Two
of the travel industry’s leading sources of data and analysis regarding consumer
behavior and market trends are teaming up.
AirDNA,
a global authority on short-term rental data, has acquired Arrivalist, a
location intelligence platform for marketers primarily at tourism boards as
well as at hotels, attractions and other industry stakeholders in the United
States.
Financial
terms of the acquisition are not being disclosed.
Arrivalist
will now become a product within AirDNA’s suite of solutions, and the 25-person
Arrivalist team will join AirDNA. Arrivalist founder and CEO Cree Lawson becomes AirDNA’s
futurist and head of destination advocacy.
In
early
2022, private equity firm Alpine Investors acquired AirDNA for an
undisclosed amount. The company now sits within Predictis – Alpine’s platform
for data software businesses across multiple verticals.
AirDNA
CEO Demi Horvat, who moved into
that role last fall, said the company has been considering mergers and acquisitions
to fuel growth since becoming part of Alpine’s portfolio.
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And
AirDNA was already working with Arrivalist as the provider of short-term rental
data for its “Arrivalist Lodging” product, launched in 2021 to provide insights
on hotels, vacations rentals and stays with friends and family – all patterns
that were shifting during the pandemic.
From
there, as Lawson described it, alignment on shared values of data integrity and
client-centricity, combined with the market opportunity, “pulled the two
companies together.”
“This
is no longer a one-stay-fits-all industry," Lawson said. "The total overnight economy has
shifted, and we’re seeing vacation rentals that look like hotels, hotels that
look like vacation rentals, hybrid models – the only remedy for this kind of
complexity is sharper insights. And these two companies, combined, have a
unique opportunity to answer the questions our clients will be asking 10 years
from now.”
Horvat said, from a product perspective, the
combination of data sets – and data scientists – will provide valuable
intelligence for clients, which is more critical than ever as historical data
is less applicable.
“With COVID and all the changes that brought for this industry, I think it shined
a light on just how important it is to understand the new patterns that have
arisen and that are so different from the way things used to be,” she said.
“The blending of
leisure and business travel, people rediscovering the outdoors and going to
national parks more … the differences in international versus domestic tourism
- all of those things are changes in patterns of movement that the Arrivalist
data set can shine a light on.”
Cultural alignment
The two companies also share similar
back-stories. Lawson founded Arrivalist in 2011, spurred by the realization
that smartphones – which were suddenly in everyone’s pocket – made it possible
to track the link between ad exposure and the user’s location.
The blending of leisure and business travel, people rediscovering the outdoors and going to national parks more … the differences in international versus domestic tourism - all of those things are changes in patterns of movement that the Arrivalist data set can shine a light on.
Demi Horvat - AirDNA
The company never took in venture capital – as Lawson said, they have been “fortunate
to be funded by happy customers over the last 12 years” – and now works with
more than 200 travel marketers including 100 cities, 40 states and four of the
top theme parks in the U.S.
In 2015, Scott Shatford founded AirDNA
similarly because of emerging product – not smartphones but Airbnb. After developing
a growing portfolio of rental properties, Shatford recognized the need for
property managers to understand their competitive landscape to determine rates
and maximize revenue. AirDNA now captures data on more than 10 million listings
– from property managers, channel managers and individual hosts - in more than
120,000 markets around the world.
“It’s a very
natural fit because both companies were industry pioneers and first movers in
their space,” Horvat said.
“From a culture perspective, the companies were both primarily bootstrapped, scrappy, have that culture of
innovation.”
Through the
acquisition, the AirDNA and Arrivalist’s data platforms will combine into a
unified dashboard solution, which they said will provide “a comprehensive view
of the short-term rental market in any destination, enabling [destination management organizations] to measure
the effectiveness of their marketing campaigns with attribution tracking,
gaining insights into the entire overnight economy … and differentiating
between pass-through visitors and travelers specifically visiting their
destination.”
And Lawson said the
union of the two companies is also reflective of a larger trend.
“We’re watching
the walls between different travel data sets collapse. It used to be enough to
have one researcher with five logins to five data sets. Call that travel data
1.0.,” he said.
“This marks in my
mind the beginning of travel data 2.0 - where you are integrating, not
aggregating, data sets in one company to give clients more value out of a
single login.”
According to Phocuswright manager of research and innovation Mike
Coletta the acquisition is also an indication that short-term rentals are an
essential sector that affects the overall travel industry.
“This is a sign of the maturing of the short-term rentals
market as it becomes an integral part of the lodging landscape, but it has
implications beyond the STR segment,” he said.
“DMOs, tour companies, attractions, activities and experiences, hotels and
more can benefit from the granularity of behavioral insights that the
combination of AirDNA and Arrivalist data will enable. Whether it’s marketing
campaigns or influencing tourism dispersal strategies or simply improving the
guest experience, there are a range of possibilities that this acquisition
opens up. It should also be quite illuminating for the sector to gain a deeper
understanding of the impact of events, attractions and media campaigns on STR
stays.”