The global travel industry is experiencing unprecedented
growth. The World Travel and Tourism Council estimates travel contributed more
than $8.3 trillion to the global economy in 2017 and predicts that number will
grow to $12.5 trillion by 2028.
That upward trajectory is fueling an active startup
ecosystem. Around the globe, entrepreneurs are working on disruptive solutions
to fix inefficiencies and address pain points, with work spanning from small-scale individual developers in remote corners of the globe to
well-funded initiatives in tech epicenters.
According to Phocuswright's State of Travel Startups data, about 2,000 active travel and mobility tech startups have been founded globally since 2008, and venture capitalists invested $31 billion in them in 2017, up from $19 billion in 2016. And the allocations in early 2018 - $4 billion in the first six months across 160 deals - put this year on pace to set a new record.
But what’s not evident in those figures are the thousands of struggling startups, the ones being dismissed by investors or
shutting down after years of trying to make it.
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Travel is a complex arena for entrepreneurs. So much
potential. So much risk. So many moving parts.
This month we're digging into the topic of startups,
aiming to understand the challenges and opportunities from the perspective of
various players in the field.
We begin with insights from three experienced, and active, venture capitalists - Erik Blachford, Chris Hemmeter and Christian Saller - to find out what's on their radars, the challenges facing
startup entrepreneurs and how they evaluate the pitches that land on their desks.
The current state…
Erik Blachford, venture partner, TCV (Technology Crossover Ventures): You
had the big wave of “How cool would it be to book stuff online?” that carried
us for a long time - first for air, then hotel and car rental. But now it’s not
just that you take all the old stuff and put it online for booking. We’re
starting to move into this interesting spot where, because they have tech
available, people can travel in a different way.
Uber and Lyft are the easiest
examples, as opposed to trying to hail a taxicab. There’s all sorts of
interesting stuff going on there, and my hunch is that will enable a whole lot
more local connections over time. And you’ll find the typical travel experience
for leisure anyway will look pretty different in five years from the way it
looked 10 years ago for sure.
Chris Hemmeter, managing director, Thayer Ventures: It’s a
bit of a tale of two cities. On the one hand, it’s the best it’s ever been. On
the other hand, it’s an impossible landscape.
From our perspective, all things
B2B - the core value chain of everything related to travel and transportation -
is really being reinvented, and in our view we’re just getting started. On the
other hand, on the consumer side of the world, the top of the travel funnel or
anything that depends on discovery and search is just an incredibly difficult
place to launch a business unless you are a wizard fundraiser and can manage to
sustain a capital strategy that can give you enough juice to reach escape
velocity.
So for consumer ideas, it’s just a death trap - very hard. But core
software and systems, it’s never been better.
Christian Saller, general partner, Holtzbrinck Ventures: Many
investors like travel, so there’s a lot of money available for travel startups,
both for early stage and later stage. Compared to a couple of years ago, the
amount of money travel companies are raising is getting much, much bigger than
in the past.
There’s a lot of money to deploy - billions and billions - tens of billions. That’s function of two things.
There’s a lot of investor appetite for travel companies fueled by some of the
big exits that have been happening in that space - Skyscanner, Kayak, Trivago
and so on.
If you are funding an e-commerce company, it’s not clear who the exit
channel would be, but in travel there’s Expedia, Ctrip, Booking. And then,
there’s a lot of entrepreneurs that have big visions on the companies they want
to build. I know of one - I can’t name it - that would have been able to sell
for $500 million to Expedia, and they decided to hold on because they thought
they can build bigger if they hold on. That’s something we haven’t seen in the
past.
Opportunities…
Blachford: Five
or six years ago, if you told me I would go to Berlin and, using an app on my
phone, some random Berliner would give me a lift to where I wanted to go, I’d
say I don’t know about that. Safety issues, how I’m going to pay for it, all
this stuff would have been in my head.
