Business Standard

THERE’RE MULTIPLE PARTNERSHI­P OPPORTUNIT­IES: OYO CEO AGARWAL

- RITESH AGARWAL More on business-standard.com CEO, OYO Rooms

OYO Rooms, the hotel aggregator with a listing of around 70,000 rooms under various chains, is open to partnershi­ps with the Taj group among others. In a conversati­on with Ajay Modi, 22-year-old OYO co-founder and Chief Executive Officer RITESH AGARWAL talks about Tata group Chairman Cyrus Mistry’s admission that OYO was a “threat”, the company’s relationsh­ip with Japanese investor SoftBank. Edited excerpts:

You started OYO to address the pain points faced by travellers. To what extent have you addressed the issues in three years of operation?

Three years ago, the problem was so grave that any effort would have improved the situation. People travelling to cities, especially smaller ones, had no idea what to expect. In the top 40-50 cities/destinatio­ns, there is a now a momentum to find a solution. We need to improve from here.

What has been the learning for you? How does a 22-year-old manage all this?

Most Indian institutio­ns are copies of what has happened in the West or say China. We are fundamenta­lly an India-first company. We had to make all the mistakes and learn. In me, everyone sees a young guy who wants to do things. But, behind me there is a sharp team of 10-15 people with ambitions to solve problems and experience to back that…

You have had dissatisfi­ed guests and unhappy partners. What is the situation now?

The past few months have been the best time for building the organisati­on. Today, more than 60 properties of OYO are in the top 10 list of TripAdviso­r in India. We are leading from a review standpoint. There’s a marked difference in feedback. With our hotel partners, we have had 2.3 per cent churn. We had to take a tough stance on partners who felt it was okay not to deliver great service. But when we took action against some, things fell in place.

Did the improvemen­t come on the back of revision in tariffs?

No. We haven’t changed a lot of our tariffs. We have been very aggressive on that front.

Tata group Chairman Cyrus Mistry recently said OYO is a threat. How did you react?

I feel that the hospitalit­y industry in India is at a nascent stage. Tata have been great innovators. We’ll be able to learn together. It is a very good compliment and makes us stronger.

Is there scope for partnershi­p between OYO and brands like Taj, which also operates a budget range of hotels?

We definitely believe there are multiple collaborat­ion opportunit­iesavailab­le with many of these players. Taj has amid-scale brand with Vivanta and economy scale with Ginger. There are definitely opportunit­ies to collaborat­e and both organisati­ons will decide things on merit.

Start-ups are seen as burning loads of cash with no sign of profits. Where does O YO stand?

We consistent­ly see our margins improving. But the market we have captured is very small. We might be the largest player in the online space, but if you combine offline, there is a lot more to be done. We want to be in an investment mode. Our plans are very aggressive, and we are capitalise­d enough to continue doing that. The good news is that we are among the few firms with good operating margin sand there is a market waiting to be captured. We need to keep investing to bring more of the market online.

Is there a need for further fund raising?

We have announced that we have raised $126 million. There has been some more, but we are publicly not talking about these.

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