Carlson Wagonlit Travel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carlson Wagonlit Travel
Type Privately held company
Industry Travel agencies
Founded 1994
Headquarters Paris, France
Key people Douglas Anderson (CEO)
Products Traveler and transaction services, program optimization, safety and security, meetings and events
Revenue $27.8 billion USD[1]
Owner(s) Carlson and JPMorgan Chase
Employees 22,000[1]
Website Official website

Carlson Wagonlit Travel (CWT) is a privately held travel management company held by Carlson Companies that handles both business and leisure clients.

It operates in 157 countries and territories, with 22,000 employees. According to Business Travel News Online.com, in 2007, CWT surpassed American Express Business Travel and became the world's largest business travel management company. The company has $27.8 billion in annual sales (including joint ventures) in 2008, from 55 million transactions.

History

The group has existed in its present form since 1994, the result of a 50%/50% merger from two large travel agency ventures. The Carlson side was originally from the Ask Mr. Foster Travel Agency chain, which had been rebranded to Carlson Travel Network a decade earlier. The Wagonlit part came from the travel shop business of Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits. After the merger, Accor maintained its 50% interest up until 2006. Accor sold its shares in a transaction worth €500m, thereby placing a value of €1bn on CWT at the time)

The company is jointly owned by Carlson 55%, a privately held corporation in the hotel, marketing, restaurant, and travel industries; and by JPMorgan Chase 45%.

In 2011, Carlson Leisure's Macy's Travel were rebranded as Carlson Wagonlit Travel; the stores were located in former Marshall Field's department stores and were known as Marshall Field's Travel before the stores were purchased by Macy's; Marshall Field's was owned by Twin Cities based Target Corporation, similar to Carlson Wagonlit Travel co-owner Carlson Companies. Macy's Travel had joined Carlson Wagonlit Travel in 2006 when TQ3Navigant was purchased by CWT.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "CWT at a Glance". Carlson Wagonlit Travel. Retrieved 2008-09-05. 
  2. , Carlson Wagonlit Travel, accessed April 12, 2010.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.