Lufthansa Group announced a new distribution strategy on Tuesday that
de-emphasizes the global distribution channel in favor of direct bookings on its
online consumer portals and its new travel agent portal. Beginning Sept. 1,
Lufthansa will impose a €16 booking fee on tickets purchased through GDSs.
The fee
would help Lufthansa counter increased distribution costs that arrive as the
carrier works out unique new agreements with its GDS partners this summer. The
new contracts would release Lufthansa from long-standing content-parity
requirements and, instead, allow the carrier to distribute select content
through the GDS while marketing special branded fares and ancillary services
through alternative channels.
Lufthansa
claimed to have reached a deal with Amadeus that went into effect June 1 and
one with Sabre to go into effect July 1, and Lufthansa chief commercial officer
Jens Bischof told reporters on a media call on Tuesday that the carrier is
optimistic it can reach one with Travelport in the coming weeks. The BTN
Group's The Beat, however, obtained a
memo Amadeus sent to subscribers on Wednesday stating it had not reached a new
agreement and does not support Lufthansa's strategy.
While
distribution flexibility and merchandising sound attractive, freedom comes at a
price for Lufthansa—a price that the airline is passing along to the booker. The
carrier has calculated that an average GDS booking will cost it €18 under the
new agreement structure. That's higher than traditional, content-parity GDS
contracts but much higher than the €2 it would cost Lufthansa to distribute
directly on its own websites. The €16 surcharge that the carrier will impose on
GDS bookings represents the cost differential between these channels.
The Economics
Lufthansa's
e-retail goals could affect Lufthansa’s financial performance in the long term,
but the shorter term goal seems clear: to shift volume away from the GDS
channel, if possible, and increase profitability for an airline group that has
seen weak revenue growth in recent years. Lufthansa cut its 2015
operating profit target from €2.65 billion to €2 billion in mid 2014 and abandoned it entirely in October,
citing a darkening economic forecast. Having adjusted its goal for earnings before
interest and tax down to €1.5
billion for this year, Lufthansa is counting on decreased distribution costs
to close additional gaps.
“Until now, the percentage of revenue generated from the
sale of flight tickets by our airlines has continuously decreased. While other
service and system partners in the value chain are recording increasing margins
and returns, our airlines’ earnings have been compromised over time, even
though they are the actual providers of flight services,” Bischof said in a
statement.
Regarding the fee itself, Lufthansa is “just not willing to
pay the bills of others at this point,” Bischof added during Tuesday’s call.
Those bills include financial incentives awarded to travel
agencies when they meet booking-volume goals with their GDS partners. The airline industry—not
just Lufthansa—has long been disgruntled with this arrangement, viewing the distribution
fees that they alone are required to pay as subsidizing these payouts to
agencies and as a disincentive for innovation.
“We
believe the market is ready for this change,” said Bischof. “Somebody’s got to
do it.”
Market Reaction
Agency and GDS reaction to Lufthansa's announcement,
however, has been largely negative. Both pointed to the lack of transparency of
distributing only select content via the GDS and to “discriminatory” surcharges
that penalize agencies and travelers that book through GDSs.
Sabre issued the following statement: “We
stand ready to work with airlines globally that wish to sell and retail their
products through Sabre. Lufthansa’s proposed ‘distribution cost charge’ disadvantages consumers and travel agencies. The GDS is the most preferred and efficient channel for consumers and
travel agents to shop, book and
manage travel and provides consumers with transparency, choice and the ability
to comparison shop.”
Travelport, which has not yet signed an agreement with Lufthansa,
is noting its resistance: “We believe this
proposed surcharge is not in the interests of either the end-traveler or the
airline group. Meanwhile, Travelport-connected agents
worldwide can still book the full, published content from all of the Lufthansa
Group airlines (Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian Airlines and Brussels Airlines) with
no surcharges.” Though, technically, agents connected to a GDS that agreed to
Lufthansa's new structure can do the same until Sept 1.
Bischof underscored that Lufthansa does not intend to bypass
the GDS, acknowledging that GDSs account for 70 percent of its sales volume. The
carrier, however, is pursuing a direct connect strategy via the International
Air Transport Association’s New Distribution Capacity technology. Asked whether
technology-integrated direct connects to corporate booking tools or agency
desktops were up and running, Bischof responded, “We have a few that are
working,” but admitted, “We have no ready-steady-go instant solutions.”
