Travel Tech Con 18: Five things we learned

Cheyne Cole
TESTBED.VEGAS
Published in
3 min readJun 11, 2018

So, we got back from an awesome few days at Travel Tech Con 18 and now that the after party is fading, Mark Fancourt and I sat down to discuss our take-aways from the event.

1. Plenty of buzz for Unboundly

In beta, the crew from Unboundly pitched on day 1. Plenty of attendees were talking about it over the 3 days. By the end they picked up a bunch of the judges prizes too.

From destination discovery, to finding the best prices for your budget. Their goals are to use tech to open up international travel to everyone by challenging the travel industries “one size fits all” approach.

Really looking forward to see this launch.

https://www.unboundly.com/

2. Accessibility Travel Tech with Loud Steps

Paul, from Boni Global was part of the start-up pitch day. Being from Vegas, indoor navigation for the visually impaired was a real stand out to us.

Imagine this use case, MGM Grand has 6,852 rooms, what would it mean for guests with visual impairments to have this greater level of assistance when navigating to/from their room, the monorail to the convention center, or venues on property.

http://www.loudsteps.com/download/howitworks.pdf

http://www.loudsteps.com/

3. SkyHi membership model for flat-rate flights

We spent an hour distracting Rama Poola on day 2 at The VAULT chatting about his start-up.

SkyHi has members pay a monthly subscription, that gives them access to buy up to 5 one-way flights per month at a flat rate, based on distance of the flight. $35, $75, $120

Certainly interesting for those of use who are notorious for last minute bookings, or remote workers that I know who regularly commute to a Vegas “HQ”

https://flyskyhi.com/

4. Top Traveler Behavior Trends to Watch

Konrad Waliszewski from TripScout gave a great keynote on top traveler behavior trends.

Looking for the slides/video from the https://medium.com/traveltechcon page. Will update as soon as we see them.

https://tripscout.co/

5. Travel distribution on blockchain — lots of interest

The first hands-on workshop for engineering/product teams was well attended. Augusto Lemble ran a great session. Regardless of how good the idea is, or how well built the technology is, educating teams/enterprises is a big part of making adoption successful.

https://windingtree.com/

--

--

Cheyne Cole
TESTBED.VEGAS

Co-Founder Vegas Travel & Hospitality Tech Meetup