The "old" Thomas Cook, a 179-year-old company and the second largest tour operator in the world after TUI, collapsed in September of 2019. Fosun Tourism Group, a Chinese travel conglomerate that already owned the famed Club Med, bought the rights to the bankrupt company's brand for $14 million.

Now, a year later Fosun has resurrected the Thomas Cook brand as an online travel agency thomascook.com, selling directly to the public packaged beach holidays in destinations like Spain, Turkey, Greece, Croatia, USA, etc. and city breaks in Rome, Paris, Madrid, New York, etc.

The question is: Is there future for the "new" Thomas Cook?

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What is the 'New' Thomas Cook

Max Starkov
Max Starkov
Hospitality & Online Travel Tech Consultant

I am highly skeptical of Thomas Cook's resurrection as a B2C online travel player i.e. an OTA specializing in selling beach vacations and city breaks, and here is why:

a) The traveling public does not know Thomas Cook as an OTA or B2C online vacation packager, hence the need for massive advertising spend to build relevant brand recognition. 

b) Thousands of travelers had horrific experiences in 2019 - many were stranded abroad, many had their vacation plans ruined by the firm's demise. 

c) The “new” Thomas Cook has to compete with much bigger and better funded competitors: with traditional our operators like its bigger rival TUI, the mega-OTAs Booking, Expedia and China's Trip, with the “new travel purchasing behavior” of digitally-savvy travelers using low cost airlines + alternative accommodations via providers like Airbnb, Booking and vrbo.

This is a monumental task requiring monumental investments. I don't see it happening in the current environment with low travel demand and ongoing government travel restrictions.

The other option for the “new” Thomas Cook was to become a bed bank i.e. adopt the B2B biz model. The problem with this model is that the traditional retail brick-and-mortar travel agencies and small and midsize tour operators, which constitute 90% of the customers of a bed bank, have already been decimated by the Internet, the OTAs, the direct online channel, and now COVID-19. There used to be 7,500 travel agencies and small/midsize tour operators in the UK only 15 years ago, there are less than 3,000 today, 25,000 in the  U.S. some 20 years ago vs 7,000  now. Thomas Cook would have to compete with HotelBeds and WebBeds, two well entrenched bed banks that are in decline themselves. Obviously, a losing proposition.

In either scenarios, Thomas Cook is doomed.

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