National Post

Air Canada joins WestJet cutting ties with Hopper

- Ross MaRowits

MONTREAL • Air Canada said Friday it will join rival WestJet in severing its ties with Hopper Inc. after the mobile travel app’s suggestion it has sole access to “secret fares” caused confusion in the travel industry.

Hopper, which notified users when a fare matching their criteria becomes available, landed in hot water with other travel groups that sell air fares, such as travel agents and aggregator sites, when the company suggested earlier this week it was the only one to have special fares at up to a 35 per cent discount and marketing them “Secret Fares.”

“For someone to say that we have a secret fare and that it applies to all of our network is totally incorrect, it doesn’t happen,” Duncan Bureau, Air Canada’s vicepresid­ent of global sales said in an interview Friday.

The country’s largest airline had agreed to a trial of Hopper’s program by giving it access to a low fare on one route between the United States and Asia, he said.

Like other airlines around the world, Air Canada uses all kinds of distributi­on channels to drive sales, especially in markets where it isn’t the dominant player. They offer various types of fares, including private ones available to partners depending on the route, competitiv­e dynamics and season.

“We don’t disadvanta­ge one distributi­on partner from another. What we do is we leverage distributi­on partners that have a strength in a particular market or particular niche,” he said.

Bureau said Air Canada isn’t interested in selling the lowest possible fare or unloading seats at below cost.

“We don’t have secret fares. We have negotiated fares with all of our different partners and different partners bring different types of customers.”

Hopper was wrong to imply that Air Canada created an advantage for the app over its other partners, he said.

“For us it’s about integrity. We have a lot of distributi­on partners and what I cannot have is someone going to the marketplac­e insinuatin­g that they have access to inventory or fares that no one else has fares to on a system wide basis.”

The airlines say they were caught off guard when their names were used in a news release and were the subject of news reports.

WestJet spokeswoma­n Lauren Stewart said late Thursday that the company was severing ties with Hopper “due to the confusion this has created in the marketplac­e.”

WestJet said Hopper will still be able to sell the company’s published fares, comparable to those available on its website, but that it will no longer provide the private, discounted fares it offers to travel agents and other partners.

Having perhaps attracted more attention than it bargained for, Hopper apologized Friday.

“We value our relationsh­ips with both Air Canada and WestJet, and sincerely apologize for any confusion caused by the way we marketed this initiative,” Hopper spokeswoma­n Brianna Schneider wrote in an email.

In its release Wednesday, Hopper said other “secret fare” airline partners include LATAM, Turkish, Copa and Air China, adding they will be joined by other carriers in the coming weeks.

But the company clarified that “Secret Fares” was the name of a program.

“Secret Fares is a Hopperspec­ific marketing strategy and not a unique class of airfare,” she said.

So-called opaque fares can be a good way to distribute hard-to-sell seats at a lower price, without triggering an immediate fare war, but likely raised concerns from vendors and key travel agency partners, said Robert Kokonis, president of airline consulting firm AirTrav Inc.

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