Top ten travel technology trends for 2009


So we've had 24 things to think about if you work in online travel, Worry Lines Part One and Worry Lines Part Two.

And now, courtesy or PhoCusWright, we have the Top Ten Travel Technology Trends for 2009:

1 - Despite Market Woes, Pockets of Investment Still Exist

"During economic downturns, innovation is the single most important condition for transforming the crisis into an opportunity."


2 - The Entire Trip Experience Will Be "Informationized"

In the past, the main focus of the travel value chain has been those components that resulted in a booking. Access to further information was a challenge because of limitations of mobile devices, lack of acceptable technology in hotel rooms, language barriers and no clear business model. This is all about to change.


3 - Software as a Service (SaaS), Cloud Computing and Open Source Spawn a New Flock of Innovators

Open Source has matured to the point that many companies are fully dependent on it. It has become an enabler for startups, allowing them to rapidly accelerate their time to market. At the PhoCusWright's November 2008 Travel Innovation Summit, demonstrator Home and Abroad explained that they would not have been able to bring their product to market if it had not been for Open Source.


4 - Suppliers (Finally!) Provide Personalized Shopping/Booking Tools

Today, most OTAs look much the same: Where do you want to go? When? Air only or hotel and/or car? To provide convenience and value to the customer, future learning and shopping screens will adapt to the users' stated profiles, observed profiles and shopping style. Similarly, the content presented will be the most meaningful to the customer.


5 - Technologies Will Continue to Converge


Ten years ago, television networks were distinct from the Internet. Video was limited to TV and you went to see a movie at the theater. Now you can make a phone call anywhere to anywhere in the world using your laptop. You can watch movies and TV and browse rich content on your mobile device. You can watch content from the Internet on your TV and wirelessly network your house for all manner of content.


6 - A Flood of New Mobile Travel and Location-Based Applications Come to Market

Mobile usage in travel applications has languished for years with a poor technology capability and an even worse business model. The mobile platform finally has interactive capability that makes it the fully functioning "3rd screen" alongside the desktop and laptop. With the growth of 3G (broadband wireless) subscriptions and smartphone adoption, apps will embrace location and context in a new way, enhancing the travel experience.


7 - Advertising Technology Transforms Travel Distribution

Pure play booking fee models will become dinosaurs as blended models involving highly targeted ads, referral fees and fees for service establish peaceful coexistence. The technology convergence discussed in Trend 5 will enable the convergence of business models.


8 - Still Searching...for Better Search

Last year the trends were "Semantic Technology and the Semantic Web will drive the next wave of Internet technology" and "Search will evolve to become more effective." These are still true. Lack of adoption of the formal semantic Web does not mean that search is not getting better. There are several instances where semantics are being used to improve search. As they begin to show differentiated business value over normal search, they will gain traction.


9 - Democratization of Supply Levels the Playing Field

In the beginning when the airlines created travel distribution, the GDSs (they were called CRSs then) controlled the distribution of travel content. This created an oligopoly. But times are changing. The implementation of standards for interconnection, the transparency of the Internet, Web services and mashups, new search tools and SaaS models have all contributed to the development of an open marketplace for travel distribution.


10 - Business Intelligence and Analytics Move to the Forefront

In tight times, you need to squeeze as much as possible from your existing operations and capabilities. This involves understanding what your competitors are doing, how efficient and effective your own operations are and what your customers are saying.


Full analysis of points one and two in this downloadable PDF.

More information in PhoCusWright's Technology Edition.

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6 Comments

I don't get it in the end: how is this supposed to change in practical way?

I guess I am disappointed not see mention of the choice of your domain name as it reflects search and being found on the Internet.

Especially since this is a travel related topic, I would hope to see mention of .travel as well as country codes and their affect on the top ten technology trends.

.travel? Complete and utter waste of time...

I see business intelligence and analytics as being one of the keys for survival. Without benchmarking and a customer centric approach, I don't see a way to survive this competitive environment.

These are all interesting developments to be sure. However, I feel that the major travel companies still have a long way to go with their tech usage.

I agree on most of your points. We especially feel it as we work on our own startup.
We:
1. would be nowhere without open source tech,
2. Plan on booking to be more personalized,
3. would have a harder time working on revenue channels if advertising & booking services weren't available

I believe the other trends you listed also support our ideas, so at the moment - we feel lucky :)

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