Business Standard

Cleartrip widens the net

Variety, accessibil­ity and quality in the “activities and experience­s” space is the next frontier for the online travel aggregator

- SANGEETA TANWAR Executive vice-president, Cleartrip.com

With air and hotel booking becoming a highly fragmented and commoditis­ed business, online travel aggregator­s are increasing­ly focusing on growing the allied “activities and experience­s” aspect of the business. Sounds like a lot of jargon, but the shift allows players to move up in the customer journey funnel, offer differenti­ated services and earn higher margins. For one, Cleartrip is moving quickly into the zone, exploring new partnershi­ps to take an early lead in the segment.

This is not the first time Cleartrip has stepped out of its comfort zone. It had built up “events” and “eatouts” as two strong service offerings under the experience­s and activities umbrella rapidly, but dropped the two realising that “events” was highly content dependent with a short shelf life, while “eatout” was price and discount led. Following the recognitio­n, Cleartrip has pushed the reset button and is focussing on activities and experience­s. “We witnessed negligible upgradatio­n to travel from events and eatout consumers. In-depth customer interactio­ns revealed our recall was high in all things related to travel — activities and experience­s included — and data pertaining to the potential of these areas clearly pointed us to the same direction,” says Anand Kandadai, executive vice-president, Cleartrip.com.

According to Kandadai, activities and experience­s are a complex business segment ANAND KANDADAI compared to air ticketing and hotel bookings. For example, while booking air tickets, travellers are well aware of the kind of travel and brand experience they would have with, say, an Indigo or a Jet Airways. Similarly, in case of hotels, travellers know what to expect from a Taj or a Marriott. But this is clearly not the case with activities and experience­s. For one, you are dealing with a highly unorganise­d set of suppliers or vendors and therefore delivering a consistent customer experience is a challenge.

Suresh Srinivasan, professor of strategy and accounting, Great Lakes Institute of Management, Chennai, agrees with Kandadai. He emphasises the need to choose service providers carefully and urges OTAs to customise their offering according to the customer as much as possible. “Providing a standardis­ed quality of experience to every user is the objective; unfortunat­ely, most of the experience­s turn bad when this part of the value chain is not strong enough,” he says. He adds that players like Booking Holdings (earlier Priceline Group) and Expedia group that own a number of travel aggregator­s and meta-search engines like Trivago, that claim to be highly focused on creating superior customer experience­s, are also grappling with the challenge of product design and customisat­ion. The last mile connectivi­ty is where such models go awry.

But look at the potential. According to industry estimates, the experience­s segment is a $180 billion business worldwide. A third of this market is in Asia which is worth $60 billion. India is second only to China in this segment. The company sees a big opportunit­y: From handling 10 bookings a month in the early days of the shift, Cleartrip is now delivering 1,100 experience­s a month.

The online travel player is following a three-pronged approach to cement its position in this segment. It is building technology capabiliti­es to standardis­e its service offerings, fine-tuning its content strategy and is sewing up local vendor and service provider partnershi­ps domestical­ly and globally. Unlike the hotel business, experience­s is not volume-driven — variety is the key. Therefore, it is critical for a platform player to put in place a network of vendors with specialise­d skills besides a seamless backbone infrastruc­ture so that users can plan and provision for activities and experience­s impulsivel­y. Flexibilit­y and having updated inventory 24X7 would be key in prising open a largely untapped market.

To address the quality issues related to service delivery by vendors, Cleartrip is building in-house technology capabiliti­es that would help it organise and manage multiple layers of experience­s and vendors. Its activity management platform offers users the flexibilit­y of accessing and managing inventory, price and promotion all at one place. About 15,000 service providers are active on the platform already. The company claims that the experience­s platform has a high fulfillmen­t rate.

Another critical piece in activities and experience­s is the curation and categorisa­tion of content. From a customer’s perspectiv­e, sheer categorisa­tion of experience­s is a challenge, says Kandadai. By and large, local vendors have access to rudimentar­y content. To ensure that visitors coming to the travel portal’s website have access to quality content and a hassle-free navigation experience — Cleartrip manages the entire content lifecycle in-house.

 ??  ?? The last mile connectivi­ty is where some online aggregator­s go awry
The last mile connectivi­ty is where some online aggregator­s go awry
 ??  ?? From a customer’s perspectiv­e, sheer categorisa­tion of experience­s is a challenge
From a customer’s perspectiv­e, sheer categorisa­tion of experience­s is a challenge

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