Transcript
In 1998, Priceline had pioneered the revolutionary 'Name Y Your our Own Price' pricing system that was the inverse of the of the customer-retailer relationship. Some Some analysts had raised concerns that a business model based on the path-breaking NYOP system might not be sustainable. Priceline had since moved beyond the NYOP system by providing customers customers with the option of choosing from a list of published prices for its travel products and services as well. In a bold move in end2007, the company company permanently eliminated all booking fees on published airfares taking the analysts and competitors by surprise.
Business
Model
patented Demand Collection System -- the patented "name-your-pric "name-your-price" e" model pioneered by Priceline.com. Prospective buyer makes makes a final (binding) bid for a specified good or service, se rvice, and the broker broker arranges fulfillment.
What
are the core components of Priceline.com's business model
The fundamental concept of Priceline.com's model lies in its reverse auction pricing system which allows its users the ability to find discount travel related items by placing bids. Priceline's model is geared toward industries which have rapidly aging inventory, items such as airplane tickets, hotel room reservations, and car rentals. The company is not a direct supplier of these services; it functions more as a middleman, providing price quotes from various major hotel chains, airlines, and rental car companies. Its name your own price system is geared more toward bargain hunters seeking low prices as selecting the brand of hotel and airline using the Priceline system is not possible
Do
you think Priceline will ultimately succeed or fail? Why?
While
Priceline initially started out running in the red unable to generate a profit running at a loss of upwards of $1 billion during its infancy, it has since reached the point of profitability. Since its turnaround in 2003 it has been able to reach and maintain sustained profitability. This is due to the demand from consumers for discount travel tickets and hotels. The reverse auction model which Priceline uses to link the sellers with buyers is what has made it profitable. However, during times of recession luxury items are usually sacrificed by the consumer and thus the impending recession will have a significant impact on the travel and tourism industry which in turn could cut into Priceline's profitability
How has Priceline (and similar online services) impacted the travel services industry? The use of these business models has given the travel services industry more flexibility in arranging for the sales of its services. This allows vendors the opportunity to gain additional revenue by selling its products for below retail prices without having to change its existing pricing structure. It also allows the general population an alternate means to book more affordable vacations
Priceline core business model appears to have remained relatively the same to the 2005 version of itself. The same fundamental sections which appear on its website flights, hotels, rental cars, vacation packages, and cruise services remain at the heart of Priceline's business model to this day. Its competition comes from other online middleman companies which exist and operate to this day such as Expedia.com, Travelocity.com, Hotels.com, Orbitz.com, and Cheaptickets.com. According to Forbes.com Priceline reported its 2007 4 th quarter earnings at $334.9 million a 28.8% increase from over a year ago. Its gross profit for the quarter was $160.2 million a 60.9% increase from the previous year. The update article outlines the recent acquisitions made by Priceline as well as its earnings per share and overall profitability during the four quarters of 2007. It also details various strategic moves made by the company to gain and edge over competitor travel booking sites such as Expedia, Travelocity, and Orbitz.
With
this in mind the core components of Pricelines business model are based around their pioneered and patented reverse auction pricing model which is a unique offering within the travel market place. This innovative model allows consumers to purchase travel services at a discounted prices by trading off brand and features. Michael Rappa explains that Priceline uses a business model known as brokerage model where a business creates their own market by bringing buyers and sellers together. Priceline operate as the middle man or broker bringing the two parties together in a seamless and friendly manner. Priceline receives its revenue based on the difference between the Name your own price amount entered by the customer and the amount charged by the service provider such as the airline.
During Pricelines early
start up days they experimented with variations of its business model by offering groceries and gasoline, which initially had negative impacts on profitability. However Pricelines management were able to adapt and focus their model so that it started producing significant returns. This is evident by the fact that Priceline improved from a $1 billion loss to a profit of over $10 million between the years of 1999 to 2003. Since 2003 Priceline has continued to be profitable and grow, increasing its stock price over 27 times from its lowest to slightly under $200 USD in 2010 and is now sporting a market valuation of $8.8 billion. Pricelines revenues are expected to grow 20 percent in 2010, compared with 11 percent at Expedia and 4 percent at Orbitz. If the past few years are any indication, maybe, just maybe, bad times arent that bad for Priceline . Additionally Priceline recently announced a ground breaking hotel price guarantee that pays customers a nominal reward if they find a lower price than the one offered by Priceline. As part of their expansion and growth they recently acquired the multinational car hire reservation service TravelJigsaw to provide more their value added services to their customers. (Priceline Investor Relations) Although the travel industry is saturated and has ever increasing competition, the population of the internet and those willing to buy goods and services over the web also continues to grow. This should also assist Priceline with its well known and strong brand advertising to help maintain their reasonably dominant market share.
