Zoombu

Posts Tagged ‘Google’

The Google Travel Summit, Zurich

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

We were delighted to be invited to take part in the Google Travel Summit this year, held at their swanky offices in Zurich. The purpose of the event was to spark discussion around “the opportunity for the travel industry in the next 5-10 years”. Participants included 15 travel related start-ups (including TV Trip, Tripsay, Tourist Way, Memonic, eZSearch and Skyscanner), 5 VCs (Creata Ventures, Partech, Brains to Ventures, DJF Esprit and Howzat Media) and lots of Googlers to stir the debate.

The day kicked off with pitches and product demos from each company, followed by a VC panel, Google product demos and break-out sessions for business and technical debates.

Nelson Mattos, Google’s Vice President of Engineering, EMEA, gave a great introduction to the parameters of effective search: relevance, user experience, speed and comprehensiveness.  As we’ve been thinking about the growth of Zoombu travel search, we’ve focussed efforts on these domains too, so we were pleased to see the commonality.

Data was a common theme throughout, both as an enabler of innovation, and as one of the biggest challenges faced by travel start-ups.  Getting hold of data is time-consuming and difficult due to the wide rank of formats and lack of availability. However, those with data are able to do interesting and useful things in serving up information to users and ultimately helping them to make purchases.  One of our current efforts is to gather information on local ’shuttle buses’, where timetables and prices may or may not be available online, are usually difficult to locate and are certainly not in a consistent format.  It’s a painful process, but having access to this data means we can recommend great value end-to-end routes to our users.

Fancy a nap? Googlers in their sleep room.

The Googlers were keen to see what they could do to help innovation by sharing their data and services; an offer welcomed by all involved.  They also wanted to show the start-ups how to do office culture properly and gave us a warm welcome to their home.  When you have a slide into the staff canteen, Ben and Jerry’s fridges on every floor and a ’sleep room’ complete with tropical fish and jungle noises for post-lunch snoozes, you know you’ve made it.

- Posted by Rachel

Where is the innovation in travel?

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009
Lightbulb by Jago Pauwel under the Creative Commons license

Lightbulb by Jago Pauwel under the Creative Commons license

I was proudly invited to hold a ‘lunch ‘n’ learn’ session with the Google Travel team today to address the question of whether there is real innovation happening in the travel sector.  Google has had a long history of engaging with start-ups early on and it is great to see that this ethos continues as their empire grows. My mission was to convince them that there is indeed innovation taking place, and that it is small, nimble start-ups that are leading the way. Of course, I wanted to prove my point by sharing some of the developments taking place on Zoombu.

Our propriety travel search engine technology can search through thousands of routes across multiple modes of transportation and recommend the cheapest, fastest or greenest end-to-end route.  There is real innovation taking place on the technology side with our search and routing algorithms and this will be the first time true end-to-end travel search is available to consumers, helping them to pick through the confusing array of travel options.  This is certainly not a trivial nut to crack and it requires vision, real engineering, a good dose of hard work and dedication to pull off.  It also takes time….but nobody said that innovation happened overnight!

Recent discussions on the likes of Alex Bainbridge’s blog have also challenged the state of innovation in the travel industry and whether the ‘travel 2.0′ era has actually hit yet.  With Zoombu and a few other exciting developments we are privy to in this sector, I know that the travel industry will change markedly in the months and years to come.  The typical time lag for innovation to hit mainstream is 18 months…so look to the start-ups now to see the shape of the future of travel.

- Posted by Rachel