Manila Bulletin

Airlines try to woo customers back to their own websites

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BERLIN/NEW YORK (Reuters) – Airlines are trying to draw passengers away from low-price comparison sites and back to their own home pages, seeking to boost profits by selling them extra services such as additional legroom or access to airport lounges.

Airlines across Europe and the United States are experiment­ing with strategies to bring travellers back to their own websites. These range from improving the booking process to adding fees for tickets booked using third-party distributo­rs, which themselves charge airlines for their services.

Many airlines see customizin­g travel packages with lounge access, extra legroom or hotel stays and restaurant bookings as the area where revenue has greatest scope to grow. That model can conflict with comparison sites that market only base fares.

German carrier Lufthansa gets just 10 percent of its revenues from such ancillary sales and wants to grow that by an unspecifie­d amount. Ryanair, which had led the way in selling such add-ons, gets over 30 percent of its revenues from ancillarie­s.

Third party sites offer airlines access to a wider audience but for a fee and also at the expense of control of sales.

"Airlines are excited to get their product on to the shelves," Scott Wilson, vice president of eCommerce and merchandis­ing for United Continenta­l Holdings Inc told Reuters.

"They just need to be displayed in the correct way."

"I can see a scenario in which United would not want to work with partners that weren’t helping advance our corporate strategy," he added, although United aims to be "agnostic" about where customers buy its services.

Ryanair is overhaulin­g its website to offer its 100 million annual passengers flight price comparison­s, cheap hotel rooms and location-based restaurant discounts.

CEO Michael O’Leary told Reuters last month that he wants rival airlines to share their prices on the low-cost carrier’s website, although that idea has not yet been embraced by his competitor­s.

"There is this level of trust whereby customers don’t believe that an airline will show them the best that (a rival) has got," Gordon Wilson, CEO of distributi­on and technology company Travelport Worldwide Ltd told Reuters.

The major airlines each spend hundreds of millions of dollars annually to distribute their fares via global distributi­on systems (GDS), provided by Amadeus IT Holding, Sabre Corp. and Travelport.

That allows fares to be easily compared by corporate travel bookers and directly by consumers.

Aiming to recoup costs, Lufthansa has introduced a 16 euro fee for bookings via GDS companies, a move which those businesses and travel managers have criticized. Lufthansa says its annual GDS costs are over 100 million euros ($113 million) and that GDS costs are "several times higher" than other booking channels.

"We have seen such big difference­s in cost via the various sales channels and we’ve seen more and more demand from our passengers for more personaliz­ed services," CEO Carsten Spohr told Reuters in an interview.

These latest moves in the tug of war between airlines and fare distributo­rs have prompted some consumer advocates and travel technology companies to warn that carriers are making it tough for travellers to compare prices.

The US Transporta­tion Department is considerin­g introducin­g a rule to require airlines to disclose ancillary fees at all points of sale.

Airlines say they are among the world’s most transparen­t industries when it comes to pricing, despite difference­s among their products and charging for services such as baggage and seat choice that complicate comparison­s.

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