Expedia Group’s B2B business — which powers travel
distribution for more than 60,000 partners including Walmart Plus Travel, Chase
Travel, United Airlines and Mastercard as well as corporate and offline travel
agencies — was the main driver of revenue growth for the company in the third
quarter this year.
Total revenue was $4.1 billion in the quarter, up 3% year
over year, but revenue for the B2B business was up 18% in the period, hitting
$1.2 billion, and B2B gross bookings increased 19% in the quarter compared to
last year.
In 2023 Expedia Group’s B2B business accounted for 100
million room nights, and CEO Ariane Gorin expressed optimism about future
growth potential.
“The B2B business has a massive market,” she said. “The last
set of quarters it’s grown at a very elevated rate. Some of that was Asia that
was really coming back. … We believe in this business, we believe it will
continue to be healthy, double-digit rates.”
New B2B partners for Expedia Group
include Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and Microsoft, which has linked its loyalty program with Expedia for bookings on Bing Travel.
Expedia Group’s consumer business
While gross booking growth year over year was much less for
its B2C business – coming in at 3% – Gorin said the consumer business has been
improving every quarter this year.
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“We accelerated gross bookings in our consumer business for
the second straight quarter driven by continued strength in brand Expedia, Vrbo
returning to growth and good results in international points of sale,” Gorin
said.
She also talked about a focus on integrations between brand
Expedia and Vrbo – the company has moved about one million units that had been
listed on Expedia to Vrbo, giving the vacation rental platform more inventory
in urban areas and suited for shorter stays to appeal to a wider audience.
“We’re meaningfully improving the Vrbo app performance,
making the app faster and adding new features to streamline shopping. … we have
improved the quality of our existing supply with more discounts for long stays
and more flexible cancellation policies,” Gorin said.
“We believe our focus on the basics — traffic, our product
and our supply — will continue to drive positive momentum for Vrbo.”
When asked if the company will make vacation rental inventory available to its
B2B partners, Gorin said that is already happening on a small scale, and is an
opportunity but not a priority right now.
“As you can imagine, selling vacation rentals there is some
complexity that is different than hotels,” she said.
“Communications between travelers and owner, for example. …
We are testing it. We want to be able to deliver a great traveler experience to
our B2B partners and to our hosts and owners. So I do see that as an opportunity
in the long term.”
We’re continuing to leverage AI to allow travelers to self-serve, which both lowers costs and improve the traveler experience.
Ariane Gorin – Expedia Group
Gorin also provided an update on the company’s work with
artificial intelligence and how it is helping travelers, such as by answering
questions about properties and summarizing reviews.
“We’re continuing to leverage AI to allow travelers to self-serve,
which both lowers costs and improve the traveler experience,” she said.
“For instance our virtual agents now handle nearly half of
all traveler inquires through self-service. Additionally our agent co-pilot
feature, which summarizes voice and chat interactions, significantly reduces
after-call work for our call center agents.”
Other financial figures
Expedia Group’s adjusted EBITDA in Q3 was $1.25 billion, up
3% year over year. Direct sales and marketing expenses in the quarter were $1.9
billion, up 11%, which the company said was due primarily to higher commissions
to partners from growth in the B2B business.
Looking ahead, Expedia Group said the strong results in Q3
has caused it to raised its full year guidance.
“We now expect gross bookings growth to be approximately 5%
versus last year, up one point relative to our prior outlook,” said Julie
Whalen, chief financial officer.
“And we now expect our EBITDA and EBIT margins to be
slightly up versus last year, an improvement from our prior outlook of flat
levels. And our revenue guidance remains at approximately 6% growth versus last
year.”
Along with the earnings results, Expedia Group announced
Thursday that Whalen will step down from her role early next year. Whalen has
agreed to remain with the company through February 17 and her successor is
expected to be named before then. She has also resigned as a member of the
company’s board of directors, effective immediately.
“I want to thank Julie for all she has done for Expedia
Group as a board member and as CFO over the last five years. We are grateful
for her contributions,” Gorin said.
Ariane Gorin at The Phocuswright Conference
Hear from Expedia Group’s CEO during the opening session of The Phocuswright Conference, November 19-21, in Phoenix.