The V1 Airline Retailing Report

State of the GDS, Part 1: The Weapon Became Infrastructure

25 min · I går
episode State of the GDS, Part 1: The Weapon Became Infrastructure cover

Beskrivelse

Everyone credits the GDS for the things that make modern travel work: one neutral screen, every airline's fares, settlement that clears across borders. Here is what most of the industry has forgotten. None of that was designed in. The GDS did not start as neutral infrastructure. It started as a weapon. This is Part 1 of a special four-part series, and for the next four Mondays it replaces the usual news show. Eric and Steph rebuild the story from 1953 forward, because you cannot understand where airline distribution is going until you understand what it is trying to move past. That history is the frame for everything happening now. NDC, Offer and Order, Google, and AI agents are all pulling the screen back toward single owners. The question this series asks is whether we are quietly re-running 1976. What Part 1 Covers * How a Cold War missile-defense system (SAGE) became Sabre * The 1976 original sin: the neutral industry system United killed and American followed * Screen bias, the per-segment toll, and Crandall's 1983 "raison d'être" defense to Congress * How antitrust forced neutrality, and the real legacy — transparency, EDIFACT, settlement, and agency leverage, the dividend of disarmament * The meter regulators never touched, and why NDC is really trying to settle it The Series * Part 1 — Foundation: The weapon that became infrastructure (this episode) * Part 2 — Amadeus: The stack play. Why the biggest GDS is quietly trying to stop being a GDS. * Part 3 — Sabre: The survivor. Modernizing against the debt clock. * Part 4 — Travelport: The rebuild, and the capstone question — can the industry afford to go from three to two? New part every Monday. Follow the show so each one lands in your feed automatically. Miss a Monday and the next part will not fully land. Sources & Further Reading * U.S. v. American Airlines, Inc. and Robert L. Crandall — U.S. Department of Justice: https://www.justice.gov/atr/case-document/file/951381/dl * A Brief History of Air Travel Distribution — Business Travel News: https://www.businesstravelnews.com/Research/Distribution/A-Brief-History-of-Air-Travel-Distribution About the Show The V1 Airline Retailing Report is produced by V1 Advisory LLC and publishes every Monday. Every episode surfaces what matters most in airline and travel retailing — NDC, Offer and Order, GDS economics, and AI — and delivers the analysis that helps commercial leaders, distribution professionals, and travel technology executives understand what is really happening and what to do about it. Powered by Jellypod.com, the AI podcast platform behind this show. Check it out and use our referral link: https://go.jellypod.com/rQZEXiO Hosted by: Eric Marketts — Tech and aviation journalist, co-host Steph Nell — Airline distribution expert and consultant, co-host and analyst Follow on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1896298777 © 2026 V1 Advisory LLC. All rights reserved. | v1advisory.co

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episode State of the GDS, Part 1: The Weapon Became Infrastructure cover

State of the GDS, Part 1: The Weapon Became Infrastructure

Everyone credits the GDS for the things that make modern travel work: one neutral screen, every airline's fares, settlement that clears across borders. Here is what most of the industry has forgotten. None of that was designed in. The GDS did not start as neutral infrastructure. It started as a weapon. This is Part 1 of a special four-part series, and for the next four Mondays it replaces the usual news show. Eric and Steph rebuild the story from 1953 forward, because you cannot understand where airline distribution is going until you understand what it is trying to move past. That history is the frame for everything happening now. NDC, Offer and Order, Google, and AI agents are all pulling the screen back toward single owners. The question this series asks is whether we are quietly re-running 1976. What Part 1 Covers * How a Cold War missile-defense system (SAGE) became Sabre * The 1976 original sin: the neutral industry system United killed and American followed * Screen bias, the per-segment toll, and Crandall's 1983 "raison d'être" defense to Congress * How antitrust forced neutrality, and the real legacy — transparency, EDIFACT, settlement, and agency leverage, the dividend of disarmament * The meter regulators never touched, and why NDC is really trying to settle it The Series * Part 1 — Foundation: The weapon that became infrastructure (this episode) * Part 2 — Amadeus: The stack play. Why the biggest GDS is quietly trying to stop being a GDS. * Part 3 — Sabre: The survivor. Modernizing against the debt clock. * Part 4 — Travelport: The rebuild, and the capstone question — can the industry afford to go from three to two? New part every Monday. Follow the show so each one lands in your feed automatically. Miss a Monday and the next part will not fully land. Sources & Further Reading * U.S. v. American Airlines, Inc. and Robert L. Crandall — U.S. Department of Justice: https://www.justice.gov/atr/case-document/file/951381/dl * A Brief History of Air Travel Distribution — Business Travel News: https://www.businesstravelnews.com/Research/Distribution/A-Brief-History-of-Air-Travel-Distribution About the Show The V1 Airline Retailing Report is produced by V1 Advisory LLC and publishes every Monday. Every episode surfaces what matters most in airline and travel retailing — NDC, Offer and Order, GDS economics, and AI — and delivers the analysis that helps commercial leaders, distribution professionals, and travel technology executives understand what is really happening and what to do about it. Powered by Jellypod.com, the AI podcast platform behind this show. Check it out and use our referral link: https://go.jellypod.com/rQZEXiO Hosted by: Eric Marketts — Tech and aviation journalist, co-host Steph Nell — Airline distribution expert and consultant, co-host and analyst Follow on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1896298777 © 2026 V1 Advisory LLC. All rights reserved. | v1advisory.co

