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Monday, January 28, 2008

Book Direct. Because You Want To.

At the end of January, looks like United will become the latest airline to pull their mileage bonus for booking direct. It's pretty clear that carriers are feeling confident in their abilities to draw consumers to direct bookings without such incentives.

What are the key drivers of this change? The short list looks something like this:
  • The popularity of meta-searchers such as Kayak, Farecast, Sidestep, etc.

  • Lack of perceived consumer value in the on-line travel agent space.

  • Carrier surrender in the battle to drive share away from corporate TMC's.

  • Save Booking Fees over the agencies.

It could also be that carriers are positioning themselves to employ other stick-type penalties (i.e. rather than current carrot-like incentives) for booking away from their sites. That's a great conspiracy theory, but not likely to happen until current GDS deals expire.


The most realistic hypothesis is that consumers are pretty satisfied with the carrier sites. Most offer good shopping tools, a low-fare guarantee, ancillary travel services (e.g. insurance, car/hotel booking, etc.), and other tools like flight alert and on-line check-in. Why bother going anywhere else, especially for a preferred carrier?


This is kind of like any mature relationship. When you first start, you start giving neat trinkets and surprises. But then that starts going away, and the pair get kind of comfortable and content being with each other on the couch eating ice cream and watching "Terminator: The Sara Connor Chronicles" (editor's note: Tonight on FOX!). Just be wary if one of them gets all frustrated that it's not special anymore, sees some other hot young thing out there, and dumps their old standby. Because you can bet that it's going to take more than a handful of devalued miles to win back the mate...or attract a new one.

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