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The V1 Airline Retailing Report

Podcast by V1 Advisory LLC

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About The V1 Airline Retailing Report

Airline retailing is moving fast. NDC is maturing. Offer and Order is reshaping how airlines sell. GDS economics are under pressure. AI is rewriting the rules of personalization and pricing. And every week, something shifts.The V1 Airline Retailing Report cuts through the noise.Every Monday, host Eric Marketts — tech and aviation journalist — and Steph Nell — airline distribution expert and consultant — break down the two or three stories that actually matter in airline and travel retailing. Not headlines for their own sake. Real analysis. What's driving the move. Who wins. Who loses. What the industry is getting wrong.In aviation, V1 is the decision speed — the moment of no return on takeoff. Airline retailing has hit its own V1. The transformation is underway. The question is whether your organization is positioned to lead it or scrambling to catch up.This is the weekly briefing for airline commercial and product leaders, distribution professionals, travel technology executives, and anyone building or buying the platforms that power modern travel commerce.No filler. No spin. Just the sharpest take in airline retailing — every Monday.Produced by V1 Advisory LLC.

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5 episodes

episode Born Native, Booked on the For You Page, and the Deadline Just Got Real artwork

Born Native, Booked on the For You Page, and the Deadline Just Got Real

## Episode 005 — "Born Native, Booked on the For You Page, and the Deadline Just Got Real"Published: Monday, May 25, 2026Episode DescriptionLast week we said the window to shape how AI agents access airline inventory is open right now. This week, three things happened that made that window measurably smaller.This week on The V1 Airline Retailing Report, Eric and Steph break down a week in which the industry's infrastructure argument stopped being theoretical — and what that means for every airline still deciding when to move.On May 20, Riyadh Air became the world's first full-service network airline to launch entirely on Offer and Order. Powered by FLYR's platform and built on IATA ONE Order standards, with IBM handling the integration layer, Riyadh Air went live with no PNR, no e-ticket, and no legacy passenger service system. One Order ID. First commercial flight: Riyadh to London Heathrow, July 1. The bull case: the question "has any full-service carrier actually done this?" now has an answer, and that answer removes the last credible reason to treat O&O as unproven. The bear case: Riyadh Air is a greenfield carrier with sovereign wealth backing and zero legacy infrastructure to migrate — the hardest version of this problem, faced by every major incumbent with 40 years of PSS debt, remains entirely unsolved. Eric's take: the bar just moved. The excuses are gone. Airlines that haven't started are no longer waiting for proof — they're just waiting.On May 12, TikTok launched TikTok GO in the United States — a travel booking platform built directly into the app, with Booking.com, Expedia, Viator, GetYourGuide, Tiqets, and Trip.com as launch partners. Users discover a destination through TikTok content and book hotels, tours, and experiences without leaving the app. Creator monetization is built in. The bull case: TikTok has over 170 million US users, a significant share of whom are already making destination decisions through TikTok content. Closing the gap between inspiration and transaction inside the same session is a fundamentally new distribution surface. The bear case: airlines are not in the launch partner set — and there are structural reasons why flight booking doesn't convert the same way as a $90 experience or a $200 hotel night. The critical take: the problem for airlines is not what TikTok GO is today. It's where the customer is when they leave it. A traveler who books the hotel and the tour through TikTok GO is searching for a flight with an itinerary already designed without airline input. The discovery-to-booking pipeline for leisure travel just moved — and airlines weren't invited to build it.On May 6, Sabre, Mindtrip, and PayPal put the industry's first end-to-end agentic booking system into production. A user converses with Mindtrip's AI, the agent builds an itinerary, the user approves, and PayPal completes the payment inside the conversation — no redirect, no human agent. The Sabre GDS pipe provides the flight content. Real transactions. Real money. The bull case: the three layers that must work together for agentic booking — content access, AI reasoning, payment execution — are working now, not in 2028. Airlines fully represented in Sabre's GDS pipe can be found, priced, and booked by this agent today. The bear case: the agent sees GDS-piped content, not the airline's native offer. Airlines that have built NDC-only fares, dynamic pricing, or rich ancillary bundles outside the GDS pipe may find that their most competitive inventory is invisible to the first generation of production agentic systems — the structural irony of modern distribution doing most of the work and getting the least of the credit. The critical take: last week we asked whether your content was machine-readable. This week that question has a live production system attached to it. The deadline moved forward.Stories Referenced in This EpisodeNarrative 1 — Riyadh Air & FLYR: The World's First Full-Service O&O Airline- FLYR Powers Riyadh Air's Debut as World's First Full-Service Airline Built for Modern Retailing — GlobeNewswire, May 20, 2026- Riyadh Air and FLYR Launch the World's First Offer & Order Network Airline — Airline RGS- Riyadh Air Launches with FLYR Offer & Order Platform — Travel Daily NewsNarrative 2 — TikTok GO: Social Commerce Enters the Travel Distribution Stack- TikTok Turns Travel Videos Into Bookable Stays and Experiences — Skift, May 12, 2026- TikTok Now Wants to Be the Place You Book the Trip You Just Saw on TikTok — TechCrunch, May 12, 2026- TikTok Formalizes In-App Travel Bookings with Booking.com, Expedia, Trip.com Among Partners — PhocusWire- TikTok Launches Travel Booking Platform TikTok GO — Globetrender, May 19, 2026Narrative 3 — Sabre + Mindtrip + PayPal: Agentic Booking in Production- Sabre, Mindtrip, and PayPal Launch Agentic AI Travel Booking — Skift, May 6, 2026- Mindtrip Launches Travel's First All-In-One Agentic AI Flight Booking Experience — Sabre Newsroom, May 6, 2026The Bottom LineRiyadh Air proves the technology works at full-service scale and removes the last excuse for waiting. TikTok GO builds the discovery-to-booking pipeline for leisure travel and leaves airlines out of the architecture. And the Sabre-Mindtrip-PayPal system makes agentic booking a production reality — today, not in 2028. In each of these three narratives, the same pattern holds: the distribution environment is being rebuilt around airlines, not with them. The window to change that is open. It did not get larger this week.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.coRelated: Tasks | V1-Advisory-Status | V1-Airline-Retailing-Report-Podcast-Guide

