Metasearch platform Kayak entered
the business travel arena in late 2019, with the beta version of its free
Kayak for Business tool for small- and medium-sized companies. After 20 months
of testing, the full
launch came in July 2021 and since then, Kayak says more than 30,000
companies have used the product.
In the midst of developing that solution, Kayak has been
quietly developing a more advanced version targeted to large corporations in
partnership with Blockskye, a startup
developing a blockchain-based solution for corporate travel.
Since 2018, Blockskye had been developing its system through
tests with United Airlines and a corporate client that was not named at
that time. In 2020, Blockskye approached Kayak about creating the booking tool
for this new enterprise travel solution.
In August PhocusWire’s
sister publication Business Travel News reported the corporate client is PwC
and that, since last fall, the global professional services firm has been using
Kayak for Business’ new Enterprise solution for all of its employees in the
United States – numbering more than 65,000 – and processing more than 400,000
bookings, with the blockchain providing a single source of truth for each
booking.
So Kayak is now looking to sign up more corporate clients for its Enterprise product, with features such as:
- Direct NDC connectivity with suppliers so travelers can book
directly with the airlines
- Direct payment between companies and major airlines
- Integration with loyalty program rewards
- Flight emission estimates
Kayak co-founder and CEO Steve Hafner spoke to PhocusWire about building the new Enterprise
solution, the benefits of using blockchain and what competitors may think of
this new product. The conversation has been edited for brevity.
Over the years you – along with many
other industry leaders – have ranged from quiet to critical on the topic of
blockchain for travel. What is the value in it that you now see through this
partnership with Blockskye?
What blockchain is, it's a digital
ledger that is distributed so different third parties can interact with it –
which is great for something like an airline ticket because you can see who
touched the airline ticket, last made changes, did the upgrades and you can
hand it off to the next third party to continue on the path. That is a big
sticking point in this industry, because historically who you bought it from
were the only people allowed to touch it. To this day, if you buy on Orbitz or
Expedia and you call the airline to make a change, they refer you back to the [online travel agency]. Nobody wants to deal with that, especially in a business environment
when your flight just got cancelled.
So then what happens to the PNR (passenger name record) in
this system?
It's in the blockchain. The part that
was really important to us - that you could make all these changes in the Kayak
app that everyone knows about, and you are indifferent on whether it was [booked]
airline direct or agent. So regardless of who made the last change or where you
booked, any party can touch it, which is pretty
darn cool.
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And by the way, it's not just about the customer service
angle of the itinerary, it's also about payment. The payment mostly goes
through blockchain, which is great because it cuts out the credit card
companies and their associated fees, and the airlines absolutely love that. And
for the consumers, they love that too, because it means no more expense reports
for those itineraries.
That’s a bold statement – “it cuts out
the credit card companies.” A lot of these airlines have partnerships with
these credit card companies. Does this really upset the apple cart as far as
the way things have traditionally functioned?
It will over time if it gets traction. Right
now we have one enterprise client. We need to go roll it out to a lot more
corporations for it to work. But you know the holy grail for the airlines is
first, let's disintermediate the OTAs, particularly the corporate travel OTAs,
because they don’t want to pay them commissions. Then second is let’s try
to disintermediate the GDSs [global distribution systems], because they don't
want to pay them segment fees. So that's where NDC came in - the new distribution capability and everything that we've built is NDC. And then
the third piece of the holy grail is, let's stick it to the credit card
companies. To get that third piece to happen, you need to start pushing a lot
more volume through this NDC channel and through the blockchain-enabled payment,
and the jury is still out on whether we can pull that caper off. But it’s
pretty cool.
Is the booking tool running through
the same Kayak app that is used for your consumer-facing services or is it a
different app?
It's going to be the same app, you
just have to have a Kayak for Enterprise account. Once you have that, you have
a different login, and you have a different user experience and you can toggle
between personal and corporate. In the corporate view the itineraries you see
are more comprehensive, they are compliant with the corporate policy. You’ve
got payment and everything else in there, tracking.
What benefits does Kayak bring to the
table for this solution?
From the user perspective, we're a
brand name they are familiar with and an app they are familiar with. So we
think that will help with onboarding. From the industry perspective, all the
airlines know who we are. We have very good engineering and commercial
connections with those airlines. So when we got into NDC and into payments, we
knew what we were talking about and we knew we could deliver on our promises -
which means a lot to the travel industry community.
The payment mostly goes through blockchain, which is great because it cuts out the credit card companies and their associated fees, and the airlines absolutely love that.
Steve Hafner - Kayak
Where we had to earn our chops
was with our first enterprise client, actually. That's where we were total
newbies. When they … bring 20 people to the [first] meeting and we bring three
[laugh]. And they had this list of “We need all these things fulfilled”
and we say “Why don't we have an MVP product and just have these top five …
we’ll race this forward as fast as we can.” [And they say,] “No, we need this
whole list before we get the next thing done, and it has to be done by this
date.”
So you are potentially building that
and customizing that with each new customer you would on-board, correct?
We hope that there's a lot of overlap
between the requests and demands of our first enterprise client and the next
batches. We built it in a way that it anticipates a little bit more
customization, but not a lot.
There are a lot of competitors in enterprise
travel space, of course. Why should a large corporation choose Kayak for
Enterprise?
The decision maker there is usually
the corporate travel manager at the enterprise level, a [chief financial officer] or financial type
and then someone on the commercial side. And the appeal of this solution is it
gives you better content for your travelers because you get all the direct
content from the airlines plus the GDS plus the Kayak metasearch capability.
