Khaleej Times

Beyond rooms and homes: Airbnb adding tours, activities

- Brandon Bailey AP

san francisco — Not content with just renting out spare rooms and vacant homes, Airbnb is adding local tours and activities like surfing lessons and pub crawls to its travel services in major cities around the world.

With the new features announced, the fast-growing online rental company is hoping to tap into leisure travellers’ desire for distinctiv­e “experience­s” that make them feel more connected with the places they visit, travel industry analysts say.

The move also shows the ambitions of a company that’s already one of the world’s fastest-growing privately-held firms. Airbnb, which boasts millions of rental listings around the world, has been valued at $30 billion — though it’s run into growing pains in some cities where local officials complain the boom in short-term rentals is reducing longterm housing for residents.

Airbnb’s new guided activities include things like surfing lessons or

[Airbnb] want[s] to be viewed as more of a travel company and not just an alternativ­e lodging firm Henry Harteveldt, Analyst with Atmosphere Research

cooking class led by a local chef, a pub crawl through a trendy nightclub district or even a truffle hunt in Tuscany. The company has been testing the services in a few cities over the last year, enlisting local hosts as guides. It’s expanding to 12 cities, while promising 50 by next year.

“They want to be viewed as more of a travel company and not just an alternativ­e lodging firm,” said Henry Harteveldt, an analyst with Atmosphere Research. “Our research shows travellers spend as much as 60 per cent of their travel budget at their destinatio­n. So they want to tap into that very large revenue stream.”

The new services add to a set of online guides that Airbnb introduced earlier this year that list restaurant­s, outings and other attraction­s recommende­d by Airbnb hosts. Airbnb says it will also recommend “meetups”, or impromptu gatherings, and other activities keyed to travellers’ interest in topics like food, history, music or local crafts.

Travellers can already get similar recommenda­tions from a variety of online services, including popular sites like Google and Facebook. But Airbnb hopes travellers will find it easier to use the new services within its own mobile app or website.

Similarly, the company is partnering with online booking app Resy to let travellers make restaurant reservatio­ns through Airbnb — in competitio­n with services like OpenTable and Yelp.

In an interview, Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said he hopes to add more services, including the ability to book airline flights.

Since the company launched in 2008, when the co-founders invited travellers to sleep on an air mattress in their San Francisco loft, Airbnb has grown to be one of the world’s most valuable private startups by collecting fees when private hosts rent out accommodat­ions listed on the site. It’s raised $3.9 billion from investors, according to CB Insights, which tracks venture funding.

Chesky declined to say if the company is profitable, although the Wall Street Journal reported last year that Airbnb was spending heavily to expand in more cities. The newspaper cited internal projection­s that forecast Airbnb to have nearly $1 billion in revenue last year and to become profitable by 2020.

Airbnb has run into regulatory battles in some cities, including New York and San Francisco, but Chesky said he’s hopeful to resolve those issues. —

 ?? AP ?? airbnb CeO Brian Chesky says he hopes to add more services, including the ability to book airline flights. —
AP airbnb CeO Brian Chesky says he hopes to add more services, including the ability to book airline flights. —

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