Acquired trains its lens on the “second or third best acquisition of all-time”, Priceline’s 2005 purchase of Booking.com. Our heroes are joined by friend-of-the-show and former Jetsetter & Room 77 CEO Drew Patterson to help understand how this little-known startup from The Netherlands grew into the largest travel company in the world, with nearly $8B in annual revenue. Was this deal even better than Instagram??? We debate, hotly.
Sponsors:
ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagents Huntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntress Vanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvanta
More Acquired!:
Get email updates • with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodes Join the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store • !
© Copyright 2015-2024 ACQ, LLC
Topics covered include: • The biggest startup you’ve never heard of (in the US), Booking.com • , and its parent company Priceline (yes, the William Shatner Priceline) • Booking’s founding in Amsterdam in late 1996: by recent college graduate Geert-Jan Bruinsma • Skift.com’s Definitive Oral History of Online Travel • The travel industry's GDS's (“Global Distribution Systems”) • and the development of Sabre • • How Bruinsma raised the initial money for Booking: by emailing anyone he know who had an email address • OTAs ("Online Travel Agencies”) and how they operate; the "merchant model" versus the “agency model" • The role of search in online travel • Bill Gurley on Conversion: The Most Important Internet Metric of All • Expedia’s early flirtation with Booking, and decision not to acquire the company • Priceline head of M&A Glenn Fogel’s vision for how powerful the agency model for OTAs could become in Europe • Priceline and Glenn's 2004 acquisition of Active Hotels in the UK, followed by the 2005 acquisition of Booking for $133M and the combination of the two businesses into Booking.com • • Booking’s incredible growth in the decade since the acquisition, from less than 20M room-nights to over 500M, and $7.8B in revenue in 2016
The Carve Out:
• Ben: Scott Forstall talking about the original iPhone at the Computer History Museum • David: The Big Sick • Drew: Bloomberg’s Money Stuff by Matt Levine
Acquired trains its lens on the “second or third best acquisition of all-time”, Priceline’s 2005 purchase of Booking.com. Our heroes are joined by friend-of-the-show and former Jetsetter & Room 77 CEO Drew Patterson to help understand how this little-known startup from The Netherlands grew into the largest travel company in the world, with nearly $8B in annual revenue. Was this deal even better than Instagram??? We debate, hotly.
Sponsors:
ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagents Huntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntress Vanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvanta
More Acquired!:
Get email updates • with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodes Join the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store • !
© Copyright 2015-2024 ACQ, LLC
Topics covered include: • The biggest startup you’ve never heard of (in the US), Booking.com • , and its parent company Priceline (yes, the William Shatner Priceline) • Booking’s founding in Amsterdam in late 1996: by recent college graduate Geert-Jan Bruinsma • Skift.com’s Definitive Oral History of Online Travel • The travel industry's GDS's (“Global Distribution Systems”) • and the development of Sabre • • How Bruinsma raised the initial money for Booking: by emailing anyone he know who had an email address • OTAs ("Online Travel Agencies”) and how they operate; the "merchant model" versus the “agency model" • The role of search in online travel • Bill Gurley on Conversion: The Most Important Internet Metric of All • Expedia’s early flirtation with Booking, and decision not to acquire the company • Priceline head of M&A Glenn Fogel’s vision for how powerful the agency model for OTAs could become in Europe • Priceline and Glenn's 2004 acquisition of Active Hotels in the UK, followed by the 2005 acquisition of Booking for $133M and the combination of the two businesses into Booking.com • • Booking’s incredible growth in the decade since the acquisition, from less than 20M room-nights to over 500M, and $7.8B in revenue in 2016
The Carve Out:
• Ben: Scott Forstall talking about the original iPhone at the Computer History Museum • David: The Big Sick • Drew: Bloomberg’s Money Stuff by Matt Levine
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