Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Category: Conferences/Events (Page 68 of 80)

Conferences I Plan to Blog…

Just to update you, o faithful blog readers, I thought I’d mention what conferences I’ll be blogging from in coming weeks and months. First of all, I’m happy to report I’ve been accepted again as a press registrant at the DEMO 2007 event, which is January 30 – February 1. This will be about my fourth DEMO event. Demo07banner The venue this year was switched from Phoenix to Palm Desert, California, which should be a glorious locale at this time of year (especially when I’ll be escaping Minnesota winter!). I always look forward to this conference, not only because 70 of the hottest startups in the country pitch their businesses here, but because it attracts so much buzz and media attention, more than virtually any other event all year long. The media list is like a who’s who. As always, companies you’ll be reading about a year, two years, three years from now will first be heard from at DEMO. And I’ll do my best to report the highlights for you… [See categories to the right for my coverage of both DEMO events in 2006.]

Another event I’m thinking about covering (but not sure yet if I can break away) is the big momma of ’em all: CES …which used to stand for Consumer Electronics Show, but now wants to be so much more (see theme). Being a content guy, how could I not like this one? Haven’t been to Vegas in a while — caught an Interop show there a couple years ago, and of course attended many Comdex events back in the day. CES, by the way, may be big, but it still doesn’t draw as many people as Comdex did in its heydey. Nonetheless, the show is today the “world’s largest tradeshow for consumer technology and North America’s largest annual tradeshow of any kind.” Get this: it will feature 2700 exhibitors covering floorspace the equivalent of 35 football fields(!), and will have 140,000 attendees — 25,000 of them from other countries. Ces07logotheme Those attendees will include manufacturers, retailers, content providers and creators, broadband developers, wireless carriers, cable and satellite TV providers, installers, engineers, corporate buyers, government leaders, financial analysts and the media. [How could I not like pal-in’ around with those installers, huh? Cable guys attend this thing?? Maybe I should reconsider….] Anyway, there will be a ton of press at this one, and the bloggers will outnumber them — guaranteed. The combined total will easily be in the thousands. Robert Scoble, the well known author and former head blogger at Microsoft, who’s now VP of Media Development at Podtech, will even have his own suite where bloggers can hang out. Here’s what he said on his blog: “By the way, our BlogHaus at CES will be open to ANY blogger, not just those ‘blessed’ by Microsoft or some other company. You just need to have me put your name on the list so you can get up to our suite.” I did.

Finally, I’m looking out to March and thinking I’d love to blog ETech again. O’Reilly is my favorite publisher and conference producer. [You’ll note I recommend many of its books under the “Reading” subhead at the right. Disclosure: I do get free books from time to time, but only post those I really find of value.] Oreillyetechlogo I’ve really enjoyed reporting on this conference in the past, and love running into my old blog buddies there, like Doc Searls and David Weinberger. Sure, it’s a developer event. But, as I’ve said before, some of my best friends are developers…. 🙂 And this event draws an awesome, a-list of attendees, too, at all levels, and many other great bloggers. Anyway, it would be fun to capture it again for y’all, and I hope to get out to San Diego for it in late March. [Okay, it’s an excuse to hang out again at my favorite beach, too 🙂 … ]

Tags: , ,

Another Party Post (If You Can Stand It!)

Okay, I promise this will be it — for the holiday season, anyway. At the risk of appearing to do nothing else but attend parties, swill wine, and nibble cheese at various and sundry functions, I offer up here my final party post of 2006…well, I think, anyway. We’ll see… 🙂 Christmaspartygraphic_1 This one was the annual holiday function of the Minnesota Interactive Marketing Association (MIMA), held Wednesday evening December 13 at the gleaming new Guthrie Theater along the Mississippi River in downtown Minneapolis. Again, it was a balmy evening, in the low 40s…with no snow (!).

I was gonna shoot some pix of this hot new venue (my first time there), and did take my little pocket cam with me. But then I realized others have probably shot much better photos than I could. [Oh?] Check out these very cool Guthrie pix I since found on Flickr. [Thank you, “jpnuwat.” Whoever you are, you shoot some really amazing stuff!!] I now think I’m gonna throw away my pocket cam in shame, because my shots, a couple of which are shown below (after one of his), leave….uh, a little to be desired? Guthriecjpnuwat

Oh well, these two of mine show the one thing I wanted to capture Wednesday evening: the great view off the outside deck, which my friends and I decided would be a terrific place to hold a reception in warmer weather.

