Good Sunday morning from Seattle . . . Our weekly Online Travel Update for the week ending Friday, March 28, 2025, is below. This week’s Update features stories on a variety of topics including Perplexity’s big booking announcement, HotelTonight’s introduction of Airbnb’s first ever “discounts” and two perspectives on Booking.com’s budding partnership with OpenAI. I hope you enjoy.
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- Booking a Hotel Now Possible Through an AI Search Engine. Clunky, yes, but Perplexity’s new booking platform is a big step. Perplexity announced last week that it has partnered with TripAdvisor and Selfbook to launch the first AI search engine booking platform. In response to natural language searches, users of AI search engine will receive a list of hotel properties created from content provided by TripAdvisor. Users selecting one of the roughly 140,000 properties on Selfbook’s booking and payment platform will be able to book and pay for their booking without leaving Perplexity. Users selecting properties not on Selfbook’s platform will be re-directed to third-party websites like Skyscanner (part of the Trip.com group) to complete the booking. Today, the booking option is only available to website users, though a mobile solution is on its way. The jury is still out on whether these AI search based booking options pose a greater threat to existing intermediaries (OTAs) or suppliers (e.g., who is ultimately providing the bookable inventory). History has shown that the tech savvy intermediaries (armed with billon dollar marketing budgets) are usually the first to leverage these new technologies.
- HotelTonight Introduces First Airbnb Discount. Users of Airbnb’s hotel booking platform, HotelTonight, will receive a credit (10% of the HotelTonight rate) toward a future Airbnb stay. The credits remain valid for one year following the HotelTonight stay and are automatically applied to users’ Airbnb accounts.
- Two Perspectives on OpenAI’s Relationship with Booking.com. In two separate stories last week, Skift presented the views of first OpenAI and then Booking.com on the two companies’ budding relationship. Here are the highlights:
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- OpenAI is currently working with several clients, including Booking.com, to build industry specific applications based on the same large language model (LLM) that powers ChatGPT.
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- OpenAI has no current plans to specialize in any particular industry (like travel), but it uses travel (like other industries) to improve its general application platform. Travel is one of the primary use cases used to test updates to OpenAI’s software.
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- OpenAI’s agentic products (like Operator) may soon be part of the parties’ growing relationship.
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- According to Booking.com, users of its booking platform are starting to change their search behavior and including AI generated summaries as part of their booking process.
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- Booking.com’s current efforts are largely focused on its trip planner, which it launched in 2023, though it also exploring possible uses of agentic platforms (like OpenAI’s Operator).
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Have a great week everyone.