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Booking.com's CEO Got Stranded in Denver. His Fix Is to Make Your Hotel Invisible.

Glenn Fogel wants AI to reroute travelers mid-trip without them ever seeing your property listing. If you're an independent operator who depends on Booking.com for discovery, the question isn't whether this technology works... it's what happens to your bookings when it does.

Booking.com's CEO Got Stranded in Denver. His Fix Is to Make Your Hotel Invisible.
Available Analysis

So Booking.com's CEO is sitting on a tarmac in Denver, flight canceled, and his big takeaway isn't "I should have checked the weather." It's "my own platform should have rerouted me to Aspen before I ever boarded." And look... I get the vision. I really do. AI that anticipates disruptions, rebooks you, finds the hotel, the car, the dinner reservation... all before you even open the app. It's the Connected Trip strategy they've been building toward for years, and from a pure technology standpoint, it's genuinely interesting architecture. The problem is that "interesting architecture" and "good for your hotel" are two completely different conversations.

Let's talk about what this actually does. Right now, when a traveler's plans break down, they open Booking.com, search a new destination, scroll through listings, and maybe... maybe... land on your property. You have a chance to compete. Your photos, your reviews, your rate, your positioning... all of that matters in the decision. What Fogel is describing is a system where the AI makes that decision FOR the traveler. No search. No scroll. No comparison. The algorithm picks the hotel based on whatever signals it's trained on (and if you think "AI Trip Match," their review-based ranking system they rolled out three weeks ago, isn't a preview of this... check again). Your property either fits the model's criteria or it doesn't exist. There's no second page of results because there's no first page. There's just... a recommendation.

Now here's where it gets uncomfortable for independents. Booking.com says 65% of users already come directly to their platform. They have 300 million room nights booked per quarter. They're partnered with OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and Amazon on AI development. They've cut customer service costs by double digits through AI automation at Agoda. This isn't a startup pitching a deck... this is a company with $4.4 billion in quarterly revenue building infrastructure that fundamentally changes how travelers discover hotels. And that infrastructure rewards properties with clean data, consistent content, active review management, and alignment with whatever the algorithm decides "traveler intent" means this quarter. I consulted with a hotel group last year that had 40 properties on Booking.com... same content quality across all of them, they thought. When the AI Trip Match update hit, 12 of those properties dropped an average of 4 positions in search. Same hotels. Same rooms. The algorithm just decided their review profile didn't match traveler signals as well. Nobody called to warn them.

The 89% stat from Booking's own research is telling... 89% of consumers say they want AI in travel planning, but only 12% are comfortable with AI making independent decisions. Fogel is betting that gap closes. He's probably right, eventually. But "eventually" matters a lot when you're an operator trying to fill rooms in Q3 2026. The technology isn't vaporware... it's incrementally rolling out in features like Smart Messenger, Auto-Reply, AI Voice Support, and that Trip Match ranking system. Each one takes a little more of the discovery process away from the traveler's hands and puts it into the algorithm's. Each one makes your content, your reviews, and your data hygiene a little more existential.

Look, I'm not anti-AI. I've built systems that failed spectacularly and systems that worked beautifully, and I can tell the difference between genuine innovation and a CEO using a personal travel inconvenience to sell a keynote narrative. This is somewhere in between. The technology is real. The trajectory is real. The question operators should be asking isn't "will AI reroute travelers someday?" It's "when the algorithm is the only thing between a stranded traveler and my hotel, what am I doing TODAY to make sure it picks me?"

Operator's Take

Here's what to bring to your next team meeting, especially if you're an independent or a soft-branded property that depends on OTAs for more than 30% of your bookings. Pull your Booking.com content right now... every photo, every description, every amenity tag. If it hasn't been updated in the last 90 days, you're already behind what the algorithm wants. Review response rates matter more than they did last month because AI Trip Match is using review signals for ranking. Respond to every review, positive and negative, within 48 hours. And start tracking your search position weekly, not monthly. When these AI features shift your placement, you won't get a notification... you'll get a slow bleed in bookings that looks like a demand problem but is actually a visibility problem. The properties that survive this shift are the ones that treat the algorithm like a guest... understand what it wants and deliver it consistently. The ones that ignore it will wake up one morning and wonder where their bookings went.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Source: Google News: Booking Holdings
🏢 Agoda 📊 AI Trip Match 🏢 Anthropic 🏢 Google 🏢 Booking.com 📊 Connected Trip 👤 Glenn Fogel 🏢 Independent hotel operators
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.