Assessing the Aftershocks of American Airlines NDC
It’s been a little more than a month since American Airlines began its New Distribution Capability push by removing some fares from EDIFACT-connected channels. While still early in the game, light is shedding on what that move really means.
The carrier on April 3 removed as much as 40 percent of its fares from EDIFACT channels, making them available only in NDC-connected channels.
“The first thing and most obvious is that American did exactly as they said they would do, which doesn’t always happen with airline distribution strategies,” distribution consultancy Garner CEO Cory Garner said. Some thought that American might back off its strategy at the 11th hour, but instead, the carrier stood its ground.
Initially, American said that the fares it would remove from EDIFACT mostly would be basic economy fares, which often are blocked in corporate travel programs because of their restrictions, limiting its effect on managed travel. Instead, “the fares missing from EDIFACT are a lot more than basic economy,” said president of Travel Tech Consulting Norm Rose.
“It is a dramatic shift in the way that American wants to distribute their product,” Rose said. “It’s an indication that we are moving into an environment where the airlines will be selective of what content they put into which channels. It’s pretty dramatic in the industry. … I’m not painting American as evil. It’s a struggle for profitability control.”
Content Availability
As expected, there are variances between what is found in EDIFACT and what is available in NDC pipes. Multiple sources noted they’ve also seen price differentials between fares listed in global distribution systems tapping NDC pipes and those available on AA.com. American denies this.
Even though American in its initial December announcement said it would sometimes offer special limited-time and AAdvantage member exclusive fares, the carrier said that it currently does not have any AA.com-only offers available.
If there are differences between GDS NDC and direct-channel pricing, a few sources said one possible reason could be caching—when multiple copies of data are held in a temporary storage location so they can be accessed faster.
“Everything in the American NDC API is available to all GDSs to incorporate into their NDC connections,” an American spokesperson wrote to BTN in an email. “Each GDS builds their own connections to our API, and they can choose which capabilities to incorporate.”
Still, Rose noted the airline’s setup means it no longer will require full content sharing with GDSs.
“Because you have NDC at some level through the GDS doesn’t mean you will have total content,” he said. “In addition, as we move forward, the idea of the retail model is to really start bundling dynamically, and when you have bundles to reflect customer needs and issues, that destroys the process we’ve lived in for years, which is, ‘what is the lowest logical airfare?’ The entire model is being blown up by this. Those travel managers who think, ‘I’ll work by the sidelines, the GDS will solve everything,’ are fooling themselves. They will get complaints from travelers about lack of parity and inventory sources.”
This might already be happening.
For ITW director of global T&E Cathy Sharpe, there’s been a “slow trickle” of questions coming in from her travelers around seeing fares on AA.com that are lower than those in the online booking tool. There also are more differences between EDIFACT and NDC channels than she anticipated. Sharpe noted that she has not yet turned on a GDS NDC channel for her travelers and is using price tracking to note the differences.
“We are seeing main cabin differences, premium-class differences,” Sharpe said. “We haven’t formulated any kind of baseline of what would be my go-directly-to-the-airline versus not.”
Sharpe noted she could use SAP Concur’s TripLink to capture data from direct American bookings, but “we are not sure to what level we want to activate it yet.” She also noted the possible use of non-GDS aggregator TravelFusion to access AA content, but “we do value what the agency does, and we want them to be part of our solution. We’re not going to pull the plug and say, ‘Get the lowest fare.’ It’s about fare plus a whole lot more.”
Pricing Differentials
Another finding: “Fare differentials have come in a bit broader than most people would have guessed,” Garner said.
Travel management company AmTrav has been publicly tracking the fare differences it is finding. On average, as of May 6, the company found that 32 percent of the fares differed between non-NDC and NDC channels, though that number was as high as 48 percent on April 10.
