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Agents and airlines at odds over direct booking

12 Apr 2017 - by Chana Boucher
Comments | 0

COULD agents find

themselves working across

multiple platforms as more

airlines discourage GDS

bookings?

A year and a half since

Lufthansa introduced its

direct booking platform,

Direct Connect, the

airline claims better-thanexpected

uptake and

predicts other airlines will

follow suit.

According to a recent

Skift report, more carriers

could launch similar

moves to encourage direct

booking and International

Airlines Group (IAG), parent

company of British Airways

and Iberia, will be first in

line to do so. Willie Walsh,

ceo of IAG, said while

there was a role for GDSs,

the pricing model didn’t

work for the airline looking

ahead. “We are looking

to negotiate a change to

that,” he said.

“I have always said that

Lufthansa was the first

and won’t be the last,”

says Marco Ciocchetti,

ceo of XL Travel. But

many agents, like Marco,

still favour the GDS. He

says the only difference

between Direct Connect

and the GDS is the

surcharge, which doesn’t

affect agents as it is

being absorbed by the

client. He says it will

create a problem if and

when Lufthansa doesn’t

release all of its inventory

to the GDS.

“Bookings made through

the agency GDS channel

provide a much higher

average value per ticket

to the airline than those

it generates through its

own website and direct

channels. Furthermore,

these direct airline

channels still come with

high customer acquisition

costs and tend to be

much less effective

outside the airline’s

home territory where

their brands are less well

known,” says Siobhan

McCarthy, Travelport’s

senior manager, corporate

communications, Europe,

Middle East, Africa and

South Asia. She says

airlines rely heavily on

GDSs for managing

changes, ticket re-issues,

additions to bookings, the

purchase and marketing

of ancillaries and fare

families and so on.

Meanwhile, André

Schulz, gm Southern

Africa of Lufthansa

Group, says the airline has

had fruitful discussions

about potential Direct

Connect partnerships in

South Africa.

“The major long-term

benefit of Direct

Connect will be content

differentiation, meaning

specific sales promotions

or discounted ancillary

products will be displayed

with preference via the

Direct Connect distribution

channel.”

In the meantime, Marco

says XL Travel is analysing

various solutions that

allow consultants to

work on one platform

that aggregates content

from different suppliers,

including the

GDS.

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