The event drew what looked to be 100 to 150 people, and was crowded into a long, narrow lounge on the fourth floor. But it was fun, and the food was great, as was the wine. Soon as I walked in, I ran into an old buddy I hadn’t seen in years: Terry Anderson, head shooter at TKA Photography in Edina, who was there to capture some shots of the occasion for MIMA. Guthrieview1_1
I also met some other really interesting people, including James Schmit of Greater Web Traffic, a state IT employee and former longtime Carlson Companies staffer, who’s doing some SEO/SEM work in his spare time. Let’s hear it for moonlighting! Guthrieview2_1
Then, after running into friends Tom Borgerding (the original MIMA prez) and Jason Bakker of Campus Media Group, Bloomington — the best darn college marketing firm on the planet — I met Jennifer Meyer, CEO of Web Emarketing, who not only is an accomplished search-engine marketer, but a surfer, too — I kid you not! She’s spent time at Surfer’s Paradise near Brisbane, Australia, and also frequents the Pacific side of Costa Rica in her spare time. [Naturally, we’re gonna exchange some surf pix links while on our respective New Year’s vacations.] After hooking up with MinneDemo colleagues Rob Metcalf of Flyspy and Jeff Pester of Slivercast.com, I was introduced to Martin Davis, principal of Ratchet, an accomplished interactive development shop, spun out of Fallon in 2004, that now serves a large part of the downtown ad agency community. Martin also has really cool business cards, designed by Duffy Design — seriously, you should stop by sometime just to get one! 🙂 Finally, I had a chance to chat at some length with another fascinating guy, Andrew Ecklund, CEO of Ciceron. I’d known his name for a long time, and had briefly met him once in the early days of MIMA, in like 1997, but we’d never had a chance to really talk. He was a font of information, a funny guy, and his firm is doing some excellent web marketing work for clients such as Andersen Windows, US Bank, and Target Center. In particular, he’s really excited about web video, and especially about Brightcove, which I’ve written about before — a company that kinda/sorta has Minnesota roots, since it was founded by Jeremy Allaire and friends, formerly of Allaire Corp., which was founded here. Andrew’s firm is working on some really cool, new video stuff, with a group of well-regarded local film and video talents. I’ll definitely be watching for more news on this….

Well, that’s it from the Minneapolis web marketing and Internet startup party scene for another holiday season….Whoops, no, wait! What’s this? Why, it’s another invitation to a little gathering of players in our local startup community, on Wednesday the 20th downtown. Just an impromptu get-together for beer to meet an out-of-town VC visitor from California. But how can I miss that?… 🙂

Tags: , , , Minnesota

‘MinneDemo 2’ Was One Hot Ticket!

Hot, as in…could you find a parking place? Then could you get in the door? And could you believe the freaking great weather outside? For those of you not in Minnesota, we’ve been basking in 45-50 degree temps of late, haven’t seen a snowfall yet (and it’s mid-December!), and we actually had a light rain/mist goin’ on outside Monday evening for this second MinneDemo event. I had to pinch myself to believe I wasn’t in San Francisco! And the scene, a high-energy gathering of Internet entrepreneurs and developers, made it even more reminiscent of the City by the Bay, back in days of….well, you know.

Minnedemologo200w

But, hell no, this is no bubble! Web 2.0 is different, folks. And this group is great evidence of that. It proves that smart developers can live and work anywhere they want….even in now-subtropical Minnesota [if this is global warming, bring it on, baby!]. And the new, open tools and platforms of the Web 2.0 era let them build their stuff quickly while they stay right where they prefer to live. It’s hard convincing Minnesota folks to leave. Something about quality of life, snow (hah!), lakes, fishing, hunting, the local music scene, the culture, and, doggone it…“Minnesota Nice” in general.

What’s interesting, too, about this new breed of startups is that they don’t need much to bootstrap and get their businesses going and up on the Web. Rapid development platforms like Ruby On Rails help a lot in that regard [and I’m hearing we have an excellent community of those developers here]. The hope of these entrepreneurs, of course, is that word will spread “virally” about their new sites…kind of the comeback of the age-old ‘build-a-better-mousetrap’ concept. But they’re smart enough to realize they don’t need to be hunting down big VC dollars for these businesses — they wouldn’t know what to do with such money, anyway. They understand, however, that angel funding is a good fit for their needs. [And, yes, there were definitely some angels present! Of course, not a single VC showed, but my radar is picking up that this will change soon.] Think of our local Web 2.0 phenomenon as a kind of giant caldron of experimentation: build ’em fast and get ’em up on the Web! Then, hey, if people like ’em, they just might catch on and turn into real businesses….

Minnedemo1

[Note: The event, by the way, was held at at the Arcadia Cafe at Franklin and Nicollet. Photos shown are courtesy of Minneapolis’ own Jamie Thingelstad, VP/CTO of Dow Jones Online. He and his crew run all the awesome sites of this global leader from right here! Yes, 110 people downtown, in the original MarketWatch offices. Jamie is also affiliated with one of the sponsors, Road Sign Math. The photos, in order, are of the bar, organizer-extraordinaire Dan Grigsby, the demo room, and Mike O’Connor getting ready to pitch.]

