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Web services takes flight in travel industry

Web services takes flight in travel industry

By:  Thomas Hoffman  On: 14 Jan 2007 For: ComputerWorld (US) Creator

Abacus, which is 35 percent owned by Sabre, is just one of more than 1,000 customers that have been using Sabre's Web services since 2005. Travel agents, airlines and other travel services companies are finding that Web services provide faster and easier access to Sabre's global distribution system, the world's largest electronic travel reservation system.

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To get a sense of how Web services is radiating throughout the travel industry, check out Abacus International Pte. Two years ago, the Singapore- based travel facilitator, which runs 15,000 travel agencies in the Asia-Pacific region, generated just 1 percent of its total bookings online. But thanks to Web services-backed travel data Abacus is receiving from Sabre Holdings Corp., its online bookings jumped to 11 percent of its transaction volume in 2005 and now represent 20 percent of its total volume, says Director Lim Lai Hock.

From a customer support perspective, the costs of handling Web services-based transactions are "much lower, and bookings are more efficient," says Lim. That's because Web services provide a level of automation that isn't possible with mainframe-based services, which require more human involvement. For instance, travel agents can use Sabre Web services to conduct calendar-based airfare searches. In the past, those types of requests would have been sent to a customer service agent.

Abacus, which is 35 percent owned by Sabre, is just one of more than 1,000 customers that have been using Sabre's Web services since 2005. Travel agents, airlines and other travel services companies are finding that Web services provide faster and easier access to Sabre's global distribution system, the world's largest electronic travel reservation system.

For Sabre, Web services provide an opportunity to break away from its decades-old approach of delivering mainframe-based services to travel industry customers and to dispense new products and enhanced services that can spur growth and generate additional revenue.

For example, an airline that uses Sabre's online reservation system can now tap into other Sabre applications more easily to compare fares or make hotel reservations for its customers, says Gordon Locke, vice president of marketing at Sabre Airline Solutions in Dallas.

Taking flight

Sabre's Web services effort began as a research and development project in 2003 to help company executives determine how the use of a service-oriented architecture (SOA) could help its customers reduce the complexity and expense of accessing its online products and services, says Andrew Teel, senior principal architect at Sabre Holdings. Additional investments in 2004 enabled Sabre to introduce new and expanded travel services supported by the platform in 2005. Today, Sabre offers more than 50 products and services to its clients through Web services, including fuel and inventory management tools for airlines.

Prior to the Web services implementation, Sabre's electronic customers had to negotiate a layer of its communications software to get at the data they were seeking and then code the data to a specific format to obtain structured information, says Teel. That multistep process made it much more difficult for customers to integrate content with their own applications, he says, adding, "We saw Web services as a way to get out of that model."


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Thomas Hoffman Thomas Hoffman is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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