Things like chatbots, machine learning tools, natural language processing, or sentiment analysis are applications of artificial intelligence that may one day profoundly change how we think about and transact in travel and local experiences.
Gillian Tans
Starting a business and building a product are not for the faint of heart. You have to learn to not let little disappointments get you down and to stay focused on the big picture.
We are putting a lot of investments behind building customer loyalty. We need to make sure we keep investing in the right tech that will help customers. If we keep doing that well, we will keep progressing.
Travel is a combination of the personal and the emotional.
Technology's great, but you can only be as good in technology as your people are.
The move to Internet-enable travel booking is creating massive convenience, efficiency, and savings for consumers.
Eventually, people should just say 'give me the best hotel in a certain date in a certain location.'
If you run a global business, it's so important that you understand what happens in each place, and you can't do that remotely. I don't want to go anywhere and leave and not have seen the people who work for us. That doesn't feel good.
When you start very young and you start to work, you're going to fail. That's how you learn.
Understand tipping culture. Whereas Americans tip 15-20% when dining out, most European countries don't tip, as a service charge is typically included in the bill. Make sure you're not over-tipping by doing research before traveling.
If firms were made to hire according to quotas, it might optimize the percentage of women in the industry, but that doesn't necessarily translate into more quality products for the customer.
The culture of Booking.com has been very good for me because it's a culture where you're allowed to fail. When you think about taking risks, if it's OK to fail, you actually do a lot more. And you learn a lot quicker.
We are a bottom-up culture, and we need a communications platform that can facilitate that.
Every customer is different, and the travel experience is completely fluid, but the end goal is to find the best solutions.
A long time ago, we had to build interfaces to connect with other companies, and I thought that was a great idea. The company had to pay a lot of money to build it and basically launched it, but our whole operating system almost broke. So, we couldn't continue it. In the end, I had to go on the train to Paris to explain that I had spent millions.
In the beginning of Booking.com, we were travelling around Europe a lot. Sometimes we'd do five cities in a week.
Both business and leisure travellers are enjoying unprecedented levels of choice.
Tech is a key driver of social and economic change, and around the world, women like me are transforming businesses, industries, and communities.
There are a lot of threats out there. Amazon can enter the travel market. Google could enter the accommodation space. But that is not something that we actively focus on.
My mother was from an entrepreneurial family and very creative. She always pushed me to take risks, to do things I wouldn't have thought of.
There is a misperception among job seekers that opportunities for women in tech exist only for those with coding or engineering experience. To be sure, technology firms do need women with these skills, but they also need women with expertise in other areas, like marketing and finance.
Traveling is an experience that you can always carry with you. It makes the world come together more so we understand each other better.
Traveling changes you as a person. If you buy something, it's so different than if you put your money into traveling.
As a company powered by technology and digital innovation, Booking.com believes strongly in ensuring equal access and opportunity for all within the technology sector.
And as a woman, you need to take risks. Don't stay too long in your own swim lane.
There are a few books I can recommend, but one you should read for sure is 'Do More Faster,' a book full of advice for young entrepreneurs. Looking back at the early days of Booking.com, I recognize a lot of things that feature in this the book - like 'fail fast, learn quickly.'
China's domestic travel is increasing, and that's why we are building our teams here in China.
We have built out the diversity of our product teams, and we saw the caliber of our testing and experimentation improve significantly.
I'm a master at getting as much in a day as possible.
We will invest more into China to make sure that our brand gets more known to Chinese customers.
Education is crucial in determining which profession women will choose, so it's important to spark interest in technologies at an early age.
Recognizing that female participation in technology is lower than it should be, we are committed to bolstering female tech talent, eliminating obstacles and challenges they face, and fostering diversity.
We know that companies which have more women in leadership positions have a better performance.
Instead of traveling on a weekend, begin your trip on a Tuesday or Wednesday, which are often the cheapest days to fly. Being flexible with timing can help with savings.
An American customer can book in English all over the world, but also, somebody from Japan or China can book in their own language everywhere. We translate all of our content into these languages, and that's quite unique. We service our direct customers - the innkeepers - as well in their own language.
Whether you are checking luggage or bringing a carry-on, always weigh and measure your bags to make sure they are below the airline's size and weight restrictions. Excess baggage fees can be costly. Avoid all baggage fees by only bringing a carry-on.
As CEOs or board members, women are still underrepresented, and that gap is actually growing.
One in five of our customers books for business. But it's scaling very fast. As a result, we have tools for medium or small-sized companies to allow them set their price and give basic reporting functionality.
We have many accommodation owners - people who own small hotels, villas and bungalows - and the digital economy has opened up a world of possibility for these business owners. Now, they can sell to and communicate with people around the world, and where Booking.com comes in is to help these accommodation owners adapt to the digital world.
People always travel no matter what.
From the early days, Booking.com has been disruptive. Our aim is to create the best product for our customers, and we do that through constant innovation and testing.
As a company, we believe in free and open borders. We feel this best facilitates the exchange of cultural values and ideas.
India has a sizeable chunk of the Asian travel market - both inbound and outbound travel.
We believe in global scalability with local relevance.
There are more and more properties joining us to benefit from and leverage our global online marketing expertise.
On the one hand, you have markets such as Singapore and Thailand, with an extremely strong inbound booker market and a well-developed tourism industry. You also have markets that are just opening up to tourists, like Myanmar, that have massive growth potential and then markets that are extremely fragmented within themselves such as Indonesia.
India is a fast-growth market and is developing a lot. We continue to increase our partners here and make investments.
From our earliest days, Booking.com has been deploying technology to help strip the friction out of travel.
Friction still exists in travel, and we are on a quest to go even further to make the entire experience - from planning to staying and beyond - even easier with technology.
Employing women is good for business.