Thursday, October 31, 2019

Darren Huston Serving As Executive Chairman

Slickspaces brings automation & technology to both guests and hosts at vacation rental properties through things like smart locks and voice-led tools.

CEO Darren Huston serving as executive chairman, a new funding round and integration with online travel agencies and the likes of Airbnb, Slickspaces can look at the market at a global scale.

Monday, October 21, 2019

Paul Viollis on TV Tango

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Darren Huston, The Leader In Travel Service Market

President and CEO , one of the world’s leading group of online travel brands, The Priceline Group.

After making ripples in the travel services sector with the acquisition of Buuteeq, a digital marketing platform for hotels worldwide, Huston went a step further sealing the deal to also add OpenTable to the group’s list of subsidiaries in a deal worth $2.6 billion last month.
Darren Huston has been a leader in the travel services market since joining The Priceline Group in 2011. Previously he spent 7+ years at Microsoft in various positions, namely President and CEO of the companies operations in Japan.

He has also been Senior Vice President at Starbucks where he headed up their product development in the late 1990s. A lot of experience to share when he comes to Dublin in November.

Friday, October 18, 2019

Darren Huston Interview on Acquiring Homeaway with Skift

Priceline Group CEO says his company didn’t get involved when HomeAway put itself up for sale because “we’re quite picky” and HomeAway’s model of allowing vacation rental owners to wait 24 hours before confirming a booking and charging travelers a booking fee “just didn’t fit us.”

Expedia Inc. announced that it would acquire HomeAway for $3.9 billion in cash and stock. Asked whether the Priceline Group got involved in that sales process, said: “No. Although we’ve talked to them for years. We were very much aware of it. We knew kind of how it was going. We did a little bit of thinking and said this isn’t the right thing for us. We’re quite picky.”

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Darren Huston responded to a bank analyst's question

Priceline Group had a better-than-expected 2014, with gross travel bookings of $50.3 billion, up from almost $40 billion a year ago. Gross profit for the year was $7.6 billion, up by a third from the prior year.



In the fourth quarter of 2014, Priceline had 24% growth in hotel rooms units booked. Most of its revenue came from Booking-com.



Not worried about Expedia


On an earnings call, CEO responded to a bank analyst’s question by saying he wasn’t worried about Expedia’s recent acquisitions of online travel agencies Wotif, Travelocity, and Orbitz.



“Our focus is on organic growth and acquisition. We’re focusing on premium, winning brands that add new business competencies or geographies. It’s all been adjacent growth rather than tripling down on similar brands, like others are doing. I don’t see the Orbitz deal, if it passes, as being a negative to Priceline. The global travel market was maybe $1.3 trillion, and if you add Expedia and Priceline’s businesses all together, they amount to less than 10% of that. 



There’s tremendous potential for us…. Expedia’s average room night rate increase was higher in recent quarters than ours. I give them credit for a great quarter, but we have a different philosophy when it comes to building inventory…. We pride ourselves on our growth rate. Our room night growth is 100% organic, unlike what you’re seeing with Expedia.”



The company’s market capitalization is above $50 billion, roughly four times that of rival Expedia Inc.



Rental properties


Last year, Booking-com inventory rose to more than 600,000 listings, up 41% year-over-year. Much of that was due to a doubling of vacation rental properties, to about 270,000 properties.



That meant that it had more than one million holiday rooms available and instantly confirmable on its platform on any given day. It also meant that vacation rentals are becoming a greater proportion of Booking.com’s overall inventory.



Darren Huston said the homeowner property category was of interest to the company, but it poses challenges because the product is different from hotels.



“Our next move as a company is to address homeowner-managed rather than professionally-managed vacation rentals….There is a lot of interest among our consumers in self-catered products…. We’ve taken steps here. We’ve adjusted our business system. We’ve rolled out a simple extra net. We have a lot of things in our pipeline to address the needs for a single-owner model. Delivering single-owner vacation rentals is ultimately where our destination as a company.”