Uber and Lyft solved that. I think the
same thing will happen in a whole pile of different categories. People will
expect and think it’s perfectly normal to interact with strangers when you are
traveling.
When you travel, you kind of like to talk to people that live
there. It makes you feel adventurous. I think there are all kinds of startups
trying to figure out what are the right ways to meet up. And the fact that
people are trying all of this, that’s where interesting businesses come from.
Also,
the startup activity in China and India has been interesting for a long time. It’s also really interesting in Europe where the fragmentation in the lodging
space is so different than in the United States, so attacking the lodging tech
opportunity is very dynamic and interesting.

The most important thing is to have a product and to feel it has validation with the customers you want.
Erik Blachford - TCV
Hemmeter: When we
talk about travel and transportation, we are talking about travel, hospitality,
tourism, food service, logistics, elements of entertainment. It’s a really,
really broad category. And historically, the category has been resistant to the
adoption of technology, so there is a lot of inherent inefficiency in the value
chain.
It’s also a category growing faster than global GDP and is expected to
for some time. There have been a lot of demographic shifts and evolution of
countries - like India and China - that are starting to produce massive amounts
of outbound travel as well as domestic travel. So you’ve got this growing space
that’s got a lot of latent inefficiency.
You look at one specific category – the hotel technology
stack. The old PMS is completely incapable of functioning in the modern world.
So there is an aggressive need for cloud-based, platform-based, open-API
structured PMS systems that enable hotel companies to innovate.
We
believe the whole hospitality technology stack is in play. We have an
investment in a company called Mews Systems in Prague that is specifically
focused on the international opportunity, operating in 37 countries, growing
very fast, 100% cloud-based PMS. We see lots of interesting opportunities
for software and services and tech out there.
Saller: A lot has
happened in alternative accommodations. Specifically vacation rental metasearch
is one area we’ve seen a lot of activity. And in tours and activities - GetYourGuide
being the most successful, but also Tiqets and some others that have been able
to build businesses. Multimodal search companies have been around a long time
and they never seem to go anywhere, but GoEuro has proven it’s possible to get
a lot of investor excitement.
B2B is getting a lot of attention right now. The B2B travel
market is 50% of the whole market, and there hasn’t been disruption and
innovation on that market on the same level as there has been in consumer travel.
For a long time, business travel was dominated by the old companies like Carlson
Wagonlit and BCD Travel, not a lot of startup activity - that is changing now.
The
latest area where there is a lot of activity is in individual travel, adventure
travel - going to South Africa and doing a safari there. And then I’ve seen a
couple of startups that have tried to do some things using AI and data points
from social media to better target travel and find more individualized offers.
I’m a little skeptical if this is working, but we see activity.
Challenges…
Blachford: They
[categories] get saturated. A good example would be if you go back five or six
years, there was a slew of startups saying, “We’re going to do travel guides
based on your friends’ photos.” It got sort of crazy, there were like 150
companies doing that. It’s a perfectly good idea, but it saturates out and then
after a while you go, “You know, I think that might be Instagram.”
The investment climate is a little overheated, but that’s
across startups in general. Valuations are probably higher than they should be.
And there’s too much money floating around. A lot of seed investors - I
certainly feel like this - are being very careful right now because once you
get a lot of money in a market like this, it gets a little scary.
Two things
happen. In terms of investing in specific companies, you get people willing to
pay valuations that make it difficult to get a return. That’s just supply and
demand. The more worrying thing is … you can invest in a perfectly good company
with great founders and a great market, but if your competitors have too much
money and they’ll spend it irrationally - hoping Expedia buys them or something
- it’s very hard to make a return. That’s what I mean by scary, because you
can’t control that at all.
Hemmeter: For
startups, the sort of golden formula is the cost to acquire relative to
lifetime value. It’s always easy to get tens of thousands of people to set up
accounts and engage and find you - there are enough humans out there that by
word of mouth alone you can get there, but to get into the millions of users it
just takes a massive balance sheet.
