Loading
Recorded at CAPA Americas Aviation Summit, 16-17 Apr 2018

GoldSpring Consulting Update

GoldSpring Consulting partner Neil Hammond offers an outlook on how emerging technologies could benefit the corporate travel sector and the way branded fares are being introduced into the corporate travel structure.

Transcript

Neil HammondI don't think it's going to disrupt corporate travel planning, I think it's going to assist it. What you're going to see for the consumer, for the business travel, is a lot more personalization which is going to add value and streamline a lot of the problems we encounter when we business travel. Hopefully, the biometrics are going to make the airport security process a lot more efficient. I think within distribution, it's going to threaten to lower distribution costs so that's going to be benefit to corporations.

What I've seen in travel policies is that they have removed the basic economy if we're talking about product segmentation, so they've branded these low class seats as basic economy, probably to compete with the low-cost airlines and move the business traveler up the booking class ladder. That's really what I've seen and as far as we know it's been a great success.

I'm not concerned about shifts in US trade policy. I think it's a lot of negotiation going on to try and maybe right some inequities in trade deficits. I think there will be some temporary disruptions but I think will settle on a negotiated settlement, in most cases be it NAFTA or Trans-Pacific Partnership or negotiations with the EU.

Want More News Like This?

CAPA Membership provides access to all news and analysis on the site, along with access to many areas of our comprehensive databases and toolsets.
Find Out More