Yesterday - 14 min
episode Why Legacy Airline Tech is Making Carriers Invisible to AI artwork

Why Legacy Airline Tech is Making Carriers Invisible to AI

The V1 Airline Retailing ReportEpisode 004 — "Invisible to Agents: The Infrastructure Debt Sabre Just Named Out Loud"Published: Monday, May 25, 2026Episode DescriptionThe airline industry keeps talking about Offer and Order transformation. Only 27% have started. This episode explains why — and why the window to fix it is shorter than anyone is admitting.This week on The V1 Airline Retailing Report, Eric and Steph connect three stories that aren't separate problems. They're three views of the same infrastructure debt — and together they set a deadline.Research published in April 2025 quantified the Offer and Order execution gap in a way the industry is only now starting to reckon with. A joint study from Accelya and Atmosphere Research Group — drawing on 78 airline executives and 28 phone interviews — found that 72% of airlines identify O&O transformation as a priority. Only 27% have taken substantive steps to begin. That's a 45-point gap between aspiration and action. The report projects NDC bookings tripling to 21% of total volume within three years while EDIFACT GDS distribution declines by more than 57%. The realistic implementation window for most carriers: 2028 to 2029. Sabre's CEO said something this month from an earnings call that makes that data land differently than it did when it first published.Sabre CEO Kurt Ekert used his company's strongest financial quarter in two years to publicly accuse Amadeus of monopolistic behavior in airline IT. The specific claim: Amadeus is using its control over the Altéa Passenger Service System to make it prohibitively difficult for airlines to implement competing Offer and Order solutions — trapping carriers inside a single technology ecosystem during the exact window when they need to modernize. Ekert said Sabre is pursuing regulatory and legal options. Amadeus responded not by rebutting the accusations but by announcing expansion into biometric identity, AI, hospitality, and payments. Eric and Steph break down what the non-response actually signals — and why the layers Amadeus is moving to capture are the same layers Google, Apple, and Anthropic are approaching from the consumer side.OpenAI quietly removed its "Buy Now" button from ChatGPT in March 2026 — and the industry read it as a reprieve. It isn't. A January 2026 survey found 90% of U.S. leisure travelers are aware AI can help book travel, but only 2% are willing to let it book on their behalf. IDC nonetheless projects 30% of travel bookings will be executed by AI agents by 2030. The consumer trust gap is real. The structural timeline is also real. And the infrastructure that determines whether an airline's content is bookable by an agent in 2030 is the same infrastructure that needs to be rebuilt right now. Airlines that haven't started O&O transformation aren't running behind on a modernization roadmap. They're building toward a future in which they don't appear.Stories Referenced in This EpisodeStory 1 — The O&O Execution Gap- Fewer than a third of airlines have started Offer & Order development despite recognizing revenue potential — Accelya / Atmosphere Research Group (April 2025)- Fewer than 1 in 3 airlines have advanced offer and order strategies — PhocusWireStory 2 — Sabre vs. Amadeus- Sabre Claims Amadeus Blocks Competition in Airline Technology — Skift, May 7, 2026- Amadeus Widens Its Travel Tech Domain as Sabre Fight Escalates — Skift, May 11, 2026- Sabre Weighs Legal Maneuvers Against Amadeus Airline IT 'Dominance' — The BeatStory 3 — Agentic AI Reality Check- Agentic AI will redefine travel and hospitality in 2026 — IDC, January 2026- Will Agentic AI Replace OTAs? The 2026 Reality Check — GimmonixThe Bottom LineThe O&O execution gap, the PSS lock-in Sabre named publicly, and the agentic AI timeline are not three separate stories. They are one story about one problem with three faces. The infrastructure that determines whether an airline's content is machine-readable is the same infrastructure most airlines haven't started rebuilding — and the primary structural reason they haven't started is the same constraint Sabre's CEO just named on an earnings call. IDC's 30% by 2030 projection implies this transition starts now. Airlines that treat OpenAI's "Buy Now" pullback as permission to wait are misreading the signal entirely. The agents are ready. The content isn't. That's not a technology statement. It's a strategy statement.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.coRelated: Tasks | V1-Advisory-Status | V1-Airline-Retailing-Report-Podcast-Guide