I går25 min
episode Amadeus Moves Upstream: The Booking Was Never the Point cover

Amadeus Moves Upstream: The Booking Was Never the Point

The V1 Airline Retailing Report Episode 010 — "Amadeus Moves Upstream: The Booking Was Never the Point" Published: Monday, June 29, 2026 Episode Description For fifteen years, airline distribution fought over one question: who controls the offer. This month, three moves made it clear the industry already moved past that war. The booking in the middle was never the point. This week, Eric and Steph connect three stories that tell one argument: value is draining out of the booking from both ends. Amadeus is moving upstream to own the demand. Google and the agents are moving downstream to own the checkout. And a quiet piece of order infrastructure decides whether an airline can play in either game. This Week's Stories Story 1 — Amadeus Stops Selling the Pipe and Starts Selling the Demand Amadeus launched an AI-powered Travel Advertising Platform and named its rivals: Google, Meta, and The Trade Desk, not Sabre or Travelport. The pitch is to act on a traveler's demand before they open a booking engine. Eric and Steph unpack what Amadeus is really selling, the demand data it treated as exhaust for fifty years, and why a GDS monetizing intent is the clearest sign yet that the incumbents expect the booking itself to be commoditized. 📰 Travel Distribution News — Amadeus Moves Upstream [https://traveldistributionnews.com/amadeus-moves-upstream-the-gds-giant-wants-to-own-demand-before-it-converts/] 📰 Amadeus Newsroom — Travel Advertising Platform [https://amadeus.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/amadeus-redefines-travel-advertising-capture-demand-earlier] Story 2 — Google's UCP Turns the Agent Into the Booking Channel Google published the Universal Commerce Protocol, an open standard that carries a purchase end to end, with flights and hotels confirmed next. A correction from last week: UCP is Google's, co-developed with Shopify and backed by Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Stripe, Visa, and Mastercard. Amadeus is a partner on UCP for Lodging, not the author. Mindtrip already shipped agentic flight booking on Sabre's APIs with PayPal. Eric and Steph explain MCP versus UCP, and why ceding the protocol means ceding the merchandising surface airlines fought a decade to control. 📰 Google Developers Blog — Under the Hood: UCP [https://developers.googleblog.com/under-the-hood-universal-commerce-protocol-ucp/] 📰 Sabre Newsroom — Mindtrip Agentic Flight Booking with Sabre and PayPal [https://www.sabre.com/resources/newsroom/mindtrip-launches-travels-first-all-in-one-agentic-ai-flight-booking-experience-powered-by-partnership-with-sabre-and-paypal/] Story 3 — Lufthansa's Single Order ID Is the Quiet Prerequisite Lufthansa Group and Amadeus put a single Order ID into production across millions of passengers, aligned to IATA ONE Order. The press called it operational simplification. Eric and Steph argue it is the gate the other two stories pass through: Amadeus cannot monetize demand and Google cannot run agentic checkout against an airline whose orders are not machine-readable. ONE Order is the admission ticket to every downstream value pool, not an IT cleanup. 📰 OAG — Three Airline-Tech Innovations Defining Early 2026 [https://www.oag.com/blog/three-airline-tech-innovations-defining-early-2026] 📰 PR Newswire — Connected Retailing: 7 Transformations Redefining Travel in 2026 [https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/from-content-complexity-to-connected-retailing-7-transformations-redefining-travel-in-2026--led-by-the-rise-of-agentic-ai-302634980.html] The Bottom Line Value is leaving the booking from both ends, and most of the industry is still optimizing the middle. The fifteen-year fight over who controls the offer is settled, and a lot of carriers are still fighting it. The segment fee is becoming the commodity. The demand layer, the agent layer, and the structured order underneath are the prize. The airlines that win are the ones whose order is machine-readable enough to plug into both ends. So audit your order, not your slide deck. About the Show The V1 Airline Retailing Report is produced by V1 Advisory LLC and publishes every Monday. Each episode surfaces the two or three stories that matter most in airline and travel retailing, with the 360-degree analysis that helps commercial leaders, distribution professionals, and travel technology executives understand what is really happening and what to do about it. Available on Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify. Insights crafted by the team of V1 Advisory and hosted by ou AI avatars Eric Marketts, tech and aviation journalist, and Steph Nell, airline distribution expert and analyst. © 2026 V1 Advisory LLC. All rights reserved. | v1advisory.co [http://v1advisory.co] Related: [[Episode-010-Script]] | [[V1-Advisory-Status]] | [[V1-Airline-Retailing-Report-Podcast-Guide]]

