Hopper is initiating a massive growth strategy fueled by a
$100 million Series D financing round announced today.
The funding was led by OMERS Ventures, with participation
from existing investors Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, Accomplice, Brightspark
Ventures, Investissement Québec, BDC Capital IT Venture Fund and new investor
Citi Ventures. It brings the company’s total funding to date to $184 million.
The mobile app combines data and artificial intelligence to predict
future prices for flights and accommodations, which can all be booked in the
app. The app has sold nearly $1 billion in bookings since it launched in 2015.
With the new funding, co-founder and CEO Fred Lalonde says it will focus
on expanding the app’s presence globally, starting with Europe, Australia and
Latin America, developing its use of AI and doubling the size of its workforce
to about 400.
Global growth
The app has been available in 120 countries around the world
since it launched, and today about 25% of its sales originate from outside
North America, but Lalonde says that growth has been organic. Now Hopper is
working to bring on more international carriers, including low-cost airlines,
to ensure the app has the lowest fares on all routes.
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“We’ve been playing a strategy of getting all of our
inventory, all of the rates, all the last carriers, no matter how small or big
or off the global distribution systems, making sure we have a global, full
market view in order to become the best transactional platform in the world on
mobile,” Lalonde says.
“The proceeds from this fundraising are about building
Hopper into a global mobile brand - I would say the number-one mobile travel
marketplace in the world. And when you look at where the trend is, I can see us
in the course of a year or two being more than 50% international in terms of
sales. That would not be crazy given that it’s already become a quarter in a
short period of time.”
Lalonde says this latest funding round was prompted in part
by the early success they have had in boosting the app’s international presence,
with year-over-year growth between 100 and 300% in key markets in Europe and
Australia.
“We are now at 30 million installs,” Lalonde says. “I have a
personal goal of getting us to 250 million installs in the next three to five
years.”
Along with increasing inventory, the new funding will be
used to improve the digital experience for international users, by adding languages - Hopper is currently only available in English - and global payment options.
Smarter service
The new funding will also be used to accelerate development
of Hopper’s use of AI and machine learning.
The company says one-quarter of the bookings done in the app
are the result of AI - meaning they are trips suggested by the app but that the
user did not explicitly search.
“We spent a lot of time and money building our platform
before we launched,” Lalonde says.
The proceeds from this fundraising are about building Hopper into a global mobile brand - I would say the number-one mobile travel marketplace in the world.
Fred Lalonde - Hopper
“Our core advantage, why Hopper is growing so fast, why we are
able to compete against the giants - Booking.com and Expedia and Ctrip - is
because of our data and AI.”
As the app’s database of historic prices continues to grow,
along with the addition of new product inventory and more users, Lalonde says that AI will become even smarter and better able to guide purchasing decisions.
For the upcoming holiday season, Lalonde says it has “embarked
on a massive project” to tweak how the app’s predictive engine functions so it
can provide better results for holiday travelers.
And new uses of the AI are in the works.
“The new frontier we are working on now is, What if it was
cross-category? What can we infer from your air shopping behavior to inform
your hotel purchase?" he says.
“Does the behavior in one part of the purchase influence the
other? And the answer is yes, absolutely, it’s a very, very high predictor. So
as you are looking at air, we can figure out what you’ll want in lodging and
not only give better recommendations but also different pricing.”
Lodging
Hopper added hotel price prediction and booking in October
2017, starting with New York and gradually rolling out in 20 markets around
North America.
The company says it currently has about 1,600 properties in
the app, but that number will soar to 100,000 worldwide by the end of 2018 and to
200,000 by the end of 2019.
“Hotels is still tiny compared to air,” Lalonde says.
“But I think we’ve found a really interesting model. What we
are finding is that selling long leads - not last-minute, what a HotelTonight
would be doing – selling long leads over the mobile app is absolutely possible.”
The initial focus is creating an inventory of traditional
hotels, but Lalonde says it's not ruling out home-sharing. “Given that our user base is primarily millennials,
alternate accommodations is of interest to us.”
In the future, Hopper may also add air and hotel packages since data can be used to predict a user’s lodging interests based on
their air queries and vice versa.
App-only
Lalonde says Hopper’s unique position as a mobile-only app product is part of what has driven high user engagement.
“Because it’s your phone, because it’s in your pocket,
because you have push notifications installed, you’re talking about seeing that
user every four to five days,” he says.
He says mobile has allowed the company to pull customers “out
of all existing brands. Every metasearch site, all the search sites, all of the
OTAs, we view as competitive.”
“Once somebody has bought from Hopper there is a one out of
two chance we become the starting point for their travel journey,” Lalonde
says.
“They will not go back to Google to start. They may price
check us on Google Flights or Google Hotel Finder, but Hopper has become the
place they start their travel intent. The only way we are able to pull that
off is because we are mobile-only.”
As Hopper works to grow its customer base, Lalonde says it may explore allowing users to input payment information such as credit card
numbers on the web, to serve customers that are more comfortable typing
on a laptop than on a phone.
“We are just out there to acquire the largest user base and
deliver the best possible marketplace to our users,” he says.
REGISTER NOW! Hopper, Expedia Group, Booking Holdings, Ctrip, MakeMyTrip and others speak at The Phocuswright Conference 2018
Click
here for details, tickets and the program for this year's event in Los Angeles, November 13-15.