18 May 2026 - 18 min
episode "The Report Card Nobody Asked For" The State of Airline Retailing 2026 — What the Industry Believes, What It Admits, and What It's Avoiding artwork

"The Report Card Nobody Asked For" The State of Airline Retailing 2026 — What the Industry Believes, What It Admits, and What It's Avoiding

Episode - 003 (May 13, 2026) Ann Cederhall just published the most honest assessment of airline retailing in years — and the results will surprise you.The State of Airline Retailing 2026 is a global survey of 213 aviation stakeholders conducted by the esteemed Ann Cederhall through LeapShift, sponsored by Retailaer. It benchmarks where the industry actually stands — not where the press releases say it stands. The survey highlights the progress the industry has made, and the specific friction points that remain, as we transition to modern retailing. We are making the full report available so you can benchmark your current progress against the rest of the industry. Eric and Steph go deep across three narratives the data surfaces.Airlines are less confident in their own retailing than they were in 2023 — Despite three more years of NDC investment, ancillary tooling, and transformation programs, 41% of airline respondents rate their own retailing capabilities as poor or very poor. Airlines report feeling more confident in their peers than in themselves. With a 3.7% industry net margin and $120–150B in annual ancillary revenue at stake, the gap between ambition and execution is not a small problem.NDC is losing the room — and ONE Order is quietly gaining it — Negative sentiment toward NDC and Modern Airline Retailing has grown since 2023, while optimism about ONE Order has increased. The more important finding is why: the industry has failed to explain the difference between an order-based PSS and an OMS, and that confusion is causing airlines to freeze. You do not have to replace your PSS to unlock order-based retailing. That misunderstanding is costing real money.The biggest retailing opportunity in aviation is already inside every airline — Group travel, corporate direct purchasing, disruption moments, upgrades, and post-purchase touchpoints remain almost entirely untouched. Ann's conclusion is precise: the next wave of retail growth will not come from new products. It will come from retailing existing ones better — at the right moment, with the right offer, triggered by data airlines already have.Report Referenced in This EpisodeState of Airline Retailing 2026 — Ann Cederhall / LeapShift- Download the full report — LeapShift, in collaboration with Airline Information, sponsored by RetailaerThe V1 Airline Retailing Report publishes every Monday. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.

13 May 2026 - 19 min
episode The Pipe, the Pivot, and the Protocol - Westjet, Travelport and does MCP replace NDC artwork

The Pipe, the Pivot, and the Protocol - Westjet, Travelport and does MCP replace NDC