Minnedemo2

Net-net: anybody who’s anybody in the local developer community was at this schmoozefest, either to demo their wares (there were six companies/projects pitching), watch their peers demo, or just catch up with their fellow developer friends, advisors, potential employees/employers, look for contract talent, angel connections, etc, etc…. I saw and heard all that and more. I was in awe being around so many smart people. We have one really, really great developer community here, folks! Some of my best friends are developers, and I’m very happy to say that. Get to know ’em. This is where this state’s next generation of company-building and wealth generation will come from!

Minnedemo3

So, who’s behind organizing this MinneDemo thing? It rose up out of a grass-roots, open-source movement called BarCamp, which is actually (and fittingly) a global phenomenon. Three local developers named Dan Grigsby, Luke Franci, and Ben Edwards decided about a year ago that our local community could be a great “chapter” if someone would just get it started. Well, they seized the moment! …and actually have put in a ton of work into throwing the three events so far. [BarCamp MN and then two MinneDemos.] We salute you guys! And they had no problem finding sponsors — in fact, I hear their list is almost over-subscribed already. For this event, the sponsors were ipHouse, Mosquito Mole Multiworks, Kinetic Data, Road Sign Math, and New Counsel. [Thanks, guys! Smart marketing dollars invested.]

Minnedemo4

This second MinneDemo easily drew 180 people, which was double the first one! [That was held at a smaller venue in Uptown in September.] Not only was this one a happening, fun networking event, there was a lot of stimulating discussion going on Monday night — I can attest. As well as seeing a lot of old friends, developers and others alike — Tom Kieffer, Rob Metcalf, Jeff Pester, Mike O’Connor, John Roberts, Derek Peterson, Tom VonKuster, and several more — I met some really interesting new friends, including [the ones I got cards from, at least]: Ben Moore of Curbly (great tagline this social network has: “Love Where You Live”)….Dan Carroll of imp (that stands for “Intelligent Media Platform” and, interestingly, it’s a company that sort of grew out of the Utne Reader)….John Sandberg of Kinetic Data (one of the sponsors linked above)….and Katharine Grayson, the new technology beat reporter for our local weekly The Business Journal. She was nice enough to bring along a photographer, after I alerted their managing editor, Mark Reilly, to the event. [Note: Buy next week’s issue — lots more about our local tech community there.]

So, you get the point by now: the Minnesota Internet startup and business community is a-hummin’!! I know you’ll be hearing more from many people in this group. And I’ll continue bringing as much of it to you as I can…

Nothin’ “mini” about Minne-sota!

Tags: , , ,

Travel 2.0 Conference – The Producer Speaks

As a followup to my blog coverage of the “Travel 2.0” conference, held a couple of weeks ago in Hollywood, I conducted a brief email interview with the host and primary moderator of the event, Philip Wolf. He’s the president and CEO of PhoCusWright Inc., the producers of this major annual event for executives in the travel industry, now in its thirteen year. PhoCusWright is an independent travel, tourism, and hospitality research firm specializing in consumer, business, and competitive intelligence. It conducts and publishes primary work focused on strategic assessment and segment forecasting, and it offers a range of custom research and strategic consulting services, in addition to producing its annual series of high-profile executive conferences. PhoCusWright has clients on six continents.

TECH~SURF~BLOG: Phil, what was your overall assessment of this year’s executive conference?

WOLF: I’m sure this year’s event was the best ever. We had record attendance and have received overwhelmingly positive feedback. The buzz was definitely palpable in Hollywood. The theme, “Travel 2.0 Confronts the Establishment,” was incredibly important to those in attendance, and the timing was perfect to discuss this subject. This is the most exciting time since the online travel wave hit — it is really the next wave, though not as big. The dialog on stage was very strategic. PhoCusWright’s moderators asked great questions, and didn’t let go without real answers. The caliber of our audience was incredible — senior level executives. Off-stage, the seeds were planted for millions of dollars of deals.

TECH~SURF~BLOG: What was the most surprising development?

WOLF: The conference was a prototype of 2.0 at work — not just about 2.0. It was wonderful to see how successful it was with attendees distributed throughout the conference area. The headsets worked incredibly well, and it was great to see how “tuned in” everyone was with them — whether they were in the café area, the exhibitor area, or outside on the terrace, they were as involved as those sitting in the theater.

TECH~SURF~BLOG: Generally speaking, how is the industry reacting to the whole “Travel 2.0” concept, based on your feedback so far from attendees? Do they get it? Do they buy it?

WOLF: Most people attending The Executive Conference got it; some hate it. I’m pretty sure it’s going to stick.

TECH~SURF~BLOG: What moves can we expect to see from some of the Travel 1.0 players in the next year? How about the Travel 1.5 metasearch players — how will Travel 2.0 affect them? Any predictions based on what you heard or observed at the conference?

WOLF: Prediction: This time next year, those expressions won’t be in play. Most of the five tenets I mentioned in the opening monologue will be “the norm” in the business world. For example, mapping was a special thing a couple of years ago; today, everyone’s got it. [Ed.: The tenets that define Travel 2.0 according to Wolf are these: transparency, collaboration, better basics, speed, and predictability. You can read his opening speech here.]

