From fintech to fashion, many industries have recently
gone through a seismic digital transformation and a dramatic shift to modern
retailing. And, according to new research from Travelport, the travel
industry’s very own watershed moment could be just around the corner.
Using this
“outside in” approach, the findings offer broad perspectives that can help the travel
industry stay on par with expectations set by some of the world’s best
businesses, like Netflix, Venmo and Amazon. It also shares predictions for
travel retailing that are likely to shape big change in the coming months. Some
of the key findings include:
- “Consumer washing” is rife, and people are catching on
to it
Shoppers are growing wise to the tactics businesses use to earn more, under the guise of better service. In travel, this includes confusing pricing structures that lead to hidden charges or “junk” fees. The findings in Travelport’s new report show 44% of people think travel is guilty of “consumer washing” via misleading pricing. - Banking’s getting easier. But travel isn’t.
Travelport says travel’s fintech moment is coming. The new report draws parallels between the industry today and banking ten years ago and, observing the rise of Venmo and Revolut, notes that a similar disruption could be coming for travel. It also explores how critical a flexible tech stack is to any business trying to scale, while maintaining the simple customer experience fintech giants are renowned for - Travel subscription services are set to take off
From beers, to bikes, to books, more and more people are signing up to different subscription services. Most people don’t know this already exists for travel. But 58% of people who travel just three times per year would consider a subscription service for trips too.For the full set of findings, covering more topics like choice overload, AI, and more, read the full report here.
Looking ahead in 2025
There are plenty
of opportunities to be seized this year by those who innovate early and nail
modern retailing. Amid all this change, Travelport believes that travel
agencies will remain the industry’s only true retailers. Only they can provide much
needed transparency and guidance for customers seeking to navigate choice and
complexity on this high-stakes purchase.
And only they
can help customers manage multi-brand shopping, presenting the best options in
one convenient place. That way, consumers know they’re getting the best deal
that truly puts their interests first, without spending hours shopping around and
comparing prices.
As the tipping point inches closer, the question is: who
will be the winners and who will be the losers?