Orbitz
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- For other uses, see Orbitz (disambiguation).Missing image
Orbitz_logo.gif
Orbitz, Inc. is an Internet travel company based in Chicago, since 2004 a part of the Cendant Corporation. Its flagship site, Orbitz.com, utilizes the QPX search and booking system produced by ITA Software, given the name "Orbot." Orbitz also operates portals for business purchasers of travel and travel vendors, and is a partner of "opaque" booking site Hotwire.com. It was traded on the NASDAQ exchange under the ticker symbol "ORBZ." Jeffrey G. Katz, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, has led the company since July 2000; he had previously served as President and CEO of Swissair.
Orbitz differs from competitors in that it neither consolidates inventory (such as Priceline.com) nor provides a gateway to a so-called global distribution system (GDS) (such as Travelocity), but directly searches for inventory in and retrieves information for bookings from the computer reservation systems (CRSs) or inventory management systems of travel suppliers such as airlines. As such, it searches the entire inventory of available prices simultaneously, rather than retrieving a representative subset.
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History and controversy
Orbitz constituted the airline industry's response to the rise of online travel agencies such as Expedia and Travelocity and trailed its major competitors by several years. Continental Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines, and United Airlines, subsequently joined by American Airlines, invested a combined $145 million to start the project in November 1999. It was code-named T2— some claimed, meaning "Travelocity Terminator"— but adopted the name Orbitz when it commenced corporate operations in February 2000. Beta testing began early the next year, and Orbitz.com officially launched in June 2001.
Even before the site began operating, however, the company faced intense antitrust scrutiny— after all, five of the six oligopolist "major" airlines, controlling 80 percent of the US air travel market, were collaborating. Several consumer organizations lobbied the United States Department of Transportation to block the project from the outset, and some 23 state attorneys general also voiced concerns. When the DOT permitted the company to move ahead in April 2001, the effort was switched to the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice and the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Among the concerns raised were these:
- above all, the so-called Most Favored Nation provision, by which the airlines agreed not to cut deals with competing sites under more favorable terms than with Orbitz
- the airlines' agreement to release certain discount fares only to Orbitz, at the expense of its online and offline competitors
- that Computer Reservation System fee discounts extended to partner airlines would undermine competitors and damage the fledgling online travel industry
- that the airlines would coordinate efforts secretly to reduce discounts
- technical problems on Orbitz.com were misrepresenting the true costs of tickets to customers
The Interactive Travel Services Association (ITSA), an organization of Internet travel agencies, issued a report in December 2001 arguing that Orbitz was stifling its members.
Partly in response, Orbitz announced in May 2002 it would make its fares available to travel agents offline.
Separately, Southwest Airlines filed a lawsuit against Orbitz for trademark infringement and false advertising in May 2001. Southwest, which had opposed the project from the outset, claimed Orbitz misrepresented its prices and used its trademarks without permission. In July, it withdrew its fares from Orbitz altogether.
In July 2003, the Department of Justice ruled that Orbitz was not a cartel and did not pose a threat to competition. Orbitz's rapid growth had leveled off, its online competitors' businesses had continued to grow apace, and no evidence was found of price fixing. Additionally, changes in the marketplace had eroded both the advantages of the Most Favored Nation clause and the initial technological superiority of the Orbitz engine.
On September 29, 2004 Orbitz was acquired for $1.2 billion by New York-based Cendant Corporation.
Online Boycott
In March, 2005, Orbitz.com received e-mail complaints numbering in the thousands from readers of an online blog called The Best Page in the Universe. The author, Maddox, recounted a less than satisfactory experience with Orbitz in which he was given an impossible itinerary which could not physically be fulfilled, and was not given a refund. This story was read by over a hundred thousand people within less than a week, and instigated a boycott against the company by many of these readers. However, this failed to have much effect on Orbitz's business.
It is, perhaps, useful to quote some details from Orbitz's reply, as quoted on Maddox's site: "[This happened] in May of 2002 [and all sales] meet airline requirements for appropriate "minimum connection times..."
"... there are significant inaccuracies in the information he provides... His flight was actually scheduled to depart at 12:45 pm so he had a total of 3 hours and 6 minutes to connect to the other airport, as opposed to the 2 hours and 21 minutes he claimed."
References
- Information Week: Cendant Buys Orbitz For $1.2 Billion (http://www.informationweek.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=48800113)
- MSNBC: U.S. drops investigation into Orbitz (http://www.msnbc.com/news/946723.asp?cp1=1).
External links
- http://www.orbitz.com/
- ITA Software (http://www.itasoftware.com/)
- Yahoo! - Orbitz, Inc. Company Profile (http://biz.yahoo.com/ic/101/101230.html)