Read Here :  https://www.phocuswire.com/Priceline-reported-a-solid-2014-on-the-strength-of-mobile-Asia

Security Firm Doubles Its Business By Protecting 1 percent- Paul Viollis

The worse the U.S. economy fares and the bigger the income inequality gap grows, the better business seems to get for and Douglas Kane. Their New York City-based company, Risk Control Strategies, has doubled its revenues this year by providing security services to the affluent.

That idea came years before the collapse of Wall Street, the recession and Occupy Wall Street. Paul Viollis acknowledges the indelicacy of their serendipitous success, and explains why he’s proud of their mission to protect the 1 percent.

How did Occupy Wall Street and the economy in general benefit your business?

People generally think, “I’m okay, I live under the radar,” and don’t recognize risk, but whenever you see a major event, that’s when our business spikes. Forensically, back in the fourth quarter of 2008, we had the implosion of Wall Street, the AIG collapse, the whole Paul son thing with the banks — that’s really where we had the growth spurt, and we’ve been in critical mass since.

What types of clients do you serve?

Senior level, C suite execs and entrepreneurs, people who have had significant liquidity events and are now retired investors, and on the institutional side, single and multi-family offices and the advisor community.

Do you get a sense from these clients that there is a growing culture of fear?

No question. Several clients have opted to secure an alternative residence outside the country. Two have actually bought islands. There’s an apprehension right now among the high net-worth community as to are we really safe from terrorism, and where are we economically, as in, are we going to become the next Greece or Italy? There’s a huge vote of no confidence among our clients as far as where the country is headed.

Do you attribute the fact that you almost doubled revenue this year to Occupy Wall Street?

Yes. People want to make sure they’re preemptively addressing certain risks. It doesn’t help when you have clients getting emails from strangers saying, “I know you have lunch at the Starbucks on Williams and John,” or “That’s a nice house you have in Greenwich.” That kind of spooks you a little bit.

Do you deal with a lot of paranoia from clients?

Part of the job is to hand-hold the client. I spend a lot of time visiting with clients all over the country. If someone is anxious, it helps to look someone in the face rather than communicating over email. And education is key.

What’s the oddest request you’ve gotten from a client?

The past three to four months, we’ve been inundated with calls from folks who want to get together an Armageddon plan — in the event of a nuclear attack, terrorist attack, biological test, wanting to get off, say, the island [of Manhattan] to a safe house. That’s not going to happen. What will happen is New York will be shut down.

What type of requests do you more commonly deal with?

The main ones are detail background investigations — not background checks — on house staff. Another growth spurt has been our technical surveillance counter measure practice, because of the desire of companies such as hedge funds to verify that eavesdropping devices are not in their offices. Our cyber security practice has grown for building small servers and putting them in people’s homes so they can communicate safely over the Internet.

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Priceline- Dominant Online Player Based on its Search Engine Marketing Strategy

The Priceline Group likes to keep its CEOs hungry with below-market base salaries and lucrative potential bonuses should they and the company over-achieve.

CEO cashed in on the opportunity, receiving nearly $17.9 million in total compensation just prior to taking on the top role.

Huston’s 2013 base salary of $478,487 as CEO of the Priceline Group’s Booking.com unit, he received a stock award of around $12 million, a bonus of $5.25 million, and other compensation amounting to a teensy $150,000 or so.

That brought Huston’s total compensation to $17,878,468, to be precise, which he received in euros as he was based in the Netherlands.

Huston’s 2013 bonus was based on his being the CEO of Booking.com and its “excellent” performance, a Priceline financial filing states, as well as the additional duties he took on last year to be responsible for the Group’s inter-brand relations.

You might think of Huston’s role last year in coordinating relations between and technology-sharing among Booking.com, Priceline.com, Kayak, Agoda, and rentalcars.com in 2013 as sort of a CEO internship and a prelude to his taking the top spot in 2014, replacing Jeffery Boyd as CEO of the Priceline Group.

A gallery's perspective on the Venice Biennale

The Venice Biennale allows the best artists to leave their mark. Lorenzo Fiaschi , founder of the Galleria Continua, says that "artists...