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6 commentsFriday, December 21, 2007

Travel Search Sites Kayak, SideStep Connect

Kayak quickly spends its Christmas money

6 Comments

Only 10% overlap?

I am surprised that they claim only 10% overlap in their respective markets - I for one have used both (and ultimately chose sidestep because of ease-of-use) and they seem really similar. Do they have different marketing tactics perhaps?

Only 10% - no way!

You're right on pointing that out. I don't think the overlap is only 10% - it must be higher. Even their sites look rather similar and they are both in the industry of online travel and flight booking so I don't see how it's only 10%.

Kayak is very good website I

Kayak is very good website I like.

cheap flights from to

Competition

"Stifel Nicolaus & Co. analyst George Askew today cut his ratings on online travel sites, saying economic weakness and increasing competition will take its toll on the business."

damn right it is. it's great for us marketers though, with new guys like Impulsifly ( www.impulsifly.com.au ) getting launched every month trying to carve a specific section out of the longtail.

SideStep, the travel search

SideStep, the travel search engine, has raised $15 million in a third round of funding to help it stay competitive and to venture into other areas. The travel industry is packed. Other players offer search. But they also make money from selling travel tickets, something SideStep doesn’t do. These companies include Expedia, Travelocity. There’s Kayak, which offers a similar search engine. There are niche sites too, such as fare-prediction site Farecast and user-generated site, RealTravel. Sidestep’s funding comes from Norwest Venture Partners, and continues an incestuous trend among venture firms and the travel companies they support. Besides the Santa Clara, Calif.-based SideStep, Norwest has backed Indian tavel company Yatra, and Sulekha, another Indian company that has travel features among other things. Sidestep is probably happy to take the money, even if it knows the danger of having a VC with conflicts. It learned its lesson back in 2004, when it held several meetings with venture firm General Catalyst, during which Sidestep spilled its business strategy to the firm, only to see the firm back out and invest in competitor Kayak instead. And then there’s Accel, which has invested in Kosmix, a search engine that has a travel component, and Kayak. Other investors in Sidestep include Trident Capital, Leader Ventures and Saints Capital. In a statement, Sidestep said it wants to use the money build out media and user-generated offerings. Sidestep offers a comparison-shopping Web site, with options from more than 600 airlines, 150,000 hotels and 30,000 car rental locations worldwide. It offers vacation packages and, — via its purchase of TravelPost.com — extensive hotel reviews and travel blogs. It has more than five million users a month. Also, we shouldn’t forget that Jamis McNiven, owner of the famous VC breakfast hangout, Bucks Restaurant, is launching his own travel company, Landfrog, this quarter. ________________ Submited by : Bebes

Shifts in the travel landscape

The point you made about the 10% overlap in traffic, demonstrates that there is still growth opportunity beyond travel booking. We think about online travel as addressing 4 stages: planning, shopping, booking, and sharing. Kayak and Sidestep address shopping, and together represent a microscopic part of the of $80 billion online booking market, which in turn represents a still small penetration against the $700 billion total US travel market. Thanks for your insights on this merger and we put our take on the Kango.com blog.

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