Travel 2.0, was used as early as December 2003 on a posting on the Planeta Web 2.0 Discussion Forum[1] and is an offshoot of the Web 2.0 phenomenon. Like many other industries, the online travel industry is currently in transition, adapting to new technologies and trends available on the Internet.[2]
Travellers, for their part, are becoming increasingly more interested in finding the opinions and reviews of their fellow travellers in lieu of professional travel advice.[3] This impact is significant given the travel sector's economic influence on the Internet, indeed more money is spent on travel than anything else online. Roughly two-thirds of Americans research and plan travel online and approximately the same amount book online as well.[4] The online travel industry breaks down into several different categories: online travel agents, online travel guides, online travel planners, and online travel communities and forums.[5] Together, these four groups make up the bulk of what are considered Travel 2.0 companies.
Travel 2.0 is a term that represents the extension and customization of the concept of Web 2.0 into a form that applies to the world’s largest industry: travel and tourism. It defines a transformation of online offerings into a new level of user empowerment and functionality. More than “Move to the Internet” as a platform, though, it is about how business forces that characterized Web 1.0 are yielding power, influence and eyeballs to the socially oriented Web 2.0. For Web 2.0, Tim O’Reilly described the following new models or different approaches that illustrated the divide between 2.0 and 1.0.[6]
The world has seen a migration of technical capabilities from slow, single process chips, 1200 baud modems, big, heavy monitors, and expensive memory and storage to dual core processors, DSL and cable modems with broad market penetration, cheap memory and storage and flat screen monitors. This has enabled Web democracy, allowing the presence of a one-person site to be as influential as a mass media outlet. The result is an online social revolution where friends and strangers can connect, share and communicate.
As described in 2006 by Philip Wolf, president and CEO of PhoCusWright Inc.,,[7] a travel research firm, Travel 2.0 as built on Web 2.0, is defined by five key tenets:
Or in short:
The foundation for and the technical migration from "your father’s Web" to present day Web 2.0 looks like this:
Travel 2.0 is the deployment of personal and business Web sites that embrace the above tenets and are built on the illustrated technology foundation. Some examples are Farecast, Toowist, Kayak, Travelocity, Expedia, TripAdvisor TravelPod, sNOWsh and Starwood Hotels. Travel 2.0 is a natural outcome of Web 2.0, as the following table illustrates (Web 2.0 elements are from Tim O'Reilly's Web 2.0 article):
Web 2.0 | Travel 2.0 |
---|---|
Strategic Positioning: | Strategic Positioning: |
The Web as Platform | The source of content will be the Web |
User Positioning: | User Positioning: |
You control your own data | Users maintain travel profiles, personal information |
Core Competencies: | Core Competencies: |
Services, not packaged software | Web 2.0 Travel sites will either be services providers, services consumers or both |
Architecture of participation | Technology and business models will support interconnectivity and aggregation of services from many sites |
Cost-effective scalability | Traditional technology is too expensive: Travel companies need to learn from the likes of Google, ITA and Amazon how to contain technology costs |
Remixable data source and data transmissions | Services are designed to be remixed including the resultant service |
Software above the level of a single device | It is not just the browser anymore: It is the car nav device, the Blackberry, the cellphone, the iPod, etc. |
Harnessing collective intelligence | The volume of content that can be collectively garnered from users far exceeds the editorial ability of the staff of even the largest Web sites |
Even while Travel 2.0 matures, Travel 3.0 is beginning to emerge. In this case, rather than following the trends of the overall Web (Travel 2.0 built on Web 2.0), the travel element is leading, providing the proving grounds for Web 3.0.