The price variance between average fares that showed differences was $121, specifically $534 for non-NDC and $413 for NDC fares as of May 6. When looking at overall average fares, including when there is not a difference, the variance was much smaller: $477 for non-NDC versus $439 for NDC fares, or $38.
AmTrav also is tracking fare differentials based on seat type, and it has shown differences in economy, economy flexible, first class and first flexible, as well as how often there is a difference (see charts). The fares and discount percentages vary week-to-week, as do the frequencies of discrepancies.
The discounts for the week of April 30 to May 6 for booking an NDC fare versus an EDIFACT fare ranged from 13 percent for an economy ticket to 31 percent for economy flexible and first flexible. Differences were found 35 percent of the time for economy tickets, 88 percent of the time for first-class tickets, and 90 percent of the time for economy flexible ones.
“First class and economy flexible are three times [higher] on [one seller’s website], so this isn’t just a basic economy problem. It’s affecting all corners of the market,” AmTrav product marketing director Elliott McNamee said. “If flying to an American hub, that’s a bigger deal than between cities that are not AA hubs. But it’s affecting everybody. The differences are real.”
AmTrav president Jeff Klee concurred: “I want to underscore the point that the notion that this isn’t relevant to corporate travelers and that only leisure fares are affected is complete BS,” he said. “If you look at the numbers, you’ll find what American has done is very relevant to corporate travelers.”
The variances in the first-class buckets also were found to be 35 percent to 40 percent lower on AA.com, according to a travel manager who has Sabre conducting their tracking. The differences in coach weren’t as much, the travel manager said, but the variances for the first-class seats convinced this buyer, who asked to remain anonymous, to turn on American’s NDC “because we have a select group of travelers flying first class,” the travel manager said. “The Sabre API will be turned on in two weeks. Everything will be in our environment.”
Differences in the Differentials
Other TMCs and industry suppliers tracking fare differentials have found varying results. It appears that different markets show different discrepancies. Fare differentials also depend on the makeup of the TMC’s customers, the size of the corporate travel air program, key markets and travel policy.
“We’re seeing fully refundable main cabin and first-class domestic with some of the greatest price differentials,” Fox World Travel VP of business travel George Kalka said. “In fact, the discounted first-class domestic is removed from EDIFACT and only on the NDC channel. I look at that across our customer base.”
Still, Kalka noted that the lower NDC fares are not ones his corporate customers buy, such as basic economy class. The other fare differences that he has seen are lower than AmTrav’s numbers. He also noted that none of his customers have opted to tap TravelFusion to access American’s NDC fares because of the sticking point that Ctrip, a Chinese-owned company, has a majority stake in Travelfusion. “For any government contractor or entity, it’s non-negotiable,” Kalka said.
“Within main cabin, our data is showing us that even looking out 30 days from the date of travel, only 15 percent of the time there is a fare difference of 5 percent or more favorable to NDC than EDIFACT,” Kalka added. “Within seven days, it’s down to single digits for the times NDC has a better rate than what is offered in EDIFACT.”
President of Tower Travel Management John Smith, whose company is connected to American’s NDC through Sabre, has noted that the number of discrepancies between EDIFACT and NDC content appears to be growing, but the dollar discrepancies have shrunk dramatically, he said. Over the course of the first month, Smith reviewed 136 transactions, and in half of those cases there wasn’t even an NDC fare offered.
“For the balance where there was a difference, the total net difference between [EDIFACT] and NDC was a 1.41 percent savings if using NDC,” he said, adding that sometimes he’s even seen an EDIFACT fare lower than an NDC fare. “Something at American’s programming is not perfect, which when you’re rolling out a new technology across a universe of transactions doesn’t shock me at all.”
Navan Group SVP of commercial Tom Rigby said that month-to-date as of April 27, 50 percent of Navan’s American bookings were through the NDC channel, “due to the fact they are delivering more value to the end user,” he said. “On U.S. domestic flights, NDC bookings are representing an average savings of 7 percent, and for international flights it’s quite a bit more, averaging around 27 percent.”