29. juni 202626 min
episode Own It or Rent It: The Model Got Cheap, the Stack Didn't cover

Own It or Rent It: The Model Got Cheap, the Stack Didn't

Episode: 009 - Own It or Rent It: The Model Got Cheap, the Stack Didn't Date: June 22, 2026 The AI model layer just got cheap. None of the things that actually decide who wins in travel got any cheaper. That gap is the whole episode. This week on The V1 Airline Retailing Report, Eric and Steph go underneath last week's squeeze to a single question with three answers: in the AI era, what do you actually own? They build the argument across three layers of the travel stack — intelligence, offer, and demand. Three stories, one question. The model becoming a commodity, the dynamic offer most airlines still cannot create, and the agent rails an OTA is building while carriers debate plumbing. Own it, or rent it. — THIS WEEK'S STORIES — Story 1 — Frontier No More: Your Moat Was Never the Model Madrona's "Frontier No More?" argues the dominance of frontier AI models is ending on five fronts at once. Timothy O'Neil-Dunne mapped the thesis onto travel: the question is not which model you use — it is what you have that survives the model being swapped out from under you. Eric and Steph translate "harness" into airline terms and explain why this is the best argument yet for Offer and Order. The pushback: owning data is not using it, and the prettiest harness does not help if the traveler's first question starts inside ChatGPT. 📰 Madrona — Frontier No More? [https://www.madrona.com/frontier-no-more/] 📰 Timothy O'Neil-Dunne — The Frontier Is Fracturing, and Travel Should Pay Close Attention [https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/frontier-fracturing-travel-should-pay-close-attention-o-neil-dunne-motgc/] Story 2 — Dynamic Offers Were Due in 2026. The Industry Is at 23 Percent. In 2022 ATPCO set a goal of 80% of sold offers dynamically created by 2026. The figure came in at 23%, up from 6% four years ago. The standards work is largely solved. The gap from 23 to 80 is a data and capability gap inside the airlines. The plumbing is built. Most carriers still cannot feed it. atpco.net/single-blog/innovating-for-dynamic-offers-scale 📰 ATPCO — Innovating for Dynamic Offers @ scale [https://atpco.net/single-blog/innovating-for-dynamic-offers-scale/] 📰 ATPCO — What are dynamic offers? [https://atpco.net/blog/what-are-dynamic-offers/] Story 3 — While Airlines Debate, Expedia Builds the Agent Rails At Explore 2026, Expedia laid out an agentic roadmap with a B2B piece that matters more than the consumer headlines: tools that let external AI agents interface with Expedia inventory directly, plus an AI-ad test with Meta. Bain's test found AI agents reach airline sites directly about 5% of the time and route the rest to OTAs — because the data is cleaner and the transaction completes. Every booking through Expedia's rails trains the agents to come back. 📰 Expedia Group — Unveils New AI Experiences, Expands Travel Ecosystem at Explore 2026 (BusinessWire) [https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260519925747/en/] 📰 Bain & Company — Is the Airline Industry Ready for Agent-Led Bookings? [https://www.bain.com/insights/is-the-airline-industry-ready-for-agent-led-bookings/] — THE BOTTOM LINE — The industry keeps treating the model, the offer, and the agent interface as three separate conversations. They are one stack with three layers, and the same thing wins every layer: ownership of your data and the systems that turn it into an offer and put it in front of the buyer. True dynamic offers are concentrated in a handful of carriers — the 23% figure comes almost entirely from a short list of airline groups. For the rest of the market, the capability still isn't there. And while airlines work that problem, Expedia is moving to own the moment the traveler decides. Airlines have the raw material to own all three layers. The question is whether they build before someone else owns the layer for them. — ABOUT THE SHOW — The V1 Airline Retailing Report is produced by V1 Advisory LLC and publishes every Monday. Every episode surfaces the two or three stories that matter most in airline and travel retailing — and delivers the 360-degree analysis that helps commercial leaders, distribution professionals, and travel technology executives understand what's really happening and what to do about it. - Human crafted insights and script - AI executed. We welcome feedback so drop us a line at info@v1advisory.co [info@v1advisory.co] Intro music: The perfect corporate podcast intro by Lundstroem. Licensed under a Attribution 4.0 International License. The V1 Airline Retailing Report publishes every Monday. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. © 2026 V1 Advisory LLC. All rights reserved. | v1advisory.cod. [http://v1advisory.co]

