In the industry's quest to capture off-channel bookings, itinerary
management software company Traxo has combined its existing data aggregation and
email parsing skills with a new way to access corporate clients' emails. It's
called Traxo Filter and went on the market on Wednesday.
There's no email forwarding by travelers or the need to
enter loyalty credentials; you'll never capture all the bookings that way, CEO
Andres Fabris said. There are no direct connections with suppliers; the task of
setting up partnerships with every supplier would be never ending. Nor does
Traxo's process require it to access corporates' email systems (see sidebar below).
So how does Traxo do it?
Traxo's Previous Attempts to Produce Comprehensive, Real-Time Trip Data
Without mentioning Concur TripLink by name, Traxo CEO Andres
Fabris noted, "There's a solution on the market that attempts to get you
real-time insight into the data by integrating with suppliers." Of Traxo's
path to providing full and timely information about a company's travel spend
and traveler whereabouts, he added, "We started going down that
path."
To that end, Traxo created connections with suppliers like
United, Lufthansa and Booking.com, but the process was dragging. "We're
like, 'These things are taking a long time.' We thought the critical aspect of
a solution like this is that it has to be comprehensive. It has to give you
nearly all suppliers. Otherwise, you end up managing multiple systems and you
haven't really solved the problem." Fabris estimated that "nearly all
suppliers" add up to 200 or 300. Even if Traxo set up a direct connection
with a different supplier every month, "that's 200 to 300 months of
integrations," he said.
There's another approach Traxo tried: gaining
permission to access corporate clients' email systems. After testing and trying
to sell corporations on the payoffs of collecting comprehensive data, Fabris
said, the company realized "it was just a nonstarter from a data security
perspective." He explained, "A company is not going to let a third
party come in through their corporate firewall, read all of their emails and
promise to only send themselves … the travel-related emails."
Traxo sends clients a kind of starter kit: a license, some
rules—"not even code"—and a two-page how-to that directs an IT
administrator where in the mail server to drop those email server rules. Once
that's done—it can take 20 minutes, Fabris claimed—the mail server monitors for
messages arriving from Traxo's database of supplier email addresses that send
confirmation emails. He said that list covers 90 percent of suppliers, and subscribers
will receive software updates with more senders as Traxo builds its list.
As confirmation emails come in, the email server
automatically blind copies those messages to a unique Traxo email address set
up for each client. From there, the same tech Traxo has used for eight years to
organize travel itineraries then digests HTML, text and PDF content, including changes,
cancellations and refunds. "It's luckily something else that we didn't
have to go off and build just given our DNA growing up as an itinerary
management tool," Fabris said.
Then Traxo Filter adds the data to the Traxo Connect dashboard,
part of the software provider's existing platform. Traxo Connect still can take
information from bookings that employees forward or from supplier direct connections.
Traxo Filter can either supplement or replace those data feeds. Via the dashboard,
travel managers can see real-time spend, as well as traveler whereabouts.
Fabris noted that non-technical people can handle the data, which can be viewed
in list or map form and filtered by traveler, date and location. The system
also monitors flight statuses. Travel managers can report on the information
they find in the dashboard, download it and share it with service providers
like re-shopping tools, risk management systems, expense reporting systems and
business intelligence tools.
"The other folks that we've seen trying to solve this
problem [without requiring action by the traveler, such as forwarding booking
confirmations] are doing analytics and reporting and leakage analysis based on
data that comes out of expense reports or the general ledger," Fabris said.
"And in both of those cases, it's 60 days old. It's after the fact; it's
already been purchased, traveled, spent. It's just kind of interesting
information, rather than actionable insights."
Traxo Filter works with Microsoft Exchange, Outlook 365 and
Gmail-based systems, which cover the critical mass of corporate email accounts.
If a client uses a different email system, Traxo will add it, he said.
Traxo is selling Traxo Filter to corporates for $1,000 plus $1 per
transaction or for $5,000 a month plus $0.50 per transaction. Fabris said,
though, that Traxo will focus on reselling relationships with travel management
companies.
What Else Is Coming to
Traxo Filter
What travel managers do with the data in real time is up to them.
Travel managers could re-shop bookings, try to convert them to corporate
negotiated rates or even reward travelers for bookings that save money, Fabris
suggested. "We take an agnostic view. We just say, 'The corporate travel
manager ought to know,' and we leave it at that."
Traxo does plan, however, to add tools to make it easier for
travel managers to move data to suppliers. The company has 20 partnerships in
place with duty of care providers like Anvil and iJet, expense providers like
Chrome River and Coupa and business intelligence tools like DVI. "We're
going to continue to build that out," he said, alluding to a marketplace
of suppliers that could access Traxo's data at the behest of common clients, encompassing
such additional categories as value-added-tax reclamation providers.
Traxo Filter's road map also includes benchmarking that will
help travel managers see at a glance whether an off-channel booking performed
well against the corporation's negotiated rates. Those shaded in red, for
example, might be X percent over the benchmark for that destination on that
date. Travel managers could use that information, for example, to discuss the
anomaly with the traveler, to try to apply a corporate negotiated rate or to re-shop
the booking. Thus, re-shopping tools also are among the third-party partnership
integrations Traxo is establishing.
"We'll specialize in all of the data and then leave all
these additional little services to the folks that provide those services
today," Fabris said. "We'll provide some light-visualization tools,
but if they want to take it to the nth degree and render this within a Domo or
a Tableau, we'll have these little connectors that push the data out to those
various companies."
Traxo Expansion Plans
Fabris told BTN Traxo's technology works across
38 languages, though sales and marketing have centered on North America. The
company will make a Europe push in 2018 and an Asia/Pacific push in 2019, and it has started to put people on the ground in those markets.