The airline distribution industry is running at three speeds simultaneously — and most people are only watching one of them.This week on The V1 Airline Retailing Report, Eric and Steph break down three stories that look separate but tell one story about where distribution power is actually moving.WestJet goes live with NDC this month — and they're calling it boring on purpose. After watching American, Lufthansa, and others turn their NDC rollouts into channel wars, WestJet held its launch until all three GDS connections were certified and ready. Agents get full channel optionality on day one. No coercion, no surcharge, no forced migration. It's the most deliberate NDC rollout in the industry's history — and it raises a sharper question: now that the pipe is ready, does WestJet have the offer logic to make it matter?Travelport has a new CEO, fifty million dollars in fresh capital, and a partnership with United Airlines that doesn't look like any airline-GDS deal we've seen before. John Mangelaars — formerly CEO of Skyscanner — took the top job on April 1st, and the company is repositioning from legacy GDS to AI distribution infrastructure. The United deal goes further: co-development access to United's NDC technology roadmap, shared engineering resources, joint agency tooling. It's a structural relationship, not a content agreement. Eric and Steph break down why the model is right — and why execution is still the open question.And then there's MCP. At the Airline Distribution 2026 conference, industry voices openly asked whether Anthropic's Model Context Protocol — barely eighteen months old — could make NDC obsolete before NDC reaches scale. Booking.com, Expedia, Turkish Airlines, Amadeus, and Sabre are all racing to publish MCP servers. Eric pushes back on the framing: MCP and NDC aren't competing — they operate at different layers of the stack. The real question underneath the debate is the one nobody wanted to close on: if AI agents become the primary booking interface, who controls the agent? It isn't airlines. It isn't GDSs. And that fight is already underway.Stories Referenced in This EpisodeStory 1 — WestJet NDC Launch"We've done our homework": Inside WestJet's "partner-first" NDC launch set for May 2026 — PAX News"It's the channel of your choice": WestJet prioritizes flexibility as it readies for mid-2026 NDC launch — TravelweekStory 2 — Travelport Reinvention & United PartnershipTravelport Enters Next Phase of Accelerated Growth as AI Reshapes Travel Distribution — PR NewswireTravelport and United Airlines Ink Long-Term Strategic Partnership — Travel Market ReportStory 3 — MCP vs. NDCMCP vs. NDC and other challenges facing airline distribution — PhocusWireAI, NDC and MCP: How the distribution of airline tickets is changing — TragentoMCP: Travel's Next Transformation Catalyst — Business Travel News

11 May 2026 - 18 min
episode The Point of No Return: Airline Retailing's V1 Moment Has Arrived artwork

The Point of No Return: Airline Retailing's V1 Moment Has Arrived

Episode 001 — Show Description & NotesEpisode Title: The Point of No Return: Airline Retailing's V1 Moment Has ArrivedPublished: Monday, May 5, 2026Episode DescriptionWelcome to the inaugural episode of The V1 Airline Retailing Report — the weekly podcast that cuts through the noise in airline and travel retailing and tells you what the headlines actually mean.In aviation, V1 is the decision speed — the moment of no return on takeoff. Airline retailing has hit its own V1. The transformation is underway, the direction is set, and this week's stories make that crystal clear.Co-hosts Eric Marketts and Steph Nell kick off the show with three stories that capture exactly where the industry stands right now: financial pressure on legacy distribution, the accelerating push toward Offer and Order modernization, and the AI wave that's about to reshape how airlines create and deliver personalized offers.This Week's StoriesStory 1: Lufthansa Group Raises Its GDS Surcharge — Again Lufthansa, SWISS, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, and Air Dolomiti raised their Distribution Cost Charge to $22 per ticket as of May 5th — and simultaneously pulled ITA Airways into the Lufthansa NDC ecosystem. With 75% of Lufthansa Group bookings now targeting NDC or direct channels, this is no longer a pilot program. It's a commercial strategy — and every major carrier is watching. Eric and Steph break down what this means for travel agencies, corporate travel programs, and the airlines still sitting on the fence.📰 Lufthansa Group to Raise GDS Surcharge Again in May as ITA Joins NDC Fold — Travel Market ReportStory 2: Early 2026 Is Signaling a Major Shift Toward Offer and Order The conversation is shifting from NDC as a distribution pipe to Offer and Order as the actual commercial engine. Airlines that are moving now are reporting real yield improvements and ancillary growth — but the gap between strategy and execution remains enormous. PSS constraints, organizational inertia, and the sheer complexity of modernizing core reservations infrastructure mean that most carriers are further from delivery than their roadmaps suggest. Steph doesn't pull punches on this one.📰 Early 2026 Signals a Major Shift in Airline Retail — PROSStory 3: Agentic AI Is Coming for Airline Retailing — and It's Not Waiting AI-powered personalization is no longer a roadmap item for leading carriers — it's becoming the expected standard. Airlines are reporting 5–10% yield increases and double-digit ancillary attachment growth from better personalization in the corporate channel. But agentic AI — AI that doesn't just recommend, but actually creates and delivers dynamic offers in real time — requires something most airlines don't have: clean, unified, permissioned data. Eric and Steph unpack what the AI promise actually requires to deliver, and why the data work has to come first.📰 Top Ancillary & Retailing Trends to Watch in 2026 — Future Travel Experience📰 Agentic AI: The Next Leap in Airline Offer Creation — PROS

5 May 2026 - 16 min
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