Launched earlier in May, Google Trips puts merges flights, hotels, packages, home-rentals, car rentals, ridesharing, cruises, and experiences search in one single, übermensch ecosystem, combining the Google Trips app, Google Flights, and Google Hotels under one landing page. And, with Google getting bigger on the travel landscape, OTAs continue diversifying the risks: Booking.com (with Q1-2019 revenue down by 3%, don't forget), especially, alluded to new possible acquisition and it is rumored to announce its new stand-alone tours & attractions program any day now. My long-view on the topic is that Google is going to cover the whole traveler's journey, while OTAs will move more and more to B2B, possibly even SaaS, landscapes. How will these changes impact hotels? What's your take?

Simone Puorto
Simone Puorto
Founder | CEO | Futurist

At a superficial look, the moves Google made into the travel space over the last couple of years seem random and unfocused. With the launch of the /travel website, however, all these activities assumed a new meaning, leading the company to its current (dominant) position. Google's Director of travel product management, recently stated that the company is "evolving the way" that "hotel search works". And it is succeeding: we used to have different, specific channels for each phase of the guest' journey but now, when you look at the funnel, Google is omnipresent.

Google -eventually- turned into a competitor not only for OTAs, but for review sites, metasearch engines and everything in between. How will traditional (obsolete?) travel platforms deal with it? Very likely by cutting Google's investments and by diversifying their products, moving more and more to a B2B model.

After spending over $10B in advertising last year, in fact, both Booking and Expedia highlighted the need for marketing rationalization, with more budget to be allocated in branding (i.e.: the "Be a Booker" TV commercial) rather than on search. Booking.com's AppStore and the close-to-be-renewed Expedia Travel Ads platform, moreover, are representative examples of the B2B shift, and it won't be unlikely that these companies will -at some point- offer monthly memberships to hoteliers, becoming the Netflixes and Spotifies of travel, with Google overviewing the whole funnel.

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