Gulf News

Expedia to beef up marketing war chest as competitio­n heats up

Travel website spends big to position brand in front of growing audience

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In an industry where disloyal shoppers largely opt for the cheapest rates, travel website Expedia and its competitio­n are locked in an arms race as they attempt to position their brands in front of consumers.

Expedia spent $1.4 billion (Dh5.14 billion) on marketing in the third quarter of 2017, an increase of 21 per cent on the same period in 2016, according to its earnings report.

However, the San Franciscob­ased company was not the only big spender this year.

Fellow US-based firm Priceline plunged $1.2 billion into its marketing efforts in the second quarter of 2017, a 25 per cent increase year-onyear, whilst TripAdviso­r said it had increased its marketing budget by 18 per cent in its third-quarter results.

Ait Voncke, Expedia’s vicepresid­ent of Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) Market Management, was quick to dismiss suggestion­s that the companies’ plans to further ramp up marketing spend into 2018 constitute­d some sort of race to the bottom.

“We’re going to continue spending and beefing [our marketing budget] up as long as the growth is there. Because the market is growing, we’re growing our audience constantly,” he said. “I wouldn’t call it a race to the bottom though.”

The senior executive also disputed the claim that consumers in his industry weren’t loyal.

He said that with 55 million loyal customers, Expedia did have “effective loyalty programmes.”

These include the ‘book 10 rooms and get one free’ programme, which Voncke noted had a lot of subscriber­s who continued to repeat book as a result.

Expedia’s stock fell by 13 per cent in October on the back of its dishearten­ing quarterly results, which fell well short of analysts’ estimates, and led to

Healthy Dubai growth

Speaking about Expedia’s third-quarter results for Dubai, Paula de Keijzer, Expedia’s senior director of Market Management for the Middle East and Africa (MEA), said that the company had seen a 25 per cent growth year-onyear, outpacing the market from a demand perspectiv­e.

“For Dubai, we are super healthy growth she said.

According to de Keijzer, the company’s global third-quarter results obscure some very positive indicators, regionally at least.

Expedia saw Ireland, India and China all surge as feeder markets in to Dubai, all experienci­ng triple-digit growth compared to the third quarter of 2016. Switzerlan­d and Brazil almost doubled their demand into Dubai, whilst South Korea grew by 40 per cent.

The company also seeing in demand,” reported an increasing length of stay and longer booking windows, which hotels love, according to de Keijzer, because it translates to more money spent in their restaurant­s and in their spas.

Longer booking windows mean hotels have longer to contact guests, and have longer to upsell them in advance.

August saw the departure of long-time CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi, who oversaw a quadruplin­g of sales, from $2.1 billion in 2005 to $8.8 billion in 2016, and an increase in market capitalisa­tion of $18 billion, during his time at Expedia.

“Privately it’s a big loss,” said Voncke, responding to a question from Gulf News about the impact of Khosrowsha­hi’s exit on Expedia’s business performanc­e.

The Iranian-American CEO left the company to take over at the embattled ride-hailing firm Uber Technologi­es.

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 ?? Courtesy: Expedia ?? Ait Voncke
Courtesy: Expedia Ait Voncke

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