Updated
Travel search engine Kayak has taken on $196 million in additional funding from a prominent group of investors.
It has separately purchased main rival SideStep for $180 million, as well as $20 million in the company’s bank account for a total of $200, Techcrunch first reported. [Update: We now hear from a source that the total sale was for slightly less: $175 million plus $18 million in cash, for a total of $193 million.]
Together, the companies will aim for a “tremendous” initial public offering next year, said Woody Marshall of Trident Capital, an early investor in SideStep, confirming the news.
[Update: The company itself is demure about the possibility of an IPO, saying instead that it wants to focus on being the number one travel site in the coming year.]
There has already been “strategic interest” in both companies — potential acquirers — Marshall said.
Both provide search-based travel sites where users can find travel information such airline flights, car rentals, hotel reservations, and discount travel deals. Search results may send you to other aggregators, like Orbitz, or online travel agencies. SideStep also offers travel guides, hotel reviews and downloadable toolbar, that will now be accessible by Kayak users.
Norwalk, Connecticut-based Kayak and Santa Clara, Calif.-based Sidestep are the two market leaders in this search vertical (see Hitwise graph below), and have mostly separate user bases, according to Marshall (note: He’s no relation to Matt Marshall, VentureBeat’s editor) .
Smaller travel search competitors include Farecast, Mobissimo, cFares