Airbnb is ramping up its strategy around hotel accommodation by striking an agreement to acquire HotelTonight.
Terms of the deal have not been disclosed. HotelTonight had raised nearly $130 million in investment funding since its creation in late-2010.
The purchase, according to Airbnb, gives it the chance to "accelerate our work to build an end-to-end travel platform that serves everyone."
It is unclear as yet what Airbnb will do with its latest acquisition in the mid- to long-term - only stating what looks to be a return to the last-minute focus that HotelTonight launched at the turn of the decade.
Most of the rhetoric in the announcement concerns HotelTonight's prowess with its relationship with boutique hotels and how the deal will make it easier for people who use Airbnb to find accommodation at short notice.
Airbnb says: "The availability of boutique hotels - in addition to private rooms and entire homes that are instantly bookable - helps ensure authentic, high-quality stays are available on-demand, especially at the last minute."
HotelTonight currently also works with many chain hotels in its network of cities around the world. It has a 100-day booking window.
Airbnb says the HotelTonight app and website will continue to operate, with CEO and co-founder Sam Shank reporting to president of homes at Airbnb, Greg Greeley, with a brief to run its boutique hotel category.
All employees will be joining Airbnb, the company says, except for three unnamed executives from HotelTonight whose roles are not continuing after the deal closes.
Shank says: "We started HotelTonight because we knew people wanted a better way to book an amazing hotel room on-demand, and we are excited to join forces with Airbnb to bring this service to guests around the world.
"Together, HotelTonight and Airbnb can give guests more choices and the world’s best boutique and independent hotels a genuine partner to connect them with those guests."
The acquisition follows a deliberate shift in emphasis by Airbnb over the course of the last 12 months to expand beyond private accommodation to include hotels - a distribution strategy through third-party channel managers that will continue.
It announced a program to allow hotels to officially be included on the core service in February 2018 and saw CEO Brian Chesky state after that the company was "100% battling online travel agencies," such as Expedia and Booking.com.
Speaking to the acquisition, Airbnb advisor Chip Conley says: "Boutique hoteliers and Airbnb home hosts both offer incredible, local hospitality precisely because they live in and are connected to the communities where they welcome guests.
"Airbnb and HotelTonight joining forces will make it easier for guests to find these kinds of unique, amazing places to stay and is a natural next step that will benefit everyone in the Airbnb community."
An ever-evolving model
HotelTonight's biggest round came in a $45 million chunk from the Coateau Management hedge fund in 2013.
At the time, none of its rivals, such as Spain's Blink Booking, Hong Kong's HotelQuickly, Germany's JustBook, the UK's Hot Hotels, or US-based Priceline's Tonight-Only Deals app had claimed investment levels approaching that.
The company was formed in San Francisco, initially as a same-day booking service where users could get heavily discounted rates on hotels in select cities, using so-called distressed inventory.
It expanded quickly around North America and into Europe, putting sales teams on the ground to work with hotels in a particular destination or region.
The mobile-only service, which later shifted also to desktop, spawned a string of copycat brands, including a dedicated app from the aforementioned Priceline.com.
Booking.com and pre-Expedia-owned Orbitz also followed suit and switched on last-minute capability.
But the limitations on the same-day model soon became apparent, in terms of addressable market size, leading to an extension of the booking window to seven days in 2014 and then, in 2017, to 100 days.
A string of layoffs came in 2015 (about 20% of the workforce).
A turnaround program appeared to have paid off in 2017 when it raised $37 million from Accel Partners, with talk turning to plans for an initial public offering at some point in the future.
* Check out these two interviews with Airbnb's president of homes, Greg Greeley, during The Phocuswright Conference 2018 in Los Angeles.
Executive Interview: Airbnb
PhocusWire @ Phocuswright 2018 - Airbnb on a big year to date