- Nearly two years into the
pandemic , Americans are starting totravel en masse again. - The time at home changed where we want to go, and how we get there.
- These 10 industry players are leading the industry's effort to stay ahead of those shifts.
For most Americans, the
But for the denizens of the travel industry, those shifts represented an existential threat. Life went on, but with a whole lot less moving around. Cruises shut down, road trips were postponed, and flights were reserved for acts of desperation.
Nearly two years in, with effective vaccines nearly universally available, the industry is coaxing Americans out of their bunkers — and starting to understand the many ways we've changed how we all think about movement.
For the Travel section of this year's edition of Insider's 100 People
Street life
The dream of the self-driving car has been knocking around nearly as long as the car itself, but now that the technology is approaching ready for wide-scale deployment, it's time to figure out how to work it into people's lives.
At
At
Meanwhile, Uber veteran Raquel Urtasun is going back to the beginning of the process. This summer, she launched her startup, Waabi, with the goal of building a self-driving car from the ground up, based heavily on her expertise, machine learning. "When you don't have a solution yet, everybody thinks the same," Urtasun said. "Everybody's going for the same approach. Chances of success actually diminish."
By air and by sea
If managing director of global operations for
Roei Ganzarski wants to make a bigger change to the flying experience. The aviation industry may be many years from erasing its Bigfoot-sized carbon footprint, but Ganzarski's startup, MagniX, is looking to take it down a size by developing a 40-seat, hydrogen-powered, electric aircraft set to take off in 2024.
Norwegian Cruise Line CEO Frank Del Rio is dealing with a much more imminent problem: how to safely return to the high seas, especially after multiple virus outbreaks on cruise ships in the early days of the pandemic. His answer: a strict mandate that everyone on board be vaccinated, even if that means saying no to families with kids too young for the shot and battling with politicians like Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
Getting a room
The biggest travel-related changes stemming from the pandemic may be those hitting the hospitality business, as people rethink where they want to spend their time, whether they're working or on vacation. At
Hopper's head of fintech, Anwesha Bhattacharjee, has deployed a "price freeze" tool to let customers lock in rates. "People wanted to travel, but we had to create something that made them comfortable booking it," she said. "We constantly kept our ears to the ground as we shifted to understand what customers wanted out of this product."
Since becoming Airbnb's global head of hosting in July 2020, Catherine Powell has been helping the company's hosts navigate those shifts. "Their ability to be resilient, their willingness to adapt, and their desire to continue to really create the best possible hosted experience has been really humbling," she said.