TECH~SURF~BLOG: What about the subject of content in the whole Web 2.0 travel mix, and the role of professional vs. user-generated content? How important is content, what kind of impact will it have, and which firms do you think best undertand what’s going on here, or how best to handle content on their sites?

WOLF: There’s going to be a blending of different types of content — user-generated, vertical, professional, etc. The blending will be across search, shopping, and sharing, and their aspects will start to blur. Whether content is labeled “user-generated” or “professional” won’t matter over time. What matters is what was most helpful to the customer.

Thanks, Phil. I thought it was a very worthwhile event, and enjoyed blogging it. From the boost I saw in my blog traffic, and the many people I heard from commenting favorably on my coverage, I agree this is a very hot topic. And I look forward to following Travel 2.0 going forward.

Tags: , , , , ,

Travel 2.0 Conference Wrapup

Pretty much every exec who matters in the $6 trillion travel industry [the biggest industry in the world, they tell me — bigger than oil even?] was either in Hollywood last week for the PhocusWright Executive Conference or wished they could’ve been. Well, for the latter group, perhaps this little recap of mine will help. And I suspect it will be of interest to anyone at all with a reason to pay attention to this huge caldron of commerce. That would especially include online advertisers that quite understandably lust after this rich consumer demographic.

Phocuswrightopenslide2_1

Forbes calls the travel business a “global honeypot.” What’s interesting now is that the industry itself is the first to admit it’s experiencing disruption from the phenomenon we call Web 2.0. I love stories like this! Hey, where change of this magnitude is brewing, conferences just get real, real interesting. And you know me: I enjoy getting into the middle of the action at these things and blogging about it. [And this is now my eighth post on this event.]

Let’s face it, all of us as travel consumers have an interest in this topic. What new travel sites, tools, mashups, or other developments will change the way we plan and purchase our travel? My take is, who can not be interested in this topic? So, hopefully this wrapup of my coverage of the event will be of interest to you no matter what your job or profession. Note the comments I’m including here don’t offer the perspective of an industry insider — they’re just the random observations of a tech-savvy, Web 2.0-ish consumer and trend-spotter of sorts, who’s admittedly on the outside looking in here….

Setting the Stage
PhocusWright has been doing this event for 13 years now, and themed it this year with the very provocactive line, “Travel 2.0 Confronts the Establishment.” As in the little guys eating the big guys’ lunch! Or at least shaking things up in this big, big space…. There was a lot of talk about how things have progressed in the past decade: Travel 1.0 (nee 1996) vs. Travel 1.5 (nee 1999) vs. the new era of Travel 2.0, which is now causing much change in the online portion of the travel business. This sector, of course, continues to grow much faster than offline travel (i.e, traditional travel agencies and paper tickets).

Phocuswrightstage2

Some Definitions
Travel 1.0 = represented by the OTAs (online travel agencies), a category that generally encompasses what’s called “The Big Three”: Expedia, Travelocity, and Orbitz.
Travel 1.5 = embodied in the “metasearch” engines (think comparison shopping sites) such as Kayak, SideStep, Mobissimo, TravelZoo, SmarterTravel, and others.
Travel 2.0 = which is about a host of new players (several of whom pitched here), as well as new enhancements existing players are scrambling to add to their sites (Google, Yahoo, MSN, and AOL included) — either organically or by acquiring companies that can bring Web 2.0 mojo to their existing online travel businesses.

Why Do We Need Travel 2.0?
One of the most useful presentations I caught was actually in one of the pre-conference workshops, from Chicke Fitzgerald, CEO of the Solutionz Group, who said she’s been in the travel business since 1978. She stepped through the above three modern stages of the business, explaining the gist of each. Travel 1.0 was about “where and when,” and content was largely organized by destination. “Time is the most precious commodity, and online sites are not doing a good job.” So, then came the Travel 1.5 metasearch sites. “It still takes too much time to save a few bucks,” she said. Okay, so what defines Travel 2.0 according to Fitzgerald? “It aggregates content with consumer demand.” It features flexible, time-saving tools (think Ajax), and is about community. “People want recommendations from someone like them — real feedback, not marketing hype. And they want their own feedback heard.”

Fitzgerald also talked about the need for new buying metaphors: “Where and when is not sufficient. It needs to be more like the advice of a trusted travel agent — that is, ‘If you liked this, you’ll love this’.” An additional factor today, she said, is that we don’t just have the designations of ‘business’ and ‘leisure’ travel anymore. “There are varying degrees of these.” Fitzgerald wrapped up her talk by adding, “We need Travel 2.0 because consumers today are just buying the way they’re being sold to. Online booking is commoditized — the metaphors are all the same. There’s enormous growth potential still ahead.”