How has Priceline and
similar online services impacted the travel services industry
Priceline and other online services have changed the travel industry by acting as the go between providing consumers access to deals with travel providers such as airlines or hotels therefore reducing the layers of separation and the need for agents and broker fees. Additionally Priceline and similar services have provided an avenue for travel services to clear excess inventory and receive revenue from airline seats or hotel rooms which would have otherwise remain unfilled. These efficiencies have reduced the costs to travel providers such as cuts in the booking fees airlines pay distributors. Ultimately lowering costs to consumers. Services like Priceline have caused a shift in consumer demographics to consumers with a short attention span, and simple easy to use (user friendly) facilities (Business trends in the travel industry). Additionally opening up a new demographic of consumers who previously could not afford airline travel. Niche travel deals allowing travel services such as airlines and hotels to offer fairly unique one off deals to sell just a few remaining seats or rooms. Without the online services of companies like Priceline it would be difficult if not impossible for travel service providers to advertise these niche deals without impacting their normal retail offering. As Priceline and other similar services aggregate airline and hotel services they turn them into commodities where people only shop based on price. Brand and other features become non existent when products and services are aggregated against each other purely based on price
Has Pricelines business model changed since 2007? And if
so how? Who are its strongest competitors? Is it profitable or operating at a loss?
Priceline has changed its business model since 2007 focusing more on traditional online reservation services where customers have the flexibility to select from brand and features rather than their more restrictive and discount Name your own price model. The Priceline website is now organized much like those of its competitors. Customers can still choose to bid, but this is no longer the only option. More alternatives, up to a point, usually increase customer satisfaction and this has been the case for Priceline, now up 6% to an all-time high ACSI score of 76. Value for money remains high, strengthened by elimination of booking fees, while service quality has improved. Alongside the improvement in customer satisfaction, Pricelines stock value soared by nearly 200% in 2009 (ACSI). Priceline also continues to strive towards providing customers with a superior user-friendly service such as the launch in Jan 2009 of a The Travel Ekspert blog providing advice to consumers and also offering over 2.5 million hotel reviews (PhoCusWright). As detailed by Answers.com Pricelines strongest competitors would be: Expedia Orbitz Worldwide Travelocity As shown in the direct competitor comparison chart provided here by Yahoo Finance Priceline is well above the industry average and competing quite strongly against its direct competitors. However due to the fact that Travelocity is a privately held company they can not be included in the comparison and their position is relatively unknown. Priceline is currently operating at a profit which can be seen in these key statistics published on Answers.com Key numbers for fiscal year ending December, 2009: Sales: $2,338.2M One year growth: 24.1% Net income: $489.5M Income growth: 153.0% Employee growth: 12.9%
This profit and growth is quite positive given that the world has recently been through a global financial crisis and is still recovering from this and the fact that during this time travel generally takes a lower priority. Given this Priceline is doing all the right things to keep consumers traveling .
