Flight Centre buys into hotels, DMCs to nab “larger share of travel wallet”

Flight Centre buys into hotels, DMCs to nab “larger share of travel wallet”

Just days after Flight Centre updated its forecast for its financial year pre-tax profits to as high as $330 million, as well as announcing a number of job cuts to mid-high end support roles, comes this announcement.

Flight Centre Travel Group now does hotels, after they aqcuired a hospitality management company that they’re calling a “low-risk entry” to the market.

And hey, while they’re at it, they’re adding to their destination management company (DMC) offering, which already got a headstart by expanding its stake in its 2014 Buffalo Tours venture.

The company today announced it has secured separate deals to acquire Olympus Tours, a leading Mexico-based DMC, and Bespoke Hospitality Management Asia (BHMA), an emerging Thailand-based regional operator of design and lifestyle leisure hotels.

Wowza!

Both businesses will become key additions to Flight Centre’s rapidly expanding in-destination travel experiences network, headed by Brisbane-based Nick Lucock.

Founder and Managing Director Skroo Turner had hinted at the new business ventures in the latest financial outlook, saying the areas of hotel management and DMCs hold great opportunity for expansion and revenue.

Today, he added, “Expanding our in-destination network is a key global strategy and we are starting to develop strong foundations in this sector through our tour operators, DMCs and hotel management businesses.

“Olympus is an important addition to this network and gives us a DMC in the Americas, to complement our recently expanded presence in Asia, while BHMA provides us with a low-risk entry to hotel management, a sector that we have identified as a key future growth opportunity.”

Turner added that by expanding in this in-destination area, they gain a number of advantages, with possibly the most important being “the opportunity to capture a larger share of the travel wallet”, with Turner admitting FC has not typically captured the biggest chunk of in-destination spend.

In addition, Turner said the acquisitions meant the company had “greater control over the customer offering” and the “opportunity to capture additional margin through vertical integration”.

It also provides the capacity to create new and unique products which Turner says can be sold through FC’s global channels.

Turner was also excited about the “access to new external revenue streams”, which include sales to other travel groups and providing DMC services to tour companies and groups.

Flight Centre has been tiptoeing into the DMC market since 2014, when it initiated a joint venture with Vietnam’s Thien Minh Group. It operated in 10 Asian countries, and also included TMG’s buffalo Tours business in Vietnam.

Earlier this year, FC bought a bigger – 58.5 per cent bigger – stake in the venture, and put plans in place to increase this ownership in 2018.

The company has also been pursuing hotel management in key global markets, but not actioned anything yet.

“This is a logical step into hotel management and will deliver numerous benefits,” Turner added.

Turner explained that through acquiring BHMA, FC will snag a business that’s been growing steadily since it started, and has recently taken on larger properties, meaning it fits with FC’s long term expansion goals and is globally scalable.

The acquisition also comes with the expertise of “people and processes that we can draw upon to expand our hotel management operations in Asia and into other key regions, including Australia, the South Pacific, Europe and the Americas,” Turner added.

Flight Centre’s in-destination products also include the Top Deck and Back-Roads touring businesses. With the combination of Buffalo Tours and Olympus Tours DMCs, the revenue of both hits around US$100 million annually.

Email the Travel Weekly team at traveldesk@travelweekly.com.au

Bespoke Hospitality Management Asia buffalo tours dmc flight centre graham turner olympus tours Skroo Turner

Latest News

  • Products

Embrace the journey: Traversing the world with the Shokz OpenRun

If you’ve been on the wrong side of a final call in the airport, or missed the stop on rail journey, it might be time to invest in a pair of Shokz OpenRun headphones. Originally marketed as headphones for fitness fanatics, runners or cyclists with a keen to steer clear of a prang with a car, […]

  • Tour Operators
  • Tourism

TTC: Deals are driving up demand for September trips

The latest market research from TTC Tour Brands shows interest in international leisure travel remains high for 2024, with 77 per cent of Australians over 18 still planning trips this year. Notably, 28 per cent of those travellers are eyeing September for their journeys. Europe continues to be the most popular destination, with 68 per […]

  • Aviation

Qantas ‘working urgently’ to fix app data leak

Qantas is looking into customer reports that passengers have this morning been able to access other passengers’ personal information on the airlines app. X user Lachlan posted that he was able log into different accounts every time he opened the app. My @Qantas app logs me in to a different person each time I open […]

  • Hotels

Revamped Wailoaloa Beach hotel opens as Crowne Plaza Fiji Nadi Bay Resort & Spa

Crowne Plaza Fiji Nadi Bay Resort & Spa is open and ready for bookings after the first phase of a multi-million-dollar transformation. Part of IHG Hotels & Resorts’ premium collection, the transformation has seen the completion of 106 guestrooms showcasing contemporary interiors reflective of the premium Crowne Plaza brand and is a first for the […]

  • Luxury
  • News

Kamalaya Koh Samui clinches clutch of wellness awards

Kamalaya Wellness Sanctuary & Holistic Spa has so far clinched five prestigious awards in 2024, including being inducted into the ‘Hall of Fame’ at the World Spa & Wellness Awards in London. Founders of the Koh Samui sanctuary and spa John and Karina Stewart expressed their heartfelt gratitude for the awards. “We are profoundly honoured […]