Lola is going for it. Chief technology officer and founder
Paul English hinted in July about a "partnership with a company that has
thousands of agents," and now we know: Lola and mega travel management
company American Express Global Business Travel have signed a five-year
exclusive contract. That means Lola will not work with another TMC and Amex GBT won't work with a Lola competitor in the unmanaged/lightly managed travel space.
Who Lola's competitors are, though, is unclear. Asked to
name Lola's competition, English cited Concur. "We're not competing with
them directly right now, but we're very aware of them." Though it's not the
reason Lola is partnering with GBT, Lola benefits indirectly from GBT's large
share of mutual clients with Concur. "One of the things, frankly, I really
like about this partnership is: We're learning a little bit more about Concur,
and that's been good because Concur does some things that we don't do that we
want to do at some point," English said.
While Lola isn't targeting larger customers now, it is
learning from GBT what it takes to serve bigger clients, namely travel
manager-friendly software—from controlling the traveler list to implementing
rules-based policy, such as higher fare classes for executive travelers. English
was referring to something a bit beyond the Lola Works dashboard that launched
in March. "We're designing a software right now that will allow
us to do that at some point," English said. He added: "Technology usually
starts with consumers and small businesses and then makes its way into larger
enterprises, and so we really see this as the beginning of a new wave of
technology starting to permeate the entire industry."
GBT VP of marketing and product strategy Evan Konwiser noted: "That's a departure from how TMCs have traditionally
approached technology, TMCs a lot of times have oriented their technology to the most
complex need … and then tried to distill it and simplify it for simpler-need
clients. Ultimately, that can create a less superior solution." Now, Amex
GBT is "joining Lola on this mission of starting at [a] maniacally traveler-focused" solution and then collaborating to add features that could appeal
to more clients.
What's Really Happening
Here?
Lola appears to be throwing in with corporate travel tech
platforms that are challenging traditional booking tools and TMCs that have consumer-friendly technology. TripActions CEO Ariel Cohen has stated his
company will
beat out the mega TMCs. TravelPerk chief commercial officer Jean-Christophe
Taunay-Bucalo told the BTN Group's The Beat that he anticipates a "revolution"
in the short term in which digital booking platforms take over for TMCs. Tools
that enable open booking could cut into the need for booking tools: Shep can
apply light policy to internet travel shopping via a browser extension and
pop-ups and can capture those bookings for travel management and reporting, and
TMC AmTrav has reinvented
itself as an end-to-end integrated travel management platform and
has hooked
up with Traxo to bring in off-channel bookings. AmTrav, though, like TripActions still
is a TMC, and that means real, live travel agents.
Lola and GBT, too, seem to be embracing the best-of-both-worlds
model with Lola's end-to-end tech, GBT's travel agents and GBT's negotiated
content. Lola offers light travel policy capabilities, based simply on prices
and threshold. Lola has 20 agents who carry out Lola's brand of proactive
travel management. They're based in Lola's headquarters city of Boston. The
partnership with GBT helps Lola, though, scale up its customer support—globally,
even—without a massive internal investment. GBT's thousands of agents will
train on Lola's system over time.
Whose Idea Was It?
Lola and American Express Global Business Travel first
discussed a partnership at the 2016 Phocuswright conference. Neither was ready
at the time, but GBT VP of marketing and product strategy Evan Konwiser and
Lola SVP of business development Krista Pappas checked in with each other regularly over the next year. The other players already were familiar, as GBT
president Philippe Chereque and Lola founder Paul English "go way
back," according to Pappas. Konwiser also worked for a short stint at
Kayak, another company English founded. A year ago, they all went to dinner at
a steakhouse and there decided to go for it. Now, Pappas oversees a team of three—and
growing—dedicated to the GBT partnership. Konwiser said GBT and Lola spent
the past year hashing out the terms that would truly benefit both a large company
and a startup. The rest could become history.
Additionally, Lola will offer the rates and amenities GBT
negotiates with suppliers on behalf of its midmarket clients, which GBT calls
its Preferred Extras. Those rates will be available within the Lola platform to
those who buy the Lola/GBT product and to Lola's other clients, the latter
under undisclosed contract terms. "There's revenue sharing in both
directions," said Lola CEO Mike Volpe. "[GBT is] very much vested in our overall
success, not just our success" on the joint product.
Expense capability caps off the end-to-end effort. Lola "is
looking very carefully at" launching its own expense tool, English said.
That, however, is in the future. For now, it integrates with Expensify and has more third-party expense integrations coming.
