Main

November 16, 2006

Farelogix Links BCD To 'Any Inventory' Access

BCD Travel has gone an ambitious route in attempting to get more inventory at its fingertips.

BCD has chosen Farelogix’s FLX Platform “to better optimize the many supplier and distribution services available in the travel market from a content, functionality, and financial point of view,” according to a Nov. 13 press release.

The key benefit to BCD’s deal with Farelogix is that its travel agents can use the platform to source travel inventory from many channels, including supplier-direct connections, GDSs as well as private and Internet fare sources.

The FLX Platform will also help BCD Travel centralize its data sources, faring and shopping, as well as its travel policy. BCD Travel agents may “source travel content against an infinite number of flexible, rules-based criteria,” including lowest cost to the supplier (competitive booking source) and best content source according to supplier (i.e. Web site), Farelogix said.

BCD Travel will also have the ability to manage contractual commitments made to its customers, the GDSs and suppliers. For example, the TMC can set rules to ensure the appropriate GDS bookings are met, or that a minimum number of bookings per month are made via a particular source of content.

September 06, 2006

BookingBuilder Users Gain G2 SwitchWorks Content

BookingBuilder Technologies’ agents now have full access to search and book with G2 Switchwork’s airline partners.

BookingBuilder announced Sept. 1 its full release of G2Agent content within BookingBuilder Desktop.

The Desktop integrates non-GDS content at the travel agent point-of-sale and adds airline content from nine additional carriers including AirTran Airways, Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, Continental Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines, United Airlines and US Airways (and America West Airlines), BookingBuilder explained.

BookingBuilder and GDS alternative G2 SwitchWorks have been testing integration since August.

Travel Planners, Inc, a beta test agency, has had success with the upgrade. “The partnership between BookingBuilder and G2 provides an efficient and easy way for our agents to get access to this content. These are two great products that have come together to help our agents and reduce our operational costs,” said Garet Roberson of Travel Planners.

August 09, 2006

Sales & Marketing May Preserve Agents’ Relevance

Travel companies are beefing up their online storefronts to attract self-bookers, but that doesn’t mean travel agents don’t play an important role in booking travel products.

“Travel agents are the experts on finding the best travel solution and presenting it to the consumer in a way that makes them want to buy,” says Lee Rosen, president of agent technology solutions provider TRAMS.

But agents can’t rely solely on in-demand products or sophisticated technology to lure travelers and remain important to suppliers — they must become marketing and sales dynamos, Rosen asserts. Here’s how.

Tap Into Travelers’ Histories

The greatest value that travel agents bring to the table is their past experiences with their customers, Rosen notes. Each time a traveler books a trip with an agent, the agent learns another piece of crucial information, such as where the traveler has been, what type of trips he prefers, what level of accommodation he seeks, how much he wants to spend and what his family is like.

Key: Agents must mine that information and promote travel products that make sense for the traveler. As agents make the best matches between travelers and products, they build loyalty into their client relationships, Rosen says.

That loyalty is very lucrative to travel suppliers who want a full house or sold-out flight — which means that by leveraging their own experiences with travelers, agents become the key intermediary between a supplier and the customers their businesses hinge on.

Use Web To Manage Sales

Where agencies used to need elaborate management systems, now they can rely on the Web for rapid, efficient customer management — whether they’re managing customers, suppliers or other agents.

Rosen suggests that agents “use the Internet to retrieve customer and product information, distribute and track that information as well as store it in a customer database.”

By using the Internet to manage their clients, agencies also open themselves up for incentives from suppliers who use the Web to promote their products. For example, a hotel may offer agents a steep discount for steering a client to its Web site over its competitors — or for booking that hotel over all other hotels when possible.

Lesson Learned: Though agents used to be used a basic transaction processing tool, their real value today is in knowing the customers, creating detailed databases and influencing how and where consumers purchase their travel products, Rosen claims.

For more information about how agents can remain relevant in the online travel landscape of the future, check out the current issue of Travel Distribution Report.

July 26, 2006

IDSs Face Two Tough Obstacles

Internet distribution systems (IDSs) have the potential to replace traditional systems, but they have a few hurdles to overcome. Here are two specific limitations IDSs must address:

—Consumer Sites Need Consumer Speak. Almost every Internet booking system still hosts travel industry jargon — which is Greek to the average traveler. “Travelers have no idea what a Rule 25 restriction or a PNR is,” says Pawel Mastalerz, an industry analyst with T2Impact.

Hotel descriptions also suffer from antiquated, technical definitions that were written for travel agents and don’t enrich the customer’s experience.

However, this is one area where IDSs are starting to get it right. Hotel sites and distribution systems are creating virtual tours and consumer-friendly descriptions that leave out the industry jargon.

—IDSs Must Solve Complex Problems. In their most basic forms, IDSs quickly solve easy problems, but in order to become a stand-alone distribution source, the systems must be able to solve complex problems, Mastalerz says.

Example: A complex problem might be a traveler who wants to fly to Chicago for three days, then to Europe to meet with a client, then to China for five days before returning to Denver.

IDSs aren’t capable of solving this problem yet, but the systems’ developers are working on the type of functionality necessary to solve not only this problem, but unforeseen issues down the road.

Want more information about IDSs? Check out the July 31 issue of Travel Distribution Report.

July 18, 2006

Portaga To Provide Agents Access To FLX

Farelogix wants to put travel agencies back in the distribution driver’s seat.

The GDS new entrant has partnered with Portaga to provide agents with an integrated booking and distribution management tool, according to a July 17 release.

Farelogix’s new FLX Platform gives distributors “total control of content configuration for the end user; whether GDS, GNE, Direct Connect, Web content or other external sources,” said Robert Kost, founder and CEO of Portaga.

The partnership will produce a desktop travel agent solution that allows suppliers, distributors and buyers to access content from multiple distribution sources and configure that content as necessary, Portaga stated.

The FLX-powered desktop will help travel management companies and suppliers “manage the complexities of the ever-evolving distribution and content matrix,” Kost said.

The solution is slated for release in Q4 2006.