Kayak, the travel price-comparison service, on Tuesday debuted a corporate travel service for large companies.
25.08.2023 - 13:12 / skift.com / Sean Oneill
Emburse, a software provider of expense technology for corporate travel and meetings, said on Wednesday it’s acquiring Tripbam, a Dallas startup whose tools are used by corporate travel managers.
The companies didn’t reveal the price or terms of the deal. A venture-backed startup, Tripbam had raised $1.5 million.
Tripbam’s pitch is that its software can let corporate travel managers and event planners shop across multiple airlines and hotels for reservations, taking advantage of price fluctuations when they happen. If a price goes down on a refundable booking, the software can enable the buyer to re-book at the new lower price. The startup claims this process provides significant savings on a meaningful number of searches.
Tripbam also helps companies audit their travel programs. Corporations often employ travel managers to negotiate volume discounts with airlines, hotels, and other travel providers, typically with pricing that’s essentially agreed-upon marketing conditions.
Haggling with hotels over rates is especially tricky, however. Tripbam is one provider whose tool lets travel managers audit whether or not the prices travel suppliers turned out to be as good as promised.
Emburse plans to offer Tripbam’s auditing tech to its more than 18,000 customers, including companies like Google and ExxonMobil, with a claimed 12 million users. Microsoft, for instance, is a client that uses both Emburse and TripBam for employee travel.
“Emburse Go Premier allows our employees to manage every aspect of their trip through a single app, while Tripbam delivers savings through re-booking at lower rates said Eric Bailey, global director of employee travel and devices at Microsoft.
Consolidation in the corporate travel space may be underway. Emburse rival Coupa last year launched a travel and expense platform and also has a similar price rebooking tool. Both Emburse and Coupa are looking to take share from SAP Concur, the largest player in the segment.
Emburse is the result of a roll-up of several vendors by K1 Investment Management, a private equity group in California — which apparently sees ongoing growth opportunities.
“Was a long process to find the right buyer that was the best for our customers, investors, and employees,” said Steve Reynolds, CEO and co-founder of Tripbam. “Emburse is the perfect fit. In addition, the combination … provides unique opportunities to disrupt the entire travel procurement process, end to end.”
UPDATE:
Kayak, the travel price-comparison service, on Tuesday debuted a corporate travel service for large companies.
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Property manager Sonder is positioning itself long-term to take advantage of higher-spending business travelers, and added 200 corporate travel accounts — and a former CWT CEO to its board — during the third quarter.
Big Tech companies are laying off tens of thousands of people.
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Verint provides customer service software to roughly 40 airline clients, among those other verticals. The Long Island, New York-based company is still gaining new airline business, but much of it is coming from existing customers.
In-person events and conferences are set to drive corporate travel’s recovery throughout 2023, as employees look for more human connections.
Johannesburg-based Club Travel Corporate is entering a critical next phase after securing the backing of a unique investment fund that will put new emphasis on working with female-owned businesses on the continent.
Airfares on key corporate travel routes are expected to rise by as much as 25 percent in 2023 amid high fuel prices, a stronger U.S. dollar and labour and aircraft shortages, a forecast from American Express Global Business Travel (Amex GBT) showed.
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