22. juni 202631 min
episode The Squeeze: Margins, AI Search Costs, and the Agent Race cover

The Squeeze: Margins, AI Search Costs, and the Agent Race

Episode 008 — "The Squeeze: Profits Halved, Search Costs Unbounded, Intermediaries Circling" Published: Monday, June 15, 2026 Episode Description Airline net margins are forecast to fall to two percent this year. That is not a buffer. It is a rounding error, and it is the lens for everything happening in distribution right now. This week on The V1 Airline Retailing Report, Eric and Steph trace a single pressure across three stories. Airlines are getting squeezed from the macro and from the distribution stack at the same time, and the intermediaries are not waiting for the margin to recover. Three narratives, one squeeze: the financial reality Willie Walsh laid out in his farewell, the compute bill AI agents are handing airlines without anyone's consent, and the metasearch player already moving to own the agent relationship while carriers are heads down. This Week's Stories Story 1 — Walsh's Last Warning: A Two Percent Margin Is Not a Buffer In his final address as IATA Director General at the 82nd AGM in Rio, Willie Walsh forecast industry net profit falling from $45 billion in 2025 to $23 billion in 2026, with net margin compressing from 4.2% to 2%. Fuel is up roughly 70% year over year, adding about $100 billion to the bill, against a supply chain backlog above 18,000 aircraft and a record fleet age of 15.2 years. Eric and Steph break down why demand holding up is the real bull case, why a 2% margin turns the right strategic move into a treasury problem, and what Walsh's farewell was actually about: an industry that absorbs everyone else's costs and has no pricing power to push back. 📰 Business Traveller — Willie Walsh Leaves IATA With a Blunt Warning for Aviation's Fragile Recovery [https://www.businesstraveller.com/news/iata-agm-2026-willie-walsh/] 📰 IATA — Willie Walsh's Report on the State of the Global Air Transport Industry, 82nd AGM [https://www.iata.org/en/pressroom/2026-speeches/willie-walsh-speech-iata-82nd-agm-report-state-global-air-transport-industry/] Story 2 — 881,076 Searches for One Ticket: The Cost Nobody Agreed To A traveler who wanted a single ticket pointed Claude Code at the Etihad website and pulled 881,076 fare options — every date in a month-long range, every stopover, every combination across four routes. Skift's reporting puts a number on a structural break: the look-to-book ratio held for fifty years because humans stop searching, and AI agents don't. Eric and Steph dig into why this is a cost imposed without a commercial relationship, why NDC makes airlines more exposed rather than less, and the one move that will signal the industry has finally internalized the problem — the first airline to publish an explicit AI traffic policy. 📰 Skift — The High Cost of Infinite Search: How AI Agents Break Travel Economics [https://skift.com/2026/06/01/ai-impact-travel-search-costs/] 📰 Skift — The Two-Sided AI Squeeze That Only Travel Faces [https://skift.com/2026/06/05/the-two-sided-ai-squeeze-that-only-travel-faces/] Story 3 — While Airlines Absorb the Squeeze, Skyscanner Moves on the Agent Skyscanner CEO Bryan Batista told Skift he is exploring agentic booking to ease the handoff to advertisers and sees personal agents as part of the future of flight metasearch. Skyscanner, owned by Trip.com [http://Trip.com] Group, has expanded into B2B and is pushing harder into the U.S. Eric and Steph explain why an incumbent experimenting in the open is genuinely useful, why metasearch already tried on-site booking once and reverted, and the harder question for carriers: whoever owns the agent handoff owns the moment of intent, and right now that owner is not an airline. 📰 Skift — Skyscanner CEO on Agentic Booking and the Future of Flight Metasearch [https://skift.com/2026/06/08/skyscanner-ceo-on-agentic-booking-and-the-future-of-flight-metasearch/] The Bottom Line The industry keeps treating margin, compute cost, and the agent front end as three separate conversations. They are one. A 2% net margin is the reason the other two are dangerous instead of merely interesting, because airlines now have the least capital to defend their distribution exactly when the distribution game is being recontested. AI agents are imposing cost the stack was never built to absorb, and the intermediaries are moving to own the agent relationship while carriers are heads down on survival. The airline that names an owner for AI traffic and agent strategy this year buys itself room. The one that waits for the margin to recover first will be negotiating from a weaker position every quarter it waits. About the Show The V1 Airline Retailing Report is produced by V1 Advisory LLC and publishes every Monday. Every episode surfaces the two or three stories that matter most in airline and travel retailing — and delivers the 360-degree analysis that helps commercial leaders, distribution professionals, and travel technology executives understand what's really happening and what to do about it. Hosted by: - Eric Marketts — Tech and aviation journalist, co-host - Steph Nell — Airline distribution expert and consultant, co-host and analyst Intro music: The perfect corporate podcast intro by Lundstroem. Licensed under a Attribution 4.0 International License. The V1 Airline Retailing Report publishes every Monday. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. © 2026 V1 Advisory LLC. All rights reserved. | v1advisory.co [http://v1advisory.co] Related: Tasks | V1-Advisory-Status | V1-Airline-Retailing-Report-Podcast-Guide

