to outline the key benefits airlines can achieve by taking control of their distribution strategy. Here is what he had to say:
In addition, an airline which disentangles itself from the influence of online travel agencies can reconsider using a fully integrated technology platform for its own holiday packaging business. As we have outlined before (https://www.openjawtech.com/insights/the-surprising-financial-upside-of-hotel-attachment), using a fully integrated technology platform enables a seamless end-to-end customer experience, allowing airlines to leverage their core website traffic to drive demand for package holidays and employ techniques like "switch sell" during the booking flow. This integration allows airlines to combine content from multiple hotel suppliers and dynamically create packages with superior margins by negotiating lower rates. In doing so, airlines can potentially capture their fair share of USD $12.6B of hotel marketing expense, translating to about USD $4.70 per passenger boarded booked via an airline website.
The benefits of online distribution freedom can therefore be undeniably large for airlines, but the path between point A and point B can be intimidating due to the mismatch in power between the largest online travel agencies and small- to mid-sized airlines.
The Path to Freedom
An airline’s most powerful tool to motivate change is the thing which online travel agencies most need: content. Remember, online travel agencies make the vast majority of their money from hotels, not airlines.? Airlines are a source of revenue as well, but airline content attracts bookings, bookings attract hotel attachment, and hotel attachment attracts hotel commissions. Given a choice between an airline’s money and its content, an online travel agency would choose the content every time!
This principle applies whether the airline is big or small. What matters most is irreplaceability. Irreplaceability refers to the online travel agencies’ inability to replace lost bookings from one airline with an equivalent number of bookings from other airlines. Every airline has a subset of its content which is difficult for an online travel agency to replace. This can be one or more geographic markets where the airline has a significant presence (e.g., Finnair’s domestic routes, ANA’s strategic long-haul routes), fare products (e.g., Air Canada’s Basic fares), and/or price points (e.g., Singapore Airlines’ continuous pricing). The least replaceable content also tends to be the content for which the airline bears the least revenue risk because of withholding it from any channel, including online travel agencies. It is essential that an airline carefully consider which portion of its content is the least replaceable and secure the support of its leadership team to use it as a tool to motivate distribution change.
Armed with irreplaceable content and a tolerance for reasonable levels of revenue risk, an airline will need a few more things in their toolbox before they can press for the distribution change they desire:
Not to be overlooked, airlines should also coordinate their plans for holiday packaging with their distribution strategy timelines. Should an airline expect its online travel agency negotiations will be very difficult, it may be wise to re-bid its holiday packaging business ahead of the distribution strategy’s implementation.? Alternatively, the airline could attempt to extend its holiday packaging agreement well beyond the expiry of its separate distribution agreement with the online travel agency. It is rarely to the airline’s benefit for the expiry of its holiday packaging agreement to coincide with the expiry of its distribution agreement with the online travel agency.
Conclusion
The pursuit of distribution and technology freedom from online travel agencies is a complex yet rewarding endeavour for airlines. While online travel agencies currently can hold significant sway, leading to increased distribution costs and limited control, the potential benefits of overcoming these challenges are substantial. By reducing dependency on online travel agencies, airlines can not only lower costs but also motivate the adoption of NDC, ultimately enhancing the overall customer experience. This journey towards greater autonomy and efficiency is essential for airline competitiveness in a world where so many airlines have already started down this path.
?? Travel Tech Expert | Airline | PSS | Flight Search | Shopping | GDS | OTA | Storyteller
3 个月A great read, thank you ????
Yes, they absolutely do.
CEO @ Garner | Airline Distribution Thought Leader
3 个月To me, this is a must-read for CCOs at small-to-mid-sized #airlines. So many airlines tell themselves that they are too small to push against the growing influence/expense of #OTA distribution on their business. I always say that it's better to be irreplaceable than big, and that's especially true in the online space. Most smaller carriers have more leverage in these relationships than they think.