Travel Tech Essentialist #69: Travel, Work, Play
Remote work, or at least a hybrid variation, seems to be now the default policy for an increasing number of companies. This is expanding the travel pie and opening new business opportunities, as a few stories in this newsletter indicate. You’ll also read about Booking Holdings’ second billion dollar acquisition in as many weeks, about a new travel VC in town looking to invest in early stage travel startups, and about the next travel company to IPO. And if you’re looking for a co-founder, or you’re interested in joining a startup as a co-founder, we’ve got a co-founder match making platform for you as well. :-)
Welcome to new sponsor Selfbook, a startup I covered last month when it closed a $25 million round in a Series A round led by Tiger Global.
Selfbook, the first and only direct hotel booking software that enables hotels to drive conversions with one-click payments and Apple Pay, has now added another showstopper to its roster: Instagram hotel bookings.
This holiday season, hotels can use Selfbook Direct Links to share bookable URLs right on their social media platforms. Selfbook Links can be customized with specific dates and promo codes, and then embedded within hotels' Instagram stories and Link in Bio for instant direct bookings. Find out more here.
1. Why the future of work is the future of travel
Nilay Patel had a great interview with Brian Chesky, founder/CEO of Airbnb. One of the significant advantages that Airbnb has over other large travel companies is that it is still founder-led. This generally leads to more innovation and a higher likelihood to take risks and make bold investments. It also translates into more focus and less internal politicking. This is reflected in this interview, which I think you’ll enjoy. Read more.
2. Giant Online Travel Agency consolidation
While flight specialist OTAs like eDreams were posting $600 million in yearly revenue and $140 million EBITDA, many trade commentators and pundits had been opining for decades that there was no business in being a flight specialist. It turns out that there is indeed value in being a flight specialist. ETraveli Group was just acquired by Booking Holdings for $1.84 billion. Air travel is Booking’s fastest growing product, up 131% in Q3 2021 compared to Q3 2019. This is the second major acquisition for Booking Holdings in the space of two weeks, after it bought hotel distributor Getaroom for $1.6 billion. ETraveli and its consumer brands will remain independent and the existing management will continue to operations. Read more.
3. Data from 145 travel startup fundraising rounds in 2021
I wrote a short post summarizing data from 145 travel startups that have raised at least one financing round in 2021.
The 4 most represented countries are USA (33% of the 145 startups), UK (10%), Spain (7%), Germany (7%).
The most represented cities are San Francisco (8%), London (7.5%), Barcelona (5%) and New York (5%).
The most active investors are SoftBank, 500 Startups, Accel, Heartcore Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, JetBlue Technology Ventures, K Fund, Tiger Global
Data for this post came from the Travel Startup & Investor interactive dataset.
4. Meet Derive Ventures, the new early-stage travel venture capital firm
Derive Ventures is a new venture capital fund spun out of Thayer Ventures and built to advance the Travel, Hospitality and Leisure industry. The two founders, Tyler Carrico and Mike Scott come from Thayer Ventures and KSL Capital Partners, two leading travel and hospitality investment firms. They are targeting companies raising early-stage capital in core travel sectors as well as sectors tangential to travel with innovative business concepts, ideas and technology that would support and gain from the global travel industry. Life House’s $60 million Series C round (led by Kakak) marked Derive Ventures’ first investment.
5. Selina plans IPO via SPAC merger
Another data point of the growing confluence of travel, work and play: Selina, the fast-growing hospitality and experiential brand targeting Millennial and Gen Z travelers, will merge with SPAC company Boa at a $1.2 billion valuation. The transaction is expected to close mid-year 2022, after which the combined company will operate as Selina Hospitality, and its ordinary shares will be listed on the NYSE under the ticker symbol “SLNA.” More information here. And here is Selina’s deck detailing its financials, strategy and positioning.
6. The near future of work
Tech companies have announced a wide range of policies concerning work: “work from home forever”, “remote first”, “digital by default”, “office-only”, etc… In any case though, remote work is here to stay, and every company will be remote (at least sometimes). Instead of debating whether any one form of hybrid work is superior, this article in a16z traces the evolution of remote work itself, paying particular attention to how the nature of work — with an emphasis on presence and collaboration — has been changing. These changes present greater challenges in hybrid models than in fully remote ones; overcoming them will open up a future of work that connects us seamlessly, no matter where we are.
7. Should you go solo or get co-founders?
You have a great idea, now how do you realize that idea? You need people to do that with you. Do you get a co-founder or do you go solo? If you are going solo, how can you get work done without doing it all yourself? Further, how do you ensure your chosen fellow travelers and you work well together and scale up the startup together for many years? These are some of the questions that Narayan Thammaiah from Accel addresses in this post.
8. And if you’re looking for a co-founder…
YC launched a co-founder matching platform 4 months ago. There are now 16,000 co-founder profiles on the platform. Potential co-founders have sent 130,000 matching invites through the platform, and, with a 25% acceptance rate, there has been total of 33,000 matches. In this post, you can find out who are founders looking for, what skills they’re interested in and what do they care about. It seems that founders on the platform are extremely active: 75% of all matches are accepted within 4.5 days of the initial invitation, and 50% of matches are accepted within 22 hours. Of the matches where founders indicate having met up either online or in person, 50% met within 6.2 days.
9. How Thailand is finding ways to support its travel industry
Thailand’s economy is heavily reliant on international tourism. International tourist spend was estimated at $61 billion in 2019. That year, Thailand recorded a record of 40 million visitors and ranked eighth globally in international tourist arrivals, with China being a key source market. And then Covid hit. This McKinsey article shows how the measures that the Thai government put in place to boost domestic tourism and support returning international demand. Even as the world addresses emerging variants of the virus, Thailand’s lessons can act as a guide for other tourism-dependent countries facing similar dilemmas as they prepare for the resurgence of international travel.
10. Fundraising rounds
Hotel Engine raised a $65 million Series B round at a $1.3 billion valuation, nearly 9x higher than the $150 million valuation it achieved when it raised $16 million in a Series A round in 2019. Hotel Engine provides companies access to better lodging rates as well as tools and insights designed to “optimize their travel programs”.
Life House, a boutique hotel operator that builds software aimed at helping independent hotel owners and operators, raised $60 million in a Series C round led by Kayak. Other investors include Tiger Global, Derive Ventures and Thayer Ventures.
Convious, an Amsterdam-based startup that offers an AI-driven ecommerce platform to improve attractions guest experience raised a $12 million round.
The Australian accommodations booking platform Riparide announced a $4 million capital raise backed by iMacdoch Ventures and Upswell Ventures to help power global expansion.
Travel Tech Essentialist job board
The Travel Essentialist job board can be a great resource whether you’re hiring or looking to be hired. Here are just a few of the amazing jobs seen on the board…
Wheel The World: CTO (Remote)
Hopper: Director of Hotels, Latin America (Mexico City)
Expedia: Director, Product Marketing (San Francisco)
Casai: Marketing Manager (Sao Paolo)
Browse more open roles (or add your own open roles) at Travel Tech Essentialist Job Board
Newsletter sponsorship
Sponsorships for this newsletter are sold out until May 2021, except for a mid-January open spot. If you are interested in sponsoring the mid-January newsletter, please let me know (you can find more information here).
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Have a great weekend,
Mauricio