Another key insight from the same session came later, from Les Ottolenghi, CEO of INTENT MediaWorks: “Companies that want to be successful in Travel 2.0 better intersect with consumers that are now hooked on YouTube-type content experiences.”

The Gorillas Get Grilled
The online travel business isn’t just about the travel-only sites. The big-mamma search and portal sites like this space a lot, too. A session late on the first day — unfortunately right before everyone was ready to bolt for a cocktail — was a panel of travel execs from Google, Yahoo, and AOL. And it ended up being much too short in my mind. And don’t ask me why MSN wasn’t represented, which is more and more seeming to be a worthy competitor, in my opinion. A few observations I logged from this session:

Jasper Malcolmson, Director, Yahoo! Travel: “We put our user-generated videos through a layer of processing to make them semi-professional.”

Jane Butler, Managing Director-Travel, Google, in answer to the question “What does the Long Tail mean to you?”: “It’s incredibly important….we subsidize their passion though AdSense, for example. But we also focus on the ‘head’ and the ‘trunk’.”

Jeff DeKorte. VP/GM-Travel, AOL: “We’re rebuilding our underlying platform…We’re doing a lot in music, which we can bring over to travel.” What about metasearch? “We invested in Kayak. That’s serving a segment of our audience, but still small.”

Jasper Malcolmson, Director, Yahoo! Travel: “Our COO came to this event two years ago…We still don’t think this metasearch thing is going to happen.”

Jeff DeKorte. VP/GM-Travel, AOL: “It won’t overturn the rest of the industry.”

In answer to an audience question, “I’ve heard Travelocity is cutting back on paid search, true?”

Google: “We’ve not experienced that.”
Yahoo: “Neither have we.”
[Editorial comment: Then it must be true… 🙂]

Interesting follow-on comment by Yahoo: “It’s about a 50-50 split now in travel search between the OTAs and the algorithmic search engines….Our ‘Trip Planner’ is a social networking site, like RealTravel.”

Moderator question: “What about click fraud?”
Google: “We have a huge team working on that.” [Ed.: I’ve heard this for years now. ] “We’re doing things to help site owners defend against this.”

Audience question: “Where are you with the next stage of personalization?”
Google: “Look for ‘Google Co-Op’ — individuals and organizations can index their sites.”

The Big Corporate/Offline Players Speak
A key session on the first morning featured a senior executive each from American Express and Carlson Wagonlit Travel, the two biggest players in the corporate travel sector.

What does Travel 2.0 mean to American Express? Priyan Fernando, EVP and COO of Global Business Travel, said it was this: technology, convenience, and peace of mind. “It must have scale, be global, and based in common platforms…a 24 by 7 environment…personalized service wherever you are.” He also said that, as work becomes more virtual and the web becomes the workplace, “the convenience of Web 2.0 is now becoming the expectation in the corporate space as well.” And it enables employee social networking, too, within companies. “We’re all moving to Web 2.0 whether we like it or not. It’s a more simple way to do business,” he added.

Carlson Wagonlit Travel is another big worldwide travel player, which saw first half sales in 2006 exceed $1 billion, driven by global economic expansion. “But procuring travel remains very complex,” said Hubert Joly, CEO. “The trend continues to outsource corporate travel.” The company is especially focused now on online travel. Why? “Because it’s now 50% of our transactions,” said Joly. “And this part of our business is growing rapidly outside the U.S.” The final thought Joly left with us was this: “Travel 2.0 is more a journey than a big bang.”

Nine Startups Get Five Minutes of Fame Each
Sprinkled throughout the conference, one a time, were five-minute talks by selected Travel 2.0 startups in various stages of operation — some very new, some further along. I must say these pitches were hardly of Demo Conference quality, but a few made a good impression, and all seemed worthy of a look — it’s just that Powerpoints alone rarely do any business pitch justice. They all should have read Guy Kawasaki’s Rules for Powerpoint first. [And a note to PhocusWright: live Web demos beat Powerpoint hands down — though, granted, they can backfire.]

I’ve already blogged about RealTravel, which was the first one up. Another one, Gusto, offers “travel and lifestyle” reviews of hotels, restaurants, attractions, nightlife, and shopping, and even lets you book reservations, too. Plum Ventures, a “social travel planning platform,” is the latest startup from Hans Peter Brondmo, and at least the third time I’ve heard him pitch at conferences since the Web 1.0 days (he debuted Plum at Demo in February). Home & Abroad plans your trip for you, for free, and has four ways to dive in: Just Browsing, Trip Themes, Virtual Concierge, and Dream Trips. Tripmates is an interactive travel community where you can blog about your travel, share reviews and “trip flicks,” and even find a travel buddy. SearchForecast is an SEO intelligence service, for travel and other industries, that provides monthly competitor reports, to help you control those “rising pay-per-click costs.” [By the way, this is another one of these startups with offices in “Sydney/SF/London.” Hey, those Aussies are everywhere!] The other three startup presentations I missed (sorry).

