Friday, November 11, 2005

Amazon, SideStep Partner for Travel Search

› › ›   ClickZ News

By Pamela Parker | November 10, 2005

Amazon.com's under-developed "Travel" section will become more content-rich early next year. Travel search engine SideStep has struck a deal to power a co-branded site in Amazon's travel store.

The agreement gives SideStep's travel and hospitality advertisers a dramatic boost in distribution. In SideStep's model, partners pay the company on a cost-per-acquisition basis when someone the search engine refers books travel. The company also offers advertising opportunities on its engine and in e-mail newsletters, but couldn't say whether those ads would appear on the Amazon.com site.

"I think they [advertisers] are going to be thrilled. This gives them so much reach," said Phil Carpenter, vice president of corporate marketing at SideStep, noting advertisers hadn't yet been briefed on the hush-hush deal. "If you look at travel providers...they are just rooting for us to succeed. They want to see the oligopoly [of online travel agencies] diversified."

SideStep's advertisers include American Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Continental Airlines, Hyatt Corporation, Best Western, National Leisure Group and Thrifty Car Rental.

Carpenter notes the deal is also be an opportunity for SideStep to get its brand in front of Amazon's customer base.

It's not clear whether SideStep is paying Amazon for the exposure or whether the two have a revenue-sharing arrangement. Neither company would disclose financial details or the duration of the agreement.

Fwd: PriceGrabber Adds Travel Vertical

Yup another entry in the 60 billion dollar race...
by Gavin O'Malley, Friday, Nov 11, 2005 6:00 AM EST
THE SHOPPING COMPARISON SITE PRICEGRABBER.COM this week expanded into travel comparison with PriceGrabber Travel. The vertical comparison site allows potential travelers to compare on-time flight ratings, inbound/outbound flight information, and hotel information from PriceGrabber's various partner travel sites including British Airways and InterContinental Hotels Group.

The move pits PriceGrabber against the likes of Orbitz, Travelocity, and Expedia--as well as large portals like Yahoo! and Google, which are vying for a piece of the online travel market. Research firm eMarketer Thursday released a report estimating that online travel would reach $65.4 billion this year.

Consistent with other vertical search models, after entering city and date information, PriceGrabber Travel displays available fares and rates for thousands of flights and hotels from many different sites. Once the results are displayed, travelers can choose from sorting options such as price, flight times, and hotel name, among others.

Information on areas ranging from hotel amenities to in-flight entertainment options is available either alone or as part of PriceGrabber's side-by-side comparison.

PriceGrabber's travel vertical also offers "FlightStats" ratings, which give a ranking of each flight's performance relative to other flight alternatives. The rating is statistically derived from on-time percentage, average delay, and the number of flights operated in the past 60 days to give an accurate measure of on-time performance for every flight.

At the end of October, Yahoo! launched a set of

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