Lufthansa's new distribution structure, therefore, leaves
corporate travel buyers and agencies two immediate options: pay the fee or book
directly on a Lufthansa Group website. Bischof remarked that Lufthansa sites
are equipped to access corporate negotiated rates and some corporate clients
have already gone this route. “We’ve been using corporate identifiers for some
time now,” he said. “It is a practice already in place,” though exact volume numbers
were unavailable.
For agents, Lufthansa offered its lhgroup-agent site as an
alternative to the GDS channel. While Lufthansa indicated the site is fully
operational, it is in a “soft launch” phase and has not yet been promoted to
the general agency community.
To many, this looks like paltry provisions.
“This new
fee will add millions of euros to the costs of corporates, and complexity,”
said Hans-Ingo Biehl, executive director of VDR, a German travel managers
association. “Lufthansa isn’t offering another channel at the moment that
allows corporates to direct connect. Lufthansa.com and the Lufthansa agent
portal are not appropriate for mass corporate bookings. The TMC provides the
ability through the GDS to compare and you can’t do that through lufthansa.com.”
The American
Society of Travel Agents issued the following alert to its members: “The
Lufthansa Group announced it is in the process of developing a new booking
method to enable its ‘sales partners’ to connect to their IT systems directly
based on IATA’s NDC standard. The exact meaning of ‘sales partners’ in this
context is unknown. IATA’s NDC is still in the development stage, though some
limited commercial implementations do exist, so the timing of the Group’s new
booking method is unclear.”
Should TMCs Have Seen This Coming?
Jörg Martin,
principal of Germany-based CTC Corporate Travel Consulting, said travel
agencies share responsibility for the current distribution predicament and that
corporate clients will pay the cost of travel management companies failing to
innovate.
“The TMCs
haven’t invested in technology to make themselves independent from the GDSs,”
said Martin. “They remain tied to the GDSs by letting them do the work of
delivering an office environment for the TMCs. The trend to reduce distribution cost has been clear
since zero commission came up. First we had commission cuts, then credit
card fees came. GDS fees were the next logical step on the road map.”
And while
Martin sympathized with Lufthansa's desire to control its own distribution
destiny, he did agree with the agencies and travel managers that the carriers did
not execute with them in mind.
“The only
complaint I have against Lufthansa is that it didn’t first establish a direct
connect into online booking engines,” he said. “Corporates understand that
airlines want to reduce their distribution costs, but let’s coordinate it. It
will be tough but eventually there will be an integrated process for delivering
direct connect content to the OBEs. There is no way large corporates can book
directly on airline websites.”
Breaking The Paradigm
Scott
Gillespie, managing partner at tClara and longtime managed travel industry
consultant, said Lufthansa’s move inevitably will throw a lot of anxiety into
the market for the next year, given its potential to redefine the commercial
relationship between agencies and GDSs, plus its potential to raise costs for
corporates that can’t book directly with Lufthansa. But, he said, plenty of
other industries tolerate exactly this type of distribution.
“The GDSs
have a valid point. It will make it harder for buyers to compare on a
like-to-like basis, but that’s not unusual in many industries," Gillespie
said. "Frankly, suppliers and distributors work together to create unique
offerings all the time. A computer is not configured in the same way at Staples
as it is at OfficeMax. Consumers tolerate it.”
The real
significance, Gillespie said, is the fact that Lufthansa and its GDS partners
were able to broker these deals at all.
“It shows
remarkable negotiation on both sides. Even if lower volumes go through the GDS,
the higher fees could make the move cost neutral for both the airline and the
GDS—if the economics were worked out,” he said. More important, "it breaks
the paradigm; the GDSs and airline found a way to agree on new commercial
terms. It gives other airlines the room to explore this type of relationship.”
Conversely, he
said, “it also gives competitors to Lufthansa the ability to play up the fact
that they didn’t go in this direction.”
On that last count, Travel Leaders Group CEO Barry Liben
predicted trouble for Lufthansa.
“Lufthansa’s announced strategy is at best disappointing and
at worst counterintuitive. Their move effectively places them at a competitive
disadvantage on airfare pricing,” he said. “Simply put, consumers who
comparatively shop on price will pay more to fly on Lufthansa. For the vast
majority of our clients, the economics will dictate that we book them either on
other carriers that serve those routes or through codeshare partners.”
Additional reporting from Jay Boehmer & Amon Cohen