Some companies can manage to break through,
because they continue to raise lots of money, but for most startups it’s very
difficult. The ultimate cost to acquire customers at scale is too high. And
it’s hard for investors to jump on that train.

Every time a startup speaks with an investor they should be able to articulate clearly the progress they’ve made in the last 90 days...
Chris Hemmeter - Thayer Ventures
If you say, "I’ll start a travel website that will inspire
people to go to places and when they get on location I’ll have content for them
to discover what to do," you just scratch your head and say, “That is exactly
what Google Travel is up to.”
They have Google Local, they have content, they
have all of it. They are good at it, and
they are getting better, and it’s their core mission. So everyone trying to do
a segment of that, they are just swimming upstream.
Maybe six, seven years ago, it seemed like everyone was
talking about travel inspiration, and one of the first statistics they would
display is how people had to go to 15, 20 websites in order to plan a trip.
They would make the intellectual leap that therefore it’s inefficient and not
working, so I’m going to give them one website that does it all, or one app or
one artificial intelligence bot that will spit out their summer vacation.
What turns out to be the case is that, because it’s an infrequent purchase, the
psychology of anticipation and discovery is pleasurable. So the idea of
consolidating the whole travel discovery experience down to one site, one page,
one app - it just fails miserably. The idea that you will talk to your home
device and it will spit out a trip for you, I just don’t buy it.
Saller: One thing
we are seeing is a lot of startups that try to enter some niche market, like
they want to offer yoga vacations or whatever. Maybe you can build a viable
business there, but something like that is not a venture case because it’s too
small. That is starting to be a problem in travel because some of the big
segments are already occupied in way that it seems difficult to build a new
successful company, and then a lot of the segments that are not occupied yet
are too small to build something relevant.
I’m usually looking at, how do you acquire customers, and
what’s the marketing channel that’s scalable and allows the company to become
big? When we did Swoodoo and Kayak, you could get a lot of traffic from SEO, and
you could do search engine marketing profitably and maybe TV advertising, and in
this way acquire customers.
But all of these marketing channels have become
really expensive now. SEO is pretty much gone, because in travel everything is
ads on Google, and all the ads have started to be so competitive, and Google is
so greedy in what they are charging that in a lot of spaces it’s difficult to
do marketing profitability.
Evaluating startups…
Blachford: You
are investing so much in the people. You want to see strategy, you want to see
a market that makes sense. But from the moment you write a check, you know the
plan you saw isn’t going to come true - it just never does - so you have to
have faith in the founders.
It helps an awful lot to have spent a lot of time in
operating environments. At Expedia and so on, I interviewed a lot of people for
different jobs. You are able to see if they are able to do the stuff you hired
them to do. So you calibrate against candidates pretty well. I get pretty
comfortable in my ability to decide if I think people have what it takes to
survive in the trenches.
It’s incredibly stressful to be a founder. You see how
they respond under stress, you see how they respond to competition they didn’t
expect and you learn for next time. After a while you are like, “Yeah, this is
one of the people who can make it happen.” Without that feeling I don’t invest.
There’s no way.
Hemmeter: The
things I think are important are, first, a really well-defined understanding of
the total adjustable market [TAM] that the company is focusing on. Small TAMs
are difficult, because there’s very little flexibility if the company’s initial
effort is off target to pivot and support the company, where larger addressable
markets create more opportunity to do experimentation and discovery.
And then especially in our world, but also in consumer space
- companies need to define in very clear terms the pain, the inefficiencies,
something that’s clearly not working. And then that leads into the nature of
their innovation - their core product - and inevitably that leads to a
conversation about competitive dynamics. Long-term competitive dynamics, not
just who’s doing it now and why your startup is better.
The chessboard involves
anticipating moves four or five years down the line. How might incumbents
respond? Are there parallel players in other industries that might move over?
