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by mherdeg
3817 days ago
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In Europe, Skyscanner's big advantage is that they have price data from low-cost carriers whose fares & inventory are not normally available to GDSes. They'll show you prices for people like Wizz Air, EasyJet, Ryanair, etc. who might not show up in a matrix.itasoftware.com search. Skyscanner can also construct somewhat of surprising itineraries by piecing together tickets on multiple separate LCCs that involve non-protected transfers, which is something that other price search engines (Hipmunk/Kayak) or online travel agencies (Expedia/Orbitz) don't really do. Most fare engines won't say "hey, if you're trying to get from London to Ljubljana, how would you feel about taking Easyjet LGW-BRU and Adria BRU-LJU?" — but Skyscanner will. And they have a fairly cool "I want to go from [x city] to [anywhere]" web UI that will show you, for a given weekend, what are the cheapest countries/cities you could visit? The UI is very good, arguably a bit better than the Google Flights fuzzy date/trip search. It's a great tool for exploring European fares. But I'm not sure how they make money — there's not a lot of revenue in air bookings. |
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Also I've heard from people who work there that they do a fair bit of custom analytical reporting for destinations - presumably reporting both on what people search for and what they actually book.