Oracle director of global travel sourcing and GPO Rita Visser, who has turned on NDC for both American and United Airlines and is using Sabre and GetThere, has a solution that is seeing “nominal savings” when NDC is being selected. “Only about 10 percent of the time is an NDC fare better than an EDIFACT fare, right now,” she said. “And then the potential of what we’re seeing from savings is well under 5 percent. We do see that percentage increase or savings increase when people are going international.”
Gant Travel Management president Patrick Linnihan said the best summary he’s seen is from Amadeus, in which there’s more variance in domestic flights, but not anything significant for international. He’s also found differences only in American-dominated markets. “Where American and United are fighting it out, we did not find a difference,” he said. “In Charlotte, we found a difference.”
Relatedly, reshopping and analytics company Tripbam provided an April 19-May 1 review of 13 of American’s top U.S. city pairs that measured the average GDS price versus the average NDC price for economy class when there is a difference. It found the greatest price differential at $265 or 37 percent off the EDIFACT fare for American’s route between New York JFK and Los Angeles. The next largest differential, the Dallas/Fort Worth and New York LaGuardia route, showed an average NDC discount of $257 or 35 percent.
On the other end of the spectrum, the Indianapolis-Miami route showed a lower EDIFACT fare by $24 or 4 percent, while the Dallas/Fort Worth and Denver route had a $109 premium on the NDC fare for a 28 percent difference.
“The average variance is that NDC fares are 25 percent lower or the equivalent of $159 one-way,” said Tripbam VP of air solutions Jason Kramer. “That varies based on a lot of factors. It’s not a unilateral or uniform application to every single market. … [American is] deploying their NDC approach differently in each market and having a different impact in each market.”
The greatest fare variance Tripbam has seen is among premium full-fare tickets. “I would argue that is most likely because you have a captive audience,” Kramer said. “Those people buying last-minute [and] are typically doing so through a TMC channel, and that TMC is not gaining access to NDC content at American today.”
Share Shift
Another trend TMCs have noticed: With rare exception, agents have been able to find fares from Delta Air Lines, United and Southwest Airlines that equal the American NDC fare in the GDS channel, Smith said.
“In either the agent desktop or the online booking tool, our customers are getting the lowest fares in the market, including both [EDIFACT] and NDC,” Smith added. “Does that mean our share of tickets sold on American during April declined? Absolutely. It is a zero-sum game. Our shares on United, Delta and Southwest have all increased. Our customers are following their company policy, which is to buy the more effective airfare per their policy.”
Kalka also has noted a share shift. For the first three weeks of April, market share that Fox World Travel has transacted on American had dropped 2.5 percent. “I find it interesting because we haven’t done anything to deemphasize American with what agents sell or search online,” he said. “This is all customer-driven. Our share with American is the lowest it’s been in 12 months. Travelers are just not selecting American. That’s something we are watching.”
Linnihan said Gant has turned on American NDC for all clients and is offering them the option to opt out. So far, 12 travel managers have made that request, adding that American’s share of tickets for April dropped three points from March. “It’s one of two things: People either are booking at AA.com, or they’re booking away [from the carrier],” he said.
The anonymous travel manager added that they have purposefully shifted share by biasing American in the company’s booking tool since March 1 in like-for-like markets in order to reduce the risk of not knowing what would happen come April 3.
“We bias them as the lowest in our booking tool and have seen shift away from them,” the travel manager said. “[American] won’t appear in a market where there are connections or other nonstops; they will appear at the bottom. That is how we’ve shifted 30 percent away since March 1. If there was a competitor, we were able to switch it.”
Sharpe said her company won’t pull the plug on American. “We are going to present all of the options, and our travelers will make the best decisions for themselves and the company to benefit everybody across the board,” she said. “If a carrier is not competitive, they are deselecting themselves.”
Donna M. Airoldi www.businesstravelnews.com