Phocuswrightexhibits

The Coming Shakeout in Booking Systems
One of the most interesting presentations, for those of us from the tech world, anyway, was that of ITA Software….a Cambridge, MA-based company that recently raised, oh, just a small amount: $100 million. Okay, so maybe the name doesn’t ring a bell with you — but, hey, whoever said techies knew how to brand? In this case, trust me, it doesn’t matter. These guys (now 175 strong, with 125 more soon to be hired) are a big, coming disruptor in a business where decades-old, mainframe-based “GDS” booking systems like Sabre, Galileo, Worldspan, and Amadeus have owned the market — but have become much too costly for newly cost-efficient airlines. Thus, the VCs are betting, with companies like ITA (and another called G2 Switchworks in Chicago), that the power of the Internet to take costs out will win.

“Complexity has been building since the ’20s — big airline complexity,” said Jeremy Wertheimer, CEO of ITA Software and one of three cofounders, who holds a Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence from MIT. “Legacy systems layered on top of each other duplicate customer data and degrade customer service … Transaction-oriented systems do not support customer-centric views.” He talked about the new reservations systems of the future. “They will be about new business models, new a la carte options, simplified user interfaces, more self-service, and lower cost.”

A Few Notes (Very Few) from the VC Panel
This had to be at least the 651st such panel I’ve covered, and they all start to sound the same — so don’t expect anything earth-shattering. It featured Joel Cutler of General Catalyst Partners (by phone hookup), who’s invested in Kayak among others….Jim Kolleger of Genesys Partners in NY, who had one company, Portaga, exhibiting at the event….Allan Thygesen of The Carlyle Group, Washington DC, who’s invested in Viator and others….and Matt McIlwain of Madrona Venture Group in Seattle, a firm that’s into travel a lot, with investments including TripHub, VacationSpot, and Farecast. Matt had an interesting comment in response to a moderator question about what’s coming in the next 3 to 5 years. “Travel is an early adopter,” he said. “Did you see the recent NY Times article about ‘Web 3.0’? The Semantic Web will fuel innovations in coming years.” In response to another question (a good one), about what does the startup do that’s just looking for $500k, when VCs want to invest at least $5 million in their deals, and what if they’re not located in the VCs’ backyards, we got the classic opposite response. Allan Thygesen said, “We work with a lot of people that coach startups. There’s talent everywhere. You need to support your companies globally.” The more common (truthful?) answer seemed to come from Matt McIlwain: “We have all we need in Seattle.” Note to everyone else: don’t waste your time.

Metasearch Players Spar (again)
With the plethora of so-called metasearch sites (comparison shopping engines) in the travel biz — remember Travel 1.5 from above? — I guess it’s not uncommon for them to be vying for attention and even sparring somewhat on stage. [I just read an online account of one such encounter that occured last year.] It appears to be a dog-eat-dog world out there, and these firms may be under some pressure — at least one had a major change at the top in recent times. On stage for this event, we had three interesting studies: two macho CEOs from SideStep and Kayak (the NexTag guy didn’t show), and one very meek, softspoken young lady (French?), the CEO of Mobissimo.

The moderator kicked things off by asking the panel to talk about how a metasearch site is different from an online travel agency. “An OTA is an ecommerce site, which charges a fee [$5 is common],” said Rob Solomon, CEO of SideStep, “whereas what we are is a free search site.” Kayak’s CEO and cofounder, Steve Hafner, responded: “Consumers don’t care. They just want an easy-to-use interface.” Solomon chimed in that they just acquired hotel-reviews site TravelPost, and that “our goal is to be one of the world’s largest travel sites.” Meaning more money can be made from advertising, said the moderator, than distribution (commissions from bookings)? “No!” chimed in Kayak’s Hafner, “It’s just an add-on.” To which SideStep’s Solomon countered, “Three years from now, we’ll have 50 million visitors per month!”

At that point, some guy throws in a great question from the audience: “Forrester says ‘Metasearch 1.0’ is dead on arrival — the economics don’t work. What about that?” To which Kayak says “Bunk!” And SideStep, who hasn’t even seen the report, says “We’re a great platform for travel players.”

The sparring continues. Sidstep: “Our bookability is better than the other two, because our data is right from the airlines. And we have user-generated content.” [Especially now with TravelPost.] Kayak: “We’re a personalized site. We log what you’re doing.” [Ed.: And you like dealing with the privacy nuts, then, I hope?] And finally the CEO of Mobissimo, Beatrice Tarka, gets a chance to weigh in….and she has a doozer to deliver: “We’ve been profitable for one year.” Take that, you wannabes!

One last blast from the macho guys wraps up the session. SideStep: “We’re a great place to build a brand.” Kayak: “We aren’t. We’re a qualified-lead transaction engine for you.”

Got all that now?

