Expedia Group finished 2018 on the upswing, reporting double-digit
growth in bookings, revenue, adjusted net income and adjusted EBITDA for the full year compared
to 2017.
The diverse online travel company reported gross bookings
increased 13% year-over-year to nearly $100 billion for 2018.
Revenue grew nearly as much – 12% - compared to 2017 to
$11.2 billion, split nearly evenly between domestic and international growth. Adjusted
net income was up 33% and adjusted EBITDA was up 15%.
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There are now more than one million properties on Expedia Group’s
core lodging platform. About 200,000 of those were added in 2018, roughly twice
the amount added in 2017.
More than 370,000 of the properties on the platform are
integrated from HomeAway listings – a fraction of that brand’s total of more than
1.8 million online bookable listings.
In its earnings release, the company reports the increase in
gross bookings was driven primarily by growth in Brand Expedia, HomeAway,
Hotels.com and Expedia Partner Solutions.
HomeAway
was also the big driver of revenue – up 20% in the fourth quarter compared to
the same period a year earlier and up 29% for the year.
Lodging makes up the bulk of the Expedia Group’s revenue,
accounting for 69%, with advertising and media bringing in 10%, air 8% and all
other revenue accounting for the remaining 13%.
Global outlook
In a call with analysts to discuss the results, Expedia
Group president and CEO Mark Okerstrom highlighted the company’s focus on
becoming locally-relevant in markets around the world.
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While in the United States and Canada, Expedia Group
accounts for 13% of the total travel market, in other parts of the world it is
much less visible. It owns just 3% of the EMEA market and 2% in both Asia
Pacific and Latin America.
Okerstrom says they are working aggressively to change that,
starting with delivering better products and services for travelers in those
parts of the world.
“We’ve been, up until 15 months ago, going with really much more
of a land-grab strategy where we were expanding simultaneously, 30 to 60 countries
around the world, depending on what brand you are looking at,” he says.
“The approach now is really this focused strategy… making
sure we have incredibly easy to use websites that have great descriptions and photos,
all translated into local tone of voice, promotional offers that talk about things
that are locally relevant in a similar way that we do in the U.S.
"We’ve got all
of the lodging and inventory on our sites, we’ve got local payment types and then
we layer on good marketing with locally-relevant messages, both performance
marketing and brand channels. That’s the recipe for success.”
Direct business
The company says investments in its mobile strategy are succeeding
in driving growth and engagement.
Across its brands, Expedia Group says more than one in three
transactions were booked on mobile in 2018 and for Brand Expedia and Hotels.com
there was a nearly 50% increase in app transactions in 2018.
When asked about whether figures from a few years ago that the
company brings in about two-thirds of its customers through direct, proprietary
channels – such as its apps - chief financial officer Alan Pickerill says they
do not have an update to report at this time.
He did acknowledge they look to
balance customer acquisition through paid search channels such as Google and metasearch
while providing a quality product and service so repeat customers will buy
direct.
Okerstrom says the paid marketing is an essential driver for
customer acquisition, particularly in new markets, but they continue to work to
drive direct business.
“It’s an overall formula of, in the U.S. and our core
markets where we are locally relevant, very strong direct, proprietary channel
booking volume,” he says.
“In international markets less so, but always improving, and
the playbook is essentially to make them all look like the U.S. And we track
those metrics very closely in terms of repeat customer usage, new customers versus
existing customers, cost of customer acquisition, etc. And generally we feel
very good about the trends we are seeing there.”
For 2018, adjusted selling and marketing expenses, which
includes search engines, as well as TV, radio and print advertising and
affiliate program commissions, were up 12% over 2017.
The company says Expedia
Partner Solutions, Brand Expedia and Hotels.com accounted for the majority of
the increase in direct costs.
European unease
When asked whether the company is concerned about the coming
year due the “macro environment” in Europe, Okerstrom says that while the
travel market is “somewhat counter-cyclical” and ended 2018 in a “very stable
and healthy state,” there is still concern.
“We have seen a drop off in U.K. flight bookings – both
outbound as well as inbound. We had expected uncertainty around Brexit and just
overall uncertainty in Europe. [But] we are a very global business, so we are
broadly diversified across all of these movements,” he says.
“As we sit here right now, particularly as we look at
Europe, there is a little bit more uncertainty in the air.”
* Check out our interview with Okerstrom during The Phocuswright Conference 2018 in Los Angeles.
PhocusWire @ Phocuswright 2018 - Expedia on being better and thinking long-term