19. juni 202614 min
episode Episode 007 — "Who Owns the Offer? Sabre Cries Monopoly as the Agents Show Up" cover

Episode 007 — "Who Owns the Offer? Sabre Cries Monopoly as the Agents Show Up"

Airlines spent a decade fighting to own their offer. This week three stories mark the same battle line from three angles — and together they reveal who's standing between the airline and the buyer right now. This week on The V1 Airline Retailing Report, Eric and Steph build one argument across three floors of the same building: the PSS incumbency layer, the MCP agent interface forming above it, and the IATA program running through both. The question threading all three is the same: after NDC and Offer & Order, who owns the offer next? Sabre's legal complaint against Amadeus has a new frame — and it's more important than the lawsuit. Sabre CEO Kurt Ekert accused Amadeus of using Altéa PSS control to block competing Offer and Order solutions, and announced regulatory and legal action. The bull case is real: if EU competition authorities find what Sabre is describing — airlines constrained, not choosing — forced interoperability at the PSS layer would open the O&O technology market in a way commercial competition hasn't achieved. Airlines with no practical path to Sabre's OSD or Accelya's FLX would get a genuine option. The bear case is the evidence problem: every public Nevio confirmation since Sabre filed — Air France-KLM, British Airways, Saudia — is an airline appearing to choose voluntarily, which is the opposite of the coercion regulators need to see. But the deeper point is structural. The PSS has become the modern distribution chokepoint the way the GDS was for thirty years. The difference: the GDS held data. The PSS runs the airline. You cannot build a parallel pipe around the system that processes your check-in, your inventory, and your departure control. The chokepoint moved. The incumbency advantage moved with it. Model Context Protocol — the AI-to-data standard the tech industry has converged on — landed in airline distribution this week. TPConnects added MCP layers to its Iris and Astra platforms, exposing more than 60 airlines through a single machine-readable interface and normalizing NDC schema fragmentation for AI agents. The bull case: MCP solves the problem NDC created. Airlines built NDC to own their offer but implemented it differently at every carrier. An MCP normalization layer gives AI agents one clean interface. If agents become the dominant shopping front end — IDC projects 30% of bookings through agents by 2030 — airlines reach travelers without paying a new intermediary at the search layer. The bear case: a normalization layer over 60 airlines is still an aggregator. Whoever controls that layer controls what agents see, what they prioritize, and how airline content ranks. Airlines that spent a decade pulling offer creation in-house could find themselves handing the demand interface to whoever owns the best agent connection. The critical take: agents do not care about brand, bundles, or merchandising strategy. They return the math. Everything airlines built modern retailing to enable — rich content, dynamic offers, experiential ancillaries — gets compressed by an agent into a row in a comparison table. The MCP layer is not just plumbing. It is the moment airlines discover whether their offer survives being read by a machine. The IATA AGM in Rio delivered the most substantive Offer and Order progress report the program has ever produced — and a timeline that demands honesty. Seven full-scope airline O&O contracts now in place. Forty-eight pilots or proofs of concept. IT-provider tenders doubling year on year. Riyadh Air