"We know expense is important," he said. A proprietary expense system is another weapon in a potential
faceoff with the likes of Concur. The move mirrors some new players that have
come from the opposite direction: tech platforms that started in the expense
world and are expanding into more full-fledged travel tech platforms—namely TravelBank
and Certify. Bob Neveu, CEO of Certify, was among BTN's 2017 Most Influential
for challenging
Concur, even if from a distance. In the one-stop-shop arena, AmTrav,
too, has an internal expense tool, though it's still fine-tuning the
functionality and has not made a large-scale announcement.
Another big benefit for Lola: GBT's large sales force can
attack the small and midsize enterprise market, English noted. But there's something
else. "The other thing I like personally about this—I'm an engineer by
training, but I've always been obsessed with brands—Amex is the best brand in
business travel, for sure," he said. Lola can learn from GBT how to adjust
its brand slightly to be more business oriented, he said. Branding for the
joint product remains to be determined, but the Lola name will be involved.
"We want to be part of reinforcing the Lola brand," said Konwiser.
"We're not putting a separate brand on it."
Lola's geographic plans are to market first to companies
headquartered in the U.S., which can include companies with crossborder travelers.
English-speaking countries like Canada, Australia and the U.K. will be next,
and a full global rollout will follow. Konwiser said GBT's efforts for the
joint Lola/GBT product will be in the U.S.
Lola subscriptions start at $99 per month and
go up to $900 per month, Volpe said, noting that clients appreciate a predictable cost
for which they can budget. Konwiser said GBT will offer a deal for those who
sign up by the end of the year and then will follow "a similar but
slightly different pricing regime."
What Does That Even Mean?
American Express Global Business Travel VP of marketing and
product strategy Evan Konwiser has some thoughts about the terminology around
managed travel. He said:
This notion of what
"managed" is needs to shift a little bit. "Managed,"
"lightly managed," "unmanaged"—what does that even mean?
Does that mean there's a specific channel? Does that mean there's policies and
procedures? Even a tiny company that's unmanaged often has a T&E policy.
It's not a free-for-all. [My] notion is: almost defining a little bit what
"managed" is or moving away from that verbiage altogether. …
Ultimately, a great traveler experience through a "managed" channel
is superior to an open program. When did giving somebody a travel agent turn
bad? It's like "Oh, you have to use a travel agent." Hello? For
decades, having a travel agent was a luxury! "Oh look! Somebody to plan my
travel!" … "Managed" is not a dirty word. "Managed" is
the ability to give your travelers the benefit of a travel agent.
A venture capital-backed startup with a "really
important partner," English said, would healthily derive about 25 percent
of its business from that partner. As GBT's sales efforts scale up over the
next 12 months, GBT likely will produce a higher percentage. "Over time,
we need to grow our own direct business, and we're doing that," English
said. Volpe added that the partnership indirectly will help Lola scale up
its direct business, as well.
What GBT Gets Out of
It
While the partnership will help Lola scale, GBT has found in
Lola an entry point to lightly managed travel programs. Though not a typical
TMC target, it's a segment GBT has been eyeing for years. There are "hundreds
of thousands of them out there in the U.S. market alone and they're spending
billions on travel, and we think that's really darn attractive," Konwiser
said. "We are attracting a lot of clients that are looking at travel
management that ultimately may not sign with us because, both by association
and solution set, we are more designed around more complex and bespoke needs." The Lola partnership gives GBT a product to offer to such prospects.
Konwiser said this segment required a different approach
than TMCs' usual offerings. "There is something unique about what happens
when you can combine the complementary assets of an agile tech focus startup in
this space with one of the larger travel agencies with a travel agency DNA."
The solution, Konwiser said, "has to come from a more nimble, more agile,
more flexible, more tech savvy, more maniacally focused team than we could ever
put together." He proposed that Lola, too, needed something a little
beyond its core strength: "Through this arrangement, I think there's
a tacit acknowledgement from the Lola side that they had to approach this a
little bit differently … to really achieve the commercial greatness. … The
cocktail is a first-to-market from a solution standpoint, from an asset
standpoint and certainly from a startup-plus-big company collaboration
standpoint."
What's to Come After
the Five-Year Contract Ends?
English and Volpe maintained that Lola will not be
sold, as Volpe proclaimed, "We're going to go public and build a really
big, successful company. This industry is gigantic."
__________________________
Correction, Nov. 13, 2018: This article previously referred to a Lola
integration with Concur. Lola is not integrated with Concur. BTN
regrets the error.