Though not completely unexpected (in April, the two companies openly admitted they were working together on a distribution platform), the Expedia Partner Solution/Marriott agreement created an unprecedented event in the industry. But, if it is indisputable that having all the wholesale distribution transitioning through EPS will improve Marriott properties' accuracy and consistency across third-parties, the assumption that this deal will ultimately help Marriott regain control over their rates and inventory is, at best, debatable. EPS technology does not, in fact, prevent bedbanks (or Expedia itself, for that matter) from distributing wholesale rates. So, does the deal only means that EPS is going to play detective with bedbanks on Marriott's behalf? Or the partnership between these two travel Goliath has the potential to fix a distribution model that's inherently rotten? What's your take?

Osvaldo Mauro
Osvaldo Mauro
Entrepreneur & Business Developer

When I've started to work in the online distribution in 1999 by my boss and guru Pancho Mazza (r.i.p.) told me: the customer on the Internet is transitional. This is still THE thing. Online customer goes where it's better for it, and nowadays it's pretty easy to get informed and compare. We're all in the same global market: countries differentiations, wholesalers, bed banks, consolidators, groups, tour operators = old stuff.

This market is still made of the same fundamentals: demand and supply but real-time connected at the speed of light. No cache, no phone calls, no requests, no presell. Between supply and demand, the king metric is CPS Cost per Sale. So Mariott restricting its wholesaler's operations to Expedia b2b, would "legally" help in the short term. I understand this, and I think it's an excellent short term business decision. Meanwhile, if it will be a Mariott competitor, smart enough to leverage in real-time the CPS power of a direct distributor (as they are), able to beat the tech guys (Expedia) in their game, it will win. Koddi, TravelGateX, Profiter, Fornova, Arise, DataArt, Triometrics are the first names of the modern/future distribution that come to my mind — not leashing legal agreements.

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