Adventure travel specialist G Adventures has made a “significant financial investment” in Reforest, a digital platform that connects travelers with local communities that are restoring their ecosystems using reforestation.
25.08.2023 - 14:00 / skift.com / Matthew Parsons / Sarosh Waghmar / Steve Singh
A former executive at Orbitz is launching a corporate travel agency in partnership with Spotnana — the secretive technology startup backed by Concur co-founder Steve Singh.
Mark Walton, who was previously vice president, strategy and account management at Orbitz for Business, has started Solutions Travel, which will target mid-size corporations. The Chicago-based agency will exclusively use software provided by New York headquartered Spotnana.
The launch is notable for several reasons.
It’s the first time Spotnana has publicly named a customer agency that is adopting what it calls its “travel-as-a-service platform.” Spotnana offers a white-label solution for other agencies to use, as well as working directly with corporations itself — whose names it doesn’t disclose.
“It’s a consumption based model for travel management companies, so we can power their infrastructure end-to-end,” said Spotnana CEO and founder Sarosh Waghmar, who was named a Skift Corporate Travel Innovator in 2018 and 2019. “This is an example of the first one where it’s coming to light.”
It’s also notable as Solutions Travel launches just weeks before American Airlines switches over 40 percent of its airfares to direct channels, including so-called New Distribution Capability.
Many major airlines, like American, want to pull their content out of traditional global distribution systems, which a lot of corporate travel agencies rely on, to these newer channels to cut costs and take more control over the ancillaries they offer, particularly to businesses that can bundle extras like WiFi and premium seating together.
Spotnana has raised more than $100 million to build a new architecture for the business travel industry. It wants to create an open platform, devoid of “biased” content, meaning flights or hotels that are recommended because there are financial incentives involved.
It also developed “personalization features” with American Airlines in September last year.
Solutions Travel aims to be a full-service agency. Walton said business travel was coming back and companies still need help with three key areas: service, savings and duty of care.
“I don’t want the notion or thought that Solutions Travel is just a technology company,” he said. “And nor is Spotnana. We are a full-service travel management company, providing everything from consultative services to our clients, 24/7 service by qualified agents, multi-lingual, omnichannel. However you want to communicate with us, you’ll be able to.”
He said the agency will have a competitive advantage because it can offer the often cheaper airfares through direct connects and New Distribution Capability, courtesy of the connections Spotnana has built.
Despite many travel agencies investing
Adventure travel specialist G Adventures has made a “significant financial investment” in Reforest, a digital platform that connects travelers with local communities that are restoring their ecosystems using reforestation.
The world’s biggest airline is ready for Thanksgiving, having already battled through several hurricanes in recent months.
Agency consortium GlobalStar Travel Management is expanding in Europe, after boosting its presence across North America and Asia.
Travel prices across Europe have started to decline, following months of continuous hikes in air fares and hotel rates. However, they’re expected to remain highly volatile for several years as the market undergoes a correction.
The boss of the world’s biggest corporate travel agency has clashed with a top European politician over the best way to lower carbon emissions.
American Express Global Business Travel has partnered with Emirates Group-owned dnata to offer its global clients more local expertise in the Middle East region.
American Airlines is no longer accepting new or renewal contracts for AirPass, its VIP-corporate membership scheme. However, “program functionality” will end by March 31, 2024.
In-person events and conferences are set to drive corporate travel’s recovery throughout 2023, as employees look for more human connections.
The situation on the ground in China isn’t ideal as the country readies to remove its travel restrictions this weekend.
It was the news everyone was waiting for. Finally the U.S. government set a date, Nov 8. 2021, to reopen its borders.
Skift unveiled the 2023 edition of its annual Megatrends this week and in the mix, as you’d expect, is the phenomenon of the blended traveler.
Google has added San Francisco-based startup Whimstay as a vacation rental partner.