live as the first full-service greenfield carrier on native O&O. TMCs reporting NDC bookings up more than 150% year over year. Qantas and the ATMC held a transparency forum on NDC adoption in Sydney on June 2. The bull case: these numbers are not slideware. The shift from experimentation to material volume is visible, and airlines that move now retire legacy cost and own their offer while competitors are still scoping. The bear case: seven full-scope contracts across an industry of 300 to 400 airlines is a thin base, most IT providers don't finish current builds until 2027 or 2028, and the IATA roadmap quietly acknowledges the full transition runs past 2030 for most carriers. The critical take: the winners in this transition will not be whoever reaches 100% Offer and Order first. They will be whoever runs the messy middle most cheaply — managing NDC plus EDIFACT plus O&O simultaneously, for the rest of this decade, without the cost and complexity eating the retailing upside. Coexistence is not a transition problem. It is the product. Stories Referenced in This Episode Narrative 1 — Sabre vs. Amadeus: PSS as the New Chokepoint - Sabre Claims Amadeus Blocks Competition in Airline Technology [https://skift.com/2026/05/07/sabre-claims-amadeus-blocks-competition-in-airline-technology/] — Skift, May 7, 2026 Narrative 2 — The MCP Layer Arrives - MCP vs. NDC and other challenges facing airline distribution [https://www.phocuswire.com/news/distribution/ndc-ai-orders-airline-distribution-2026-uatp] — PhocusWire, 2026 - Iris MCP Layer Enables AI Airline Distribution [https://tpconnects.com/news/iris-mcp-layer-ai-airline-distribution/] — TPConnects, 2026 - MCP Explained: The AI Standard Reshaping Travel Tech [https://skift.com/2025/12/23/mcp-explainer-travel-ai-agentic/] — Skift, December 2025 Narrative 3 — IATA AGM Rio: Real Momentum, Honest Timeline - Progress on the journey to 100% Offers and Orders [https://airlines.iata.org/2025/12/18/progress-journey-100-offers-and-orders] — IATA, December 18, 2025 - Modern Airline Retailing Industry Transition Roadmap [https://www.iata.org/en/publications/newsletters/airline-retailing-hub/modern-airline-retailing-industry-transition-roadmap/] — IATA, 2026 - Qantas and ATMC Forge New Path on NDC [https://www.travelandtourworld.com/news/article/xa3ba019oqcr/] — Travel and Tour World, June 2, 2026 The Bottom Line Airlines won the right to own their offer. They immediately found new gatekeepers forming above and below them. The PSS incumbency layer — which Sabre named publicly but hasn't yet been able to dislodge commercially or legally — is the chokepoint that determines whether O&O transformation is genuinely competitive or effectively pre-decided. The MCP normalization layer is building a new demand interface for the agentic era, and it's forming outside airline standards bodies without airline input. And the IATA program in Rio confirmed what the roadmap has said quietly for two years: the industry lives in hybrid coexistence until the early 2030s. The three floors of the same building. The airline that runs the messy middle cheaply — managing three distribution stacks, staying visible to agents, and actually deciding what to sell through the system it's building — wins the decade. Not the one that crosses the finish line first. Intro music: The perfect corporate podcast intro by Lundstroem. Licensed under a Attribution 4.0 International License. The V1 Airline Retailing Report publishes every Monday. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. V1 Advisory LLC | v1advisory.co [http://v1advisory.co] Related: Tasks | V1-Advisory-Status | V1-Airline-Retailing-Report-Podcast-Guide

7. juni 202611 min