Two of the ‘Big 3’ Vie Onstage
An executive roundtable panel called “The Giants,” held near the end of the event, was moderated by Phil Wolf himself, CEO of PhocusWright [who does an excellent job, I might add]. It featured Jeff Clarke, the CEO of Travelport (formerly Cendant Travel), which owns Orbitz, and Dara Khosrowshahi, CEO of Expedia — another one of the “Big 3” online travel agencies. [Don’t ask me where the remaining member of the triumverate was, Travelocity — that was never explained. Should we be reading anything into that?]

Clarke crowed about his firm’s advantage in owning a GDS (Galileo), while Expedia’s CEO said their big edge was that they’re vertically integrated with their travel-planning site, TripAdvisor — which, by the way, had luggage tags all over the seats for us in this session. [Great little branding giveaway.]

In what became another “mine’s bigger than yours” kind of sparring match, Travelport said “We’re the only ones with operations in all the significant global geographies.” To which Expedia later responded that they’re all over the world, too, from a branding standpoint: “All three of our brands [that would include Hotels.com and TripAdvisor] will be global. We built a great site in Australia, and we have the best hotel site in Japan.” He admitted that Hotels.com is continuously “fighting it out” with Travelport’s Gullivers in the group-travel space.

The moderator asked how each company was affected by recently being spun out of a larger entity — Travelport from Cendant and Expedia from InterActive Corp. Expedia’s take: “It was a huge distraction initially,” but a good thing because “it’s hard to have a sense of mission when you’re part of a conglomerate.” Travelport’s CEO said, “It wasn’t bad, and not forced.” [The firm is now owned by private equity firm The Blackstone Group.]

Expedia’s CEO said his biggest challenge now is attracting good people: “We need those who want to change the world and don’t just want a company job.” He noted that he’s now focused on “small entrepreneurial teams.” Travelport’s biggest challenge? It’s a gargantuan task, according to the buzz I picked up at the event, but one Clarke almost played down: “We’re a collection of 20 companies, so we’re now tying together those operations.” But he, of course, couldn’t end without rubbing the nose of his competitors in the fast that Orbitz had had “three consecutive quarters of outstanding growth,” better than any other online travel agency. Wheras Expedia’s CEO, with only 2% growth in the recent quarter, admitted “we must improve our air product” and that his firm continues to “invest heavily in technology.”

Content: Dead-Trees and Online Players Blur
A great session right at the end was kicked off by another Aussie (!), Judy Slatyer, CEO of Lonely Planet Publications, which publishes great trvael guides and has moved to become an online resource, too. “Travel advice has basically stayed the same since the days of cave drawings. The only motive is helping others who will make the same trip.” What has changed, though, she points out, is “the huge volumes of information,” which are increasingly online — “encouraging people to try new things, making them more daring.” This, she says, causes more spontaneity. “Short breaks is the fastest growing segment in travel today.” And when it comes to “planners versus wanderers,” she said that “Web 2.0 is making the planners ecstatic!” After her talk, Slatyer was joined by a panel of other online and offline travel-information publishers, which brought out some interesting tidbits:

Daniel Saul, CEO of Smarter Living Inc. (SmarterTravel.com): “The key question is how professional content works with user-generated content.”

Tim Jarrell, VP/Publisher of Fodor’s: “Consumers want multiple sources and sites. Our forums will use editorial judgement.”

Lonely Planet: “We expect to spend more on professional content. We’re looking for more ‘human’ content versus pure reviews.”

TripAdvisor CEO Stephen Kaufer: “We’ve had links to professional reviews since the beginning, giving them equal weighting.”

And, in an interesting online/offline twist, J.R. Johnson, CEO of VirtualTourist.,com, noted “our online content is going offline soon, too” — meaning print. And TripAdvisor chimed in that they also have a magazine! So, friends, it seems both bits and atoms will continue to have a place in this burgeoning world of travel planning…

Other Random Speaker Comments That Stood Out
Jeff Clarke, CEO of Travelport, in answer to the question, Why should consumers pay $5 to book a reservation?: “Time. Speed is worth something.”

Stephen Kaufer, CEO, TripAdvisor: “How can a random crowd be more accurate than a group of experts? We see it in our community every single day! … We now have one million visitors a day, and 6.5 million ‘opinions’ online — 182 reviews of this very hotel!”

Kaufer (again): “Trust is online gold dust — twice as many leisure travelers read consumer reviews than professional ones (68% to 38%).” … “Wikipedia’s numbers have shot up from 80 million per month a year ago to 140 million per month now.” … “People will give back without a kickback — no money, no fame, no power, just the satisfaction of contributing back to a site they got something from.”

Priyan Fernando, EVP and COO of Global Business Travel, American Express: “The convergence of work and personal life is affecting travel.”

John F. Davis III, CEO, Pegasus: “When we started, we had four looks for every book, but that’s going way up. It’s a cost of doing business that we’re not able to pass on to our customers.”

