Travel website
A travel website is a website on the world wide web, that is dedicated to travel. The site may be focused on travel reviews, the booking of travel, or a combination of both. Approximately seventy million consumers researched travel plans online in July 2006.[1] Travel bookings are the single largest component of e-commerce, according to Forrester Research.[citation needed]
Travelogues
Many travel websites are online travelogues or travel journals, usually created by individual travellers and hosted by companies that generally provide their information to consumers for free.[2] These companies generate revenue through advertising or by providing services to other businesses. This medium produces a wide variety of styles, often incorporating graphics, photography, maps, and other unique content. Some examples of websites that use a combination of travel reviews and the booking of travel are TripAdvisor, Virtualtourist, GLOBOsapiens, IgoUgo, and Cruise Critic.
Service providers
Individual airlines, hotels, bed and breakfasts, cruise lines, automobile rental companies, and other travel-related service providers often maintain their own web sites providing retail sales. Many with complex offerings include some sort of search engine technology to look for bookings within a certain timeframe, service class, geographic location, or price range.
Online travel agencies
An online travel agency (OTA) specializes in offering planning sources and booking capabilities.[3] Major OTAs include:
- Voyages-sncf.com - revenue €2.23 billion (2008)[4]
- Expedia, Inc., including Expedia.com, Hotels.com, Hotwire.com, and others - revenue US$2.937 billion (2008)[5]
- Sabre Holdings, including Travelocity, lastminute.com, and others - revenue US$2.9 billion (2008)[6]
- Opodo - revenue €1.3 billion (2008)[7]
- Priceline.com - revenue US$1.9 billion (2008)[8]
- Orbitz Worldwide, Inc., including Orbitz.com, CheapTickets, ebookers, and others - revenue US$870 million (2008)[9]
- Webjet - revenue A$592 million (2011)[10]
Fare aggregators and metasearch engines
The average consumer visits 3.6 sites when shopping for an airline ticket online, according to PhoCusWright, a Sherman, CT-based travel technology firm.[citation needed] Yahoo claims 76% of all online travel purchases are preceded by some sort of search function, according to Malcolmson, director of product development for Yahoo Travel.[citation needed] The 2004 Travel Consumer Survey published Jupiter Research noted that "nearly two in five online travel consumers say they believe that no one site has the lowest rates or fares." Thus a niche was created for aggregate travel search which seek to find the lowest rates from multiple travel sites, obviating the need for consumers to cross-shop from site to site.
Metasearch engines are so named conduct searches across multiple independent search engines. Metasearch engines often make use of "screen scraping" to get live availability of flights. Screen scraping is a way of crawling through the airline websites, getting content from those sites by extracting data from the same human-readable HTML feed (rather than a Semantic Web or database feed designed to be machine-readable). Metasearch engines usually process incoming data to eliminate duplicate entries, but may not expose "advanced search" options in the underlying databases (because not all databases support the same options). [citation needed]
Fare aggregators redirect the users to an airline, cruise, hotel, or car rental site or Online Travel Agent for the final purchase of a ticket. Aggregators' business models include getting feeds from major OTAs, then displaying to the users all of the results on one screen. The OTA then fulfills the ticket. Aggregators generate revenues through advertising and charging OTAs for referring clients.[citation needed] Examples of aggregate sites are Cheapflights, Dohop, Kayak.com, Mobissimo, Momondo, CheapOair, Ixigo.com, SideStep, Skyscanner, and Webjet.[11] Kayak.com is unusual in linking to online travel agencies and hotel web sites alike, allowing the customer to choose whether to book directly on the hotel web site or through an online travel agency. Google Hotelfinder is an experiment that allows to find hotel prices with Google, but it does not offer to book hotels, merely to compare rates.
The difference between a "fare aggregator" and "metasearch engine" is unclear, though different terms may imply different levels of cooperation between the companies involved. A rate aggregator for hotel rates with a very high level of cooperation is Roomkey.com, which was actually founded by the hotel chains Choice Hotels, Hilton Worldwide, Hyatt, Intercontinental, Wyndham and Marriott.
In 2008, Ryanair threatened to cancel all bookings made on Ryanair flights made through metasearch engines, but later allowed the sites to operate as long as they did not resell tickets or overload Ryanair's servers.[12]
Bargain sites
Travel bargain websites collect and publish bargain rates by advising consumers where to find them online (sometimes but not always through a direct link). Rather than providing detailed search tools, these sites generally focus on offering advertised specials, such as last-minute sales from travel suppliers eager to deplete unused inventory; therefore, these sites often work best for consumers who are flexible about destinations and other key itinerary components. Examples of bargain sites are ltur.com (tours, hotels & airline tickets) and charter.opodo.de. Last is most focused on last minute airline tickets.
Travel and tourism guides
Many websites take the form of a digital version of a traditional guide book, aiming to provide advice on which destinations, attractions, accommodations, and so on, are worth a visit and providing information on how to access them.
Most states, provinces and countries have their own convention and visitor bureaus, which usually sponsor a website dedicated to promoting tourism in their respective regions. Cities that rely on tourism also operate websites promoting their destinations, such as VEGAS.com for Las Vegas, Nevada.
Student Travel Agencies
Some travel websites cater specifically to the college student audience and list exclusive airfare deals and travel products.
StudentUniverse offers exclusive airfare for college student and faculty, as well as 18-25 year-old youth travelers. Members must verify that they are enrolled or are faculty at an accredited college or university.
STA Travel offers student and youth airfare deals as well.
See also
References
- ^ Saks, Greg (2006-11-14). "Travel: The emergence of Meta Search". Compete.
- ^ Deatherage, Bill (7 March 1997). "Travel-related Services-Competitive Advantage through the Internet". Amos Tuck School of Business Administration. Dartmouth College. Retrieved 30 September 2009. [dead link ]
- ^ "About Expedia.com". Expedia. 2009. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
- ^ "Voyages-SNCF.com dépasse 2 milliards d'euros de revenus en 2008" (in French). ZDNet France. 27 January 2009. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- ^ "Expedia, Inc. Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2008 Results" (PDF). Expedia, Inc. 19 February 2009. p. 16. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- ^ "TSG - Sabre Holdings 2008 Earnings Conference Call" (PDF). Thomson StreetEvents. Thomson Financial. 5 March 2009. p. 4. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- ^ "Opodo 2008 Results Announcement". Opodo. 2009. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- ^ "Priceline.com Reports Financial Results for 4th Quarter and Full-Year 2008". Priceline.com. Business Wire. 18 February 2009. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- ^ "2009 Letter to Shareholders". Orbitz Worldwide. 22 April 2009. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- ^ "Full Year Results Ended 30 June 2011". Webjet.com.au. 11 August 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
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(help) - ^ Smith, Kendall (1999). The complete idiot's guide to planning a trip online. Que. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-7897-2168-6.
- ^ "Ryanair offers meta search engines an olive branch". Eyefortravel.com. 2008-09-02.