Gross
Booking Domestic
$4,500
International** Total
$4,000 $3,500 $3,000 $2,500 $2,000 $1,500 $1,000 $500 $0 2Q08
3Q08
4Q08
1Q09
2Q09
3Q09
4Q09
1Q10
2Q10
3Q10
Domestic
International**
Total
2Q08
$872
1,238
$2,110
3Q08
$800
1,251
$2,051
4Q08
$689
792
$1,481
1Q09
$851
1,092
$1,943
2Q09
$964
1,415
$2,379
3Q09
$999
1,724
$2,723
4Q09
$831
1,433
$2,264
1Q10
$989
1,975
$2,964
2Q10
$1,154
2,256
$3,410
3Q10
$1,121
2,885
$4,006
Gross Booking $4,500 $4,000 $3,500 $3,000 $2,500
Agency
$2,000
Merchant**
$1,500
Total
$1,000 $500 $0 2Q08 3Q08 4Q08 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10
Agency
Merchant**
Total
2Q08
$1,657
453
2110
3Q08
$1,604
447
2051
4Q08
$1,108
373
1481
1Q09
$1,470
474
1944
2Q09
$1,825
555
2380
3Q09
$2,131
592
2723
4Q09
$1,766
498
2264
1Q10
$2,374
591
2965
2Q10
$2,683
727
3410
3Q10
$3,168
838
4006
Growth Yr/Yr 90.0% 80.0% 70.0% 60.0% 50.0%
Domestic
International
40.0%
Total
30.0% 20.0% 10.0% 0.0% 2Q08 3Q08 4Q08 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10
Domestic
International
Total
2Q08
59.2%
80.1%
70.9%
3Q08
32.8%
58.6%
47.4%
4Q08
31.1%
16.5%
22.9%
1Q09
18.1%
5.3%
10.5%
2Q09
10.6%
14.3%
12.8%
3Q09
24.9%
37.8%
32.8%
4Q09
20.6%
81.0%
52.9%
1Q10
16.2%
80.8%
52.5%
2Q10
19.6%
59.5%
43.3%
3Q10
12.2%
67.3%
47.1%
Growth
Agency/Merchent
90.0% 80.0% 70.0% 60.0% 50.0%
Agency
40.0%
Merchant
30.0%
Total
20.0% 10.0% 0.0% 2Q08 3Q08 4Q08 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10
Agency
Merchant
Total
2Q08
80.2%
43.6%
70.9%
3Q08
53.8%
28.3%
47.4%
4Q08
21.4%
27.5%
22.9%
1Q09
7.3%
21.9%
10.5%
2Q09
10.1%
22.4%
12.8%
3Q09
32.9%
32.6%
32.8%
4Q09
59.4%
33.5%
52.9%
1Q10
61.5%
24.8%
52.5%
2Q10
47.0%
31.1%
43.3%
3Q10
48.7%
41.4%
47.1%
Units
Sold Hotel Room-Nights Rental Car Days Airline Tickets
30.0
25.0
20.0
15.0
10.0
5.0
2Q08 3Q08 4Q08 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10
Hotel RoomNights
Rental Car Days Airline Tickets
2Q08
10.9
2.8
1.4
3Q08
11.4
2.3
1.2
4Q08
9.1
2.2
1.1
1Q09
12.8
3.0
1.5
2Q09
15.7
3.2
1.6
3Q09
17.9
2.6
1.5
4Q09
14.6
2.4
1.3
1Q10
20.0
3.0
1.5
2Q10
23.2
4.3
1.6
3Q10
27.5
5.1
1.5
Growth 120.0% 100.0% 80.0% 60.0%
Hotel Room-Nights Rental Car Days
40.0% 20.0% 0.0% -20.0%
Airline Tickets
Hotel RoomNights
Rental Car Days
Airline Tickets
2Q08
50.2%
23.6%
98.2%
3Q08
43.6%
-0.2%
44.8%
4Q08
38.0%
11.1%
43.7%
1Q09
36.4%
15.4%
28.0%
2Q09
44.0%
15.0%
13.9%
3Q09
56.3%
11.6%
30.2%
4Q09
59.9%
6.6%
16.2%
1Q10
56.8%
-0.9%
2.8%
2Q10
48.2%
32.0%
4.1%
3Q10
54.1%
97.3%
-4.6%
$1,200.0 $1,000.0 $800.0 $600.0 $400.0 $200.0 $0.0
Revenue Gross Profit
Revenue
Gross Profit
2Q08
$514.0
$253.7
3Q08
$561.6
$316.1
4Q08
$406.0
$205.1
1Q09
$462.1
$208.3
2Q09
$603.7
$305.2
3Q09
$730.7
$434.0
4Q09
$541.8
$313.2
1Q10
$584.4
$319.1
2Q10
$767.4
$445.3
3Q10
$1,001.8
$666.2
Growth 70.0% 60.0% 50.0% 40.0% Revenue 30.0%
Gross Profit
20.0% 10.0% 0.0% 2Q8 3Q8 4Q8 1Q9 2Q9 3Q9 4Q9 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10
Revenue
Gross Profit
2Q8
44.4%
61.4%
3Q8
34.6%
56.2%
4Q8
21.3%
28.0%
1Q9
14.6%
15.0%
2Q9
17.5%
20.3%
3Q9
30.1%
37.3%
4Q9
33.4%
52.7%
1Q10
26.5%
52.7%
2Q10
27.1%
45.9%
3Q10
37.1%
53.5%