And then the final three steps in my view are team,
financials - which almost always boils down to unit economics – and then
progress. Every time a startup speaks with an investor, they should be able to
articulate clearly the progress they’ve made in the last 90 days, because it’s
one of the hardest things to do as an entrepreneur is advance the ball down the
field.
If you are constantly telling people the progress you’ve made in
the last 90 days, that’s a really important thing because over time you provide
evidence that you are capable of getting stuff done. Which believe it or not, I
think most people burn out on that alone.
Saller: The
biggest question for me in the beginning is, is it something that can be big?
Then the second area I’m looking at is how do you do marketing and how do you
scale the business? Do you have a way to do Google SEM in a positive ROI way, or
do you have other channels to acquire customers? And then the most important
thing in the end is the team and whether we believe they can build something.
In travel in particular, it helps if it is people who have
been in travel before, who have ideally built a successful startup before. If
you look at the founders of HomeToGo for example - it’s not one of our
investments - but one of them was with me at Kayak and the other one was
building a vacation rental business in Germany so they knew from the beginning
what they were doing. Travel is rather specific and complex, so it helps if
someone has been there before and knows what they are doing.
Google has been going after the sector pretty heavily, so what
we are looking for also is businesses that are not so suitable for Google. HomeToGo
is a great company, but in the end it’s vacation rental metasearch - it’s relatively
likely Google will do that. That may not kill them, but it will impact them
quite heavily if Google went into that sector.
Mistakes…
Blachford: The
classic thing is expanding too quickly. The most important thing is to have a
product and to feel it has validation with the customers you want.
Product-market fit. Companies that spend money and start growing before they
are sure of that, it always go sideways.
The other thing is in travel specifically, a lot of companies
start in the consumer market without properly understanding how difficult it is
to get the marketing right. Then they try to move into B2B without taking
seriously the sales side of it.
So you get people that do good products, but
they don’t put enough time in the go-to market. Over and over again they’ll say,
“We’ll spend money on Google to get customers.” And you say wait a second, Booking.com
is doing that too so how are you going to be able to spend more money than them?
And if you get a blank look back, it’s a good indicator.
Hemmeter: The
truth of the matter is, it’s hard to build a business to profitability, period.
We see thousands of deals to make 10 investments, and then we’re wrong 40% of
the time. So it’s not typically because someone’s made a mistake, I think one
of the great factors of success is timing. And timing is a function in some
ways of luck.
There have been some studies that have shown what differentiates
successful entrepreneurs from entrepreneurs that don’t break through are the
number of failures they’ve overcome. So it really is a function of taking at
bats. Very, very few people have just nailed it on their first attempt.
The State of Travel Startups 2017
Sometimes people brush over really understanding the details
of their addressable market and the human dynamics. How big is it? Is it
growing? What’s really going on in that marketplace? They’ll get really excited
about what they can do with a new app and software, but they haven’t really
figured out if somebody cares. They assume everybody will because their stuff,
of course, is always the coolest. But human beings - it’s hard for them to
change.
Saller: Going
after segments that are too small. We
still see companies that think, we’ll build a travel inspiration site and then
after we build the audience we can start selling hotels and flights to people
coming to our site. I don’t think there is a shortage of travel inspiration
sites, so it’s not by building another site in that sector you will attract a
big audience easily. And secondly, it’s actually pretty difficult to cross-sell
or sell an actual product to people who are looking for inspiration. The only
company doing well in the content space and selling is TripAdvisor.
So this idea that okay, I’ll build a great product and then
people will come automatically, that is over. There are hundreds of thousands
of websites, and it’s not that people just find you because you have a great
product. You have to have a marketing strategy and a way to scale the business
in place.
Travel is also very challenging from a technology standpoint. It’s
much more complex than building an e-commerce site, so underestimating the
technical challenges and not having a strong chief technology officer and
strong development capabilities is another mistake we see.