Toronto Star

Google annoys travel giants

Priceline, Expedia among advertiser­s wary of company’s foray into trip planning

- GERRIT DE VYNCK AND MARK BERGEN BLOOMBERG

At the largest online travel conference earlier this month, industry executive Steve Hafner was asked an unusual question: What’s the first word that comes to mind when you think about Google?

“Annoying,” Hafner, CEO of Priceline Group Inc.’s Kayak business, said.

Hafner captured the mood well. Despite more than $15 billion (U.S.) in annual revenue and hefty profits, online travel agents (OTAs) like Priceline and Expedia Inc. are increasing­ly wary of Google encroachin­g on their turf. That’s lifting tension with a sector that’s one of Google’s biggest advertiser­s.

The two camps once lived in harmony. The travel giants appeared on top of Google travel search results, either by buying ads or tweakingth­eir websites to suit Google’s algorithm. But in recent years, Google remade its search engine to show its own flight and hotel informatio­n above links to Priceline and Expedia. It launched a trip-planning app in September and sometimes lets travellers book hotels and flights on Google. Some industry players expect more direct competitio­n like this.

“Google has a bigger vision than just purely how much they’re making on ad revenue,” said Kayak co-founder Paul English, who left in late 2013 and is now building a travel-concierge service called Lola.

Google travel executive Oliver Heckmann has the tricky job of keeping online travel agents happy while building increasing­ly competitiv­e services for consumers. These advertiser­s need Google as much as the Alphabet Inc. unit needs them, but he’s always mending fences.

“If I look at the industry, everybody is sort of collaborat­ing and compet- ing with each other,” he said, while dismissing concern about a larger threat from Google. “I want to get a margarita every time I have to clarify that misunderst­anding.”

In an interview at the Phocuswrig­ht conference in Los Angeles, he said Google won’t become an online travel agent with full booking capabiliti­es. Instead, the company’s goal is to provide travellers with the best informatio­n. Google can deduce that someone searching for informatio­n on the Zika virus is planning a trip, and send them a travel deal before they ask for one. Expedia can’t do this by itself, he said.

That’s not enough for some in the travel industry who worry the Internet company could relegate online travel agents to background order takers — sitting between end providers, like hotels and airlines, and Google controllin­g the front-end experience. Expedia and Priceline would process transactio­ns and deal with customer service problems, but it may be harder for them to build a connection with users to cross-sell things like rental cars.

In 2014, Google argued against a planned U.S. Department of Transporta­tion (DOT) measure that would have regulated the company as an online travel agent. The DOT imposes more requiremen­ts, like fee disclosure­s, on companies that handle travel bookings, while firms that just provide informatio­n and refer customers have more freedom.

Five other companies, including Kayak and TripAdviso­r Inc., sup- ported Google. TripAdviso­r, which started as a travel informatio­n provider, recently started direct bookings on its own site to diversify away from making money by referring users to existing online travel agents.

Google has taken similar steps. It offers a feature that lets people who’ve already shared credit card informatio­n with Google book some hotels without filling in that payment data again on travel agents’ sites. Heckmann insisted the tool isn’t a first step toward handling bookings completely and said the actual transactio­n still takes place on travel agents’ computer servers. Google is just trying to speed up the process, he said.

Still, Google also offers a “Book on Google” feature when people search for flights. In some cases, users can purchase tickets without leaving Google. The company passes passenger details and payment informatio­n on to booking partners, which could be an airline, not just an online travel agent, according to Google’s support website. And in July 2015, it launched a partnershi­p with travel technology provider Sabre Corp. that lets travellers search for hotels on Google Search, Google Maps or Google+, and then book a room directly with the hotel without leaving the page.

Google’s latest moves are the most aggressive, and the most likely to push online travel agents into taking some of their marketing dollars elsewhere. Priceline and Expedia each spent more than $1 billion in the third quarter to get customers to come to their sites to book trips. Much of that went to Google, putting-Priceline and Expedia among Google’s top 10 search advertiser­s.

Google ad revenue from the sector is still solid, but Google is making a risky bet, said Jason Hartley, a search marketing executive at ad agency 360i. OTAs already advertise on Facebook Inc. and expect the social media giant to build more travel marketing options in the future.

Google has “probably done the math, and they’ve figured out that they have more to gain than to lose,” Hartley said. That calculatio­n involves the rise of mobile devices and voice-based digital assistants.

Some online travel executives said their own nimbleness will fortify them against Google’s entry.

“Google is an advertisin­g platform and everything that we’ve seen of them is they’re going to continue being an advertisin­g platform,” said Expedia CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi. “Google might let some searchers bypass Expedia by sending them straight to hotel and airline websites but the reality is Expedia . . . is much better setup to work in Google’s universe to capture customers.”

“If I look at the industry, everybody is sort of collaborat­ing and competing with each other.” OLIVER HECKMANN GOOGLE TRAVEL EXECUTIVE

 ?? KIM JIN-A/NEWSIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In recent years, Google tweaked its engine to show its own flight and hotel offers above links to travel advertiser­s.
KIM JIN-A/NEWSIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In recent years, Google tweaked its engine to show its own flight and hotel offers above links to travel advertiser­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada