3Sixty president and chief technology officer Robyn Joliat
Extended-stay accommodation specialist
3Sixty is pushing further into managed travel, with a platform that brings
together millions of options across corporate apartments, aparthotels and hotel
partners. As more companies send employees on longer, project-based
assignments, the company is positioning its platform to fit alongside
traditional hotel programs rather than outside them. 3Sixty president and chief
technology officer Robyn Joliat spoke to BTN executive editor Julie Sickel
about how the company is working with corporate travel buyers, where it fits
into existing booking and servicing workflows, and how demand for longer stays
is changing. An edited transcript follows.
BTN: How are
you seeing demand from the corporate travel space evolve?
Robyn Joliat: We're definitely seeing more demand. Primarily, corporate housing or extended
stay was very much a relocation market. But since 2024, we've seen extended-stay
needs for business travel, outside of relocation, increase by 26.5 percent
among our customers.
Companies are sending their people to
locations for longer than that three-to-seven-night stay—anywhere from 10 or 14
or even up to 30 nights. We're helping companies establish programs in the
extended-stay space for travel that might be over 30 days.
BTN: Are you
seeing this growth in any specific industries?
Joliat: We're
definitely seeing an increase in the tech space. With everything going on
around data centers and new development, we're seeing a lot of deployment from
travel companies and corporate travel managers in the project space. That
extended-stay product becomes more relevant the longer that traveler is in a
specific location. Many companies are looking at ways to potentially save money
by having kitchens, larger spaces, a workspace within the accommodations—all
things that expand past the typical hotel room. But they're still looking for
hotel amenities, whether that be meeting space or workout facilities.
BTN: Can you
tell me more about 3Sixty's inventory?
Joliat: 3Sixty is a SaaS platform and we really are the curation to all of the product
that's out there. To date, we have about 3.4 million [units] in our product
inventory across five different product types. We've dabbled in the home space
and condos—that's really more for relocation than travel. We have corporate
apartments, a variety of aparthotels across the globe, primarily in EMEA and
APAC, and then partnerships where we've integrated hotel product through APIs,
working directly with partners like Wyndham Hotels & Resorts and HotelBeds.
We really have diversified that product, and that's what's helped drive us into
more of the travel space.
BTN: You
mentioned APIs. How do you integrate with corporate booking tools and the GDS?
Joliat: We
don't have a direct connection to the GDS. The GDS is still a very complex
beast, and a lot of companies have tried to crack that nut and not necessarily
been successful. Our approach is really to educate and allow corporate buyers
to understand what we have outside of the GDS and expose them to product they
might not see there. Instead, we've created a series of APIs that allow us to
push that information directly where [travel managers and TMCs] need it.
BTN: How does
the traveler actually book?
Joliat: It
really depends on the organization. Our system allows for a self-serve model
where the traveler goes direct. Some companies prefer to stay within their own
native system, which allows us to create a white label or an API directly back
to that system. Others have policies that are a little looser—they don't
necessarily need to mandate where travelers go, but they want governance and
compliance. We'll work with corporates to set budgets and … business rules,
which allows us to set rules around length of stay and product type. We do have
an instant book feature, though it's not across the entire product offering. It
depends on the sophistication of the supplier and how much product they have at
any given location. We do find in EMEA and APAC there is much more availability
for instant book than in the U.S.
BTN: Are you
seeing the U.S. market catch up to Europe and APAC in terms of corporate
housing?
Joliat: I do
feel like it is changing. The movement toward platforms and an aggregate model
is expanding how corporate housing owners—both regionally and locally—think.
They're seeing the value in platforms to open up revenue streams they haven't
seen before. In the U.S., they're getting out of the relocation bucket and
thinking more about travel and project business. Re-lo isn't booming like it
has in years past—it's been very inconsistent for the last several years. So to
keep their businesses vital and continue to drive new revenues, they have to
think differently. They really have no choice.
BTN: You’ve
recently introduced AI pricing tools that help travel buyers have confidence in
the platform—how does that work?
Joliat: Our
market intelligence tools look in real time at the past 60 days of market rates
and benchmark suppliers against what the market looks like, flagging them if
they're exceeding it. We envision that tool will help travel buyers in
compressed markets have true transparency and visibility to what's
happening—whether it's for specific events like the World Cup or anything that
causes compression. We're also hoping it will help set benchmarks for RFPs so
that travel managers can see in real time what market rates look like and what
they should be getting for pricing, rather than going through an elaborate
process once every one, three or five years.