It is a crowded space, especially if you consider that Silicon Valley tech giants like Airbnb, one of the latest sizable players to take a curated approach to tours and activities, Expedia, and TripAdvisor are all competing to attract the billion of tourists around the world.
But many of the disruptors are smaller — yet fast growing — companies and startups.
At the Skift Global Forum in New York City recently, Expedia CEO Mark Okerstrom said “tours and activities might move higher on the company’s list to top priorities.”
Vatcan City. (Photo by Ilya Yakover on Unsplash)
Despite being crowded, the market is so big that it “remains relatively untapped,” according to a Skift report titled: State of Tours and Activities Tech 2017.
“The tours and activities segment is one of the largest segments in the travel industry today, second only to flights and accommodations in terms of annual spending, both in the U.S. and abroad,” the report reads.
Les Sables-d’Olonne, France. (Photo by Sweet Ice Cream Photography on Unsplash)
“Not only is the tours and activities market highly fragmented, dominated by small local suppliers rather than large operators, but the act of booking tours and activities itself has traditionally been a last-minute affair.”
With the launch of Airbnb Experiences in the fall of last year, the space has seen a lot of new deals and mergers, with many players disrupting the industry to let travelers book a wide range of activities as part of their travel plans.
GetYourGuide (getyourguide.com) is a travel startup that allows people to book activities, meals, and tours in different countries. It has recently announced a new funding round through which it has raised $75 million.
“Over the last two years, GetYourGuide’s management realized this is a $150 billion market. Not even a percentage of that is being transacted with online intermediaries today,” Johannes Reck, the company’s co-founder and CEO, told Business Insider.
If we execute well this is a potential $20 billion company so we should not sell early.
The platform offers more than 31,000 tours, activities, and attractions in over 7,300 destinations.
GetYourGuide is headquartered in Berlin, Germany.
Musement (musement.com) is a digital travel companion that lets travelers discover and book things to do. It is known for being a consumer supermarket for tours and activities, but also aimed to add services like point-of-sale tools for museums, activity venues, and tour operators; help airlines upsell their customers on activities; and have pop-up stands near major attractions to sell tickets in-person.
The company has recently announced the acquisition of Triposo (triposo.com), a startup founded by ex-Googlers Douwe Osinga and Jon Tirsen and headed by CEO Nishank Gopalkrishnan to create mobile travel guides using an algorithmic approach. This is a “a major milestone for Musement’s users and partners alike,” said Alessandro Petazzi, Musement co-founder and CEO.
Our vision is to build the best in-destination activities discovery and booking platform.
Together, Musement and Triposo now have a base of more than 12 million users. Musement, with more than 10 million app downloads — about 40 percent coming from North American and Western Europe — offers activities in 200 countries, 50,000 destinations and five million points-of interest.
Musement is headquartered in Milan, Italy.
FareHarbor (fareharbor.com) is an online booking and reservation management platform. In November 2016, it acquired Hawaii-based competitor Activity Link Systems, a provider of software for the activity industry. The company has recently launched a new business-to-business tool, FareHarbor Telescope, a predictive pricing platform powered by artificial intelligence to help operators select optimal rates for activities.
“Machine learning is all about data learning from data. We’re in the perfect spot with the millions of bookings coming through FareHarbor,” said @Mark Mangurian, VP of Business Intelligence at FareHarbor.
The platform, co-founded by Lawrence Hester, serves more than 5,000 tour operators, booking agents and concierge desks hosting more than 50,000 bookable activities in 50 states plus Canada, Australia, Mexico, the UK, British Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands and Tahiti.
FareHarbor is headquartered in Denver, Colorado.
An interesting venture capital or merger play in the sector this year is a $60 million round raised by Klook (klook.com), a Hong Kong-based travel startup that specializes in helping travelers book trip activities and logistics for when they are overseas. The latest funding is in addition to the $30 million Series B raised back in March.
“Imagine walking down a road in Phuket, Thailand: instead of negotiating with an agent, you open the app and you can book directly with the best price,” co-founder and CEO Eric Gnock Fah told TechCruch.
To a certain extent, from a legal and compliance angle, the company is already an IPO candidate.
The platform said it processed 5 million transactions in 2016 and most recently it acknowledged about 1 million monthly bookings from its mobile app or online, mostly within Asia. Some 120 destinations and 30,000 travel activities are within Klook’s curated network.
Klook is headquartered in Hong Kong, China.
Another interesting player in this space is Peek (peek.com), which bought rival Zozi (zozi.com), both consumer marketplaces and enterprise software businesses, this past spring.
“The average consumer wants to book an activity in a few hours,” Peek co-founder and CEO Ruzwana Bashir told Tnooz. “And if you talk to most tour operators, they actually still function in a lot of spreadsheets and phone calls.”
We have the largest product team out of anyone in this space. We’ve done the most work on the technology side, and I think that’s really because we see ourselves as a technology company first nice and foremost.
Peek grew 10 times in the last two years with more than 160 million users (as of 2016).
Peek is headquartered in San Francisco, California.
Withlocals (withlocals.com), a marketplace for personalized travel experiences, has just closed it’s Series A with funding of over $4 million. According to the company, the goal is “to capture at least 20% of this fast-growing market.”
“The world of mass tourism, where one size fits all, is coming to an end,” said Matthijs Keij, CEO of Withlocals. “Travelers today are looking to get off the ‘TripAdvisor circuit’ to instead have unique experiences personalized around their interests and personalities.”
We created Withlocals so tourists can experience cities like the locals do.
Inspired by Airbnb Experiences, the platform counts over 10,000 people currently offering their services as hosts on the site. They do it from 22 countries. The site is available in English, Dutch, German, and Spanish.
Withlocals is headquartered in Eindhoven, The Netherlands.