For the CFO, you save money, particularly on the trip’s credit card fees, which
should also give you a kickback from the airlines on the direct bookings. And
then for the commercial person, it's the best of both worlds. You get a great
interface that your folks are used to using for their leisure travel and
then they don't have to file expense reports.
How much of a benefit do the names
Kayak and Steve Hafner bring to this effort?
I have no idea. I'll tell you that we
launched the free product Kayak for Business a couple of years ago, [and] we
haven't put a dollar of marketing behind it and we have 30,000 clients who have
signed up for it. In this effort, we don't intend to have a of dollar of marketing
or even a large sales force.
What we're really trying to do is to
have our first enterprise client - who has lots of other enterprise clients -
be able to say look you should come over to this solution because it's worked
so well for us, and we've saved so much money and our travelers use it. It
means nothing coming from a Kayak person. An enterprise person telling it to
another enterprise person that's that traction. So hopefully if we can get
some top tier companies to sign up for this and love it, the word of mouth
effect goes into place and it turns into a real business for us. Right now it's
just a great product.
What kind of pushback or challenges are you anticipating? How much of it is just the
inertia of these large enterprises?
Habit and inertia are the biggest
obstacles to change. Everywhere. I’m on the board of a company called SeatGeek.
We have a better software stack for consumers and teams and arenas, and it's
taken us eight years to start beating the pants off of Ticketmaster - and
nobody likes Ticketmaster.
... unlike a lot of the other corporate travel startups, we like to make money not just great products.
Steve Hafner - Kayak
I think people feel the same way about GBT [American
Express Global Business Travel] and Concur, honestly. Everyone wants a new
solution. They're all just scared to make the leap because every time they made
the leap in the past, they've been disappointed with the next solution too.
How much of a heavy lift was this for
your team to get up to speed on enterprise corporate travel and and booking
tech?
We’ve known the industry very well for
a long time. I used to run Orbitz for Business back in my prior life. It didn't
take as long to come up to speed - it took us a while to build the stuff that
we needed to build. The commercial agreements were easy, but then we actually
had to write the code, and it took a lot more resources than I anticipated.
Kayak for Business was basically a light improvement to Kayak for consumer.
Kayak for Enterprise – totally different beast.
The new enterprise solution calculates
the CO2 emissions for user’s flight and sends it to the company. Are you working
with a partner on that?
Yes, we're working with a couple of
partners. I'm not so sure the methodology or the partner that we're using is
the right one yet. So that's still something that we're tooling around with and
we're not the only ones trying to figure that out.
There are many theories on the long-term
outlook for corporate travel. What is your take?
I don't know if the
total, volume-wise, is ever going to get back to where it was - maybe post 2026
- because people's habits have changed. And it's just a lot easier to do stuff
via Zoom. But I think the value of in-person meetings is still there. It’s
still a very, very high [return on investment] activity. It's just sometimes Zoom is even higher.
And easy. There are a lot more people thinking about it more intently than I am
because, even with this effort, 98% of our business is still going to be
leisure. So I am much more focused on what’s happening with leisure travel than
I am business travel. But maybe this product takes off and I feel differently
in a few years.
What are you still working on for this
new enterprise solution?
We have a long laundry list of to-dos, but for the moment we're just focused on securing one to two more clients. So
we can help … the P&L a little bit to cover the cost of our engineers. But
also just to understand the feature set before we roll it out. The scope
right now is still limited to the U.S. We've got a lot of work to do to take
this show on the road to the geographies. So job one is to get two to three
more clients here in the U.S., get meaningful scale in terms of usage so that
we can better refine the feature set and how we roll it out. We have a ton of
bugs to fix too still, by the way.
Regarding the free Kayak for Business,
when you spoke to my colleague Linda Fox last year, you said, "Our
challenge is to go how deep we can go into corporate travel without providing
customer service. That's where we're going to draw the line.” So is that line
still there?
That line is still there. We're
partnered with other TMCs to actually do that customer service, and it's the
enterprise client who picks the TMC.
What's next for Kayak’s work in
business travel?
We've got two goal posts now. We've
got the free Kayak product and now we've got the enterprise product. We are
working on something for the middle, a dumbed down version if you will of the enterprise
product with a different pricing setup. … So those are the three big things for
us. And hopefully a profitable P&L for this segment emerges, because unlike
a lot of the other corporate travel startups, we like to make money, not just
great products.
Who is going to be bothered by the
creation of Kayak for Enterprise?
The big leaders in the travel space,
particularly GBT, have legacy products. It's tough for them to close the gap
here in that they also have P&Ls that are disincentivized to actually cut
costs out of the system - because they get paid a ton by pumping volume through
the GDS. They don't want to go direct to the airline. They get a ton of
kickbacks. They take a scrape on those credit card transaction fees. They don’t
want to use blockchain technology there. So they're in a tough spot because,
yes, they have the greatest scale and customer relationships, but they don't
have the product, and they don't have the P&L to help facilitate the
transition to the new world.
And then on the flip side, you've got
companies like TravelPerk and … Navan … who have pretty good product feature
sets now. I’d say that some of our stuff is better than theirs. And they have a
lot more traction in terms of customers than we do. But they haven’t figured
out a way to make money. And it's really hard for companies that are losing a
ton of money to go raise more right now. You may have noticed.
The Phocuswright Conference 2023
Join us in November to hear from Kayak CEO Steve Hafner and many other industry leaders at The Phocuswright Conference in Fort Lauderdale, November 13-16.