Lawrence W. Hall, CEO, Hotel Booking Solutions: “No one questions apps in the cloud anymore.”

A slide that appeared on screen between sessions: “The online leisure market will grow 19% from 2006 to 2007.”

Robert Metcalf, Founder of Flyspy, speaking of his innovation: “It’s one search, one chart, with a Google-like interface.”

Phil Wolf, CEO of PhocusWright: “Web 2.0 will bring complete transparency in data and pricing — which is code for ‘truth’.”

A Note About Event Logistics
I’ve covered a lot of great conferences in my day, but I must say I’ve never been to one where the back of the ballroom was open to the exhibit showfloor…which also incorporated what was called “cafe seating.” [See accompanying diagram.] It was a wrinkle that was totally new to me. It was bothersome at first, because noise was obviously coming in from that direction. But one seemed to eventually get used to it. Confroomdiagram_2 And, in its defense, it was part of a pretty ingenious logistics setup. The producers also provided headsets so you could listen to all the action while you were either sitting in the cafe seating, roaming around the exhibit flooor, or even out front in the terrace area. That area also featured a “satellite theater” with a large-screen TV to watch all the action. It included table seating, so I noticed a lot of people there were using their laptops (blogging perhaps?). I, however, much prefer my action live, and down in front, so I was forced to balance my Powerbook on my lap in the main conference room. The wi-fi throughout the entire conference area, by the way, was superb. [But a note to the expensive hotel: it wouldn’t kill you to offer it for free in your damn fancy-shmancy lobby! I had to pay for the roaming version of T-Mobile wi-fi there, which seems stupid.]

Now for some other bitches about the conference logistics:
• Table seating should have been available in the ballroom, too! At least in the front third or so. [I don’t think I’ve ever been to a conference that didn’t have that.]
• And the moderators talking from the aisles was very weird, necessitating bright lights on them all the time — which was really, really bothersome to those of us in the audience in the first 6 or 8 rows, especially close the aisles, whether we were trying to just take notes or blog live.
• The name tags, while two-sided (great idea!), had type that was too small.
• And the signage when you first got to the event was pretty bad — I’ve never had so much trouble figuring out where to go at an event (though that may been as much the hotel’s signage as anything else….very weird layout at this place).
• The reception on the first evening was way too many people (900!) in one space! (A restaurant on the second floor.) We could barely move! I wondered in retropspect why it wasn’t held in the great pool terrace area, where we had lunch each of the following two days, which was great! Under beautiful, sunny Southern California skies….

Phocuswrightpool

Regarding the conference sessions themselves: the opening speech from PhocusWright was waaay too long. I could just hear people collectively thinking: “Okay, let’s get this party started!” And the choice of a panel of Wall Street analysts to open the event was a real yawner.

But this is just my attempt at providing constructive feedback (I saw no comment sheets to do this). Overall, I thought it was a very well run and very valuable conference — and it ran on-time like no event I can remember! I would recommend it to anyone involved in any way in the travel industry … which will undoubtedly continue be an exciting place to be for quite some time to come.

Some of the Great People I Met at the Conference
One of the frustrating things about blogging live at conferences is that it just doesn’t leave as much time as I’d like to meet people. That, plus the fact that one’s success in finding specific people in any crowd goes down drastically as the size of that crowd increases (and in this case, it was a very big number as most conferences go). Nonetheless, I did meet an interesting cross-section of attendees. Most of these were new to me, though a few were previous acquaintances I enjoyed hooking up with again. They’re listed here alphabetically by last name:

– Par Arvidsson, CEO, Wcities Inc., San Francisco
– Christina Brzica, Director of Marketing, RealTravel, Los Altos, CA
– Michael Cayley, VP Operations, PlanetEye, Toronto
– Carolyn Cora, VP Professional Services, Vistrio, Sausalito, CA
– Rod Cuthbert, CEO, Viator, San Francisco and Sydney
– Nelson Granados, Assoc Professor, Pepperdine University, Malibu and Irvine
– Richard Keehaver, VP eCommerce & Travel, Intent MediaWorks, Reno, NV
– Jim Kolleger, Managing Partner, Genesys Partners, New York City
– Eric Kung, CEO, ShowHotel, El Monte, CA
– Kais Makhlouf, VP Client Relations, Nurun, Montreal
– Matt McIlwain, Partner, Madrona Venture Group, Seattle
– Scott Moorhead, Wotif.com, Brisbane, Australia
– Robert Metcalf, Founder, Flyspy.com
– Andy Packard, Director Business Development, LocalMatters, Denver, CO
– Drew Patterson, VP Marketing, Kayak.com, Norwalk, CT
– Josh Steinitz, Founder/CEO, The Nile Project, San Francisco
– Russell Winter, VP Business Development, SideStep, Santa Clara, CA

Great to see all of you, and do stay in touch! Travel 2.0 is definitely going to remain on my industry focus list….

Tags: , , , , ,

« Older posts Newer posts »