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Ireland’s Doyle Collection Revamps Luxury Hotel Strategy
Skift Acquire This spouse and children operate luxurious lodge team is a tiny participant. But the method of new CEO Gordon Drake, who previously sold Six Senses to IHG and Fairmont Raffles to Accor, how investors are positioning indie brands in the post-pandemic period. Sean O’Neill To improved fully grasp the impartial luxurious resort scene, I lately sat down with Gordon Drake, who past 12 months became CEO of the Doyle Assortment — an Irish relatives owned team of luxury inns running in Dublin, Cork, London, Bristol, and Washington D.C. Drake understands his way around luxurious hospitality investment. In 2017, Drake joined Six Senses as main money offer. He bought…
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CEO Cohen Defends Navan’s Approach, Details TMC Strategy
Ariel Cohen Navan CEO Ariel Cohen discusses: The rationale behind the former TripActions’ name change The evolving role of AI in Navan’s offerings Navan’s ability to raise funds and the possibility of an IPO TripActions last week rebranded to Navan, a palindrome that for the company represents a “more accessible” product that lives between the words “navigation” and “avant-garde,” according to co-founder and CEO Ariel Cohen. Cohen last week spoke with BTN editorial director Elizabeth West about what the new name signifies under the hood of technology, changes in the company’s go-to-market strategy, lingering criticism in the market around Navan’s effectiveness as a travel management company and, finally, its business model…
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Google Flights Could Shift Strategy After Heavy Layoffs
Especially heavy layoffs at Google Flights, including senior managers and engineers who joined Google with the ITA Software acquisition in 2011, could signal strategy shifts in the company’s multifaceted airline business, Skift has learned. Any modifications to Google’s airline strategy could potentially have implications for airline partners, global distribution systems Sabre and Amadeus, metasearch rivals such as Kayak and Skyscanner, as well as travelers. Google delivered its largest layoffs ever — about 12,000 employees, or around 6 percent of its full-time workforce — 10 days ago, and it is believed that firings at Google Flights, which had 100 or more employees on its engineering team alone, reached 10-12 percent. The…