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How to use AI to plan a vacation? Companies are bringing it to you


According to a global survey of more than 5,700 travelers commissioned by Expedia Group, the average traveler spends more than five hours researching a trip and reviews 141 pages of content — for Americans, it’s a whopping 277 pages.

And that’s just in the final 45 days before departing.

Enter generative artificial intelligence — a technology set to simplify that process, and allow companies to better tailor recommendations to travelers’ specific interests.

What could that look like? The hope is that AI will not only plan itineraries, but communicate with hotels, draft travel budgets, even function as a personal travel assistant — and in the process fundamentally alter the way companies approach travelers.

A typical home search on Airbnb, for example, produces results that don’t take past searches into account. You may have a decade of booking upscale, contemporary homes under your belt, but you’ll likely still be offered rustic, salt-of-the-earth rentals if they match the filters you’ve set.

But that could soon change.

During an earnings call in May, CEO Brian Chesky discussed how AI could alter Airbnb’s approach. He said: “Instead of asking you questions like: ‘Where are you going, and when are you going?’ I want us to build a robust profile about you, learn more about you and ask you two bigger and more fundamental questions: Who are you, and what do you want?”

The travel companies that are bringing A.I. to their customers

While AI that provides the ever-elusive goal of “personalization at scale” isn’t here yet, it’s the ability to search massive amounts of data, respond to questions asked using natural language and “remember” past questions to build on a conversation — the way humans do — that has the travel industry (and many others) sold.

Travel companies using A.I.

A summer explosion of travel A.I.

HomeToGo’s new “AI Mode” allows travelers to find vacation rental homes using natural language requests.

Source: HomeToGo

In July:

  • Tripadvisor launched a web-based, AI-powered travel itinerary maker called Trips.
  • Trip.com released an updated chatbot called TripGenie, which responds to text and voice requests, shows images and maps, and provides links for bookings.
  • The holiday home rental company HomeToGo beta launched an in-app AI search function called “AI Mode” for users in the United States and United Kingdom.

Now, more travel companies have ChatGPT plugins, including GetYourGuide, Klook, Turo and Etihad Airways. And a slew of AI-powered trip planners — from Roam Around (for general travel), AdventureGenie (for recreational vehicles), Curiosio (for road trips) — added more options to the growing AI travel planning market.  

Beyond travel planning

Travel planning is the most visible use of AI in the travel industry right now, but companies are already planning new features.

Trip.com’s Senior Product Director Amy Wei said the company is considering developing a virtual travel guide for its latest AI product, TripGenie.

“It can help provide information, such as an introduction to historical buildings and objects in a museum,” she told CNBC. “The vision is to create a digital travel companion that can understand and converse with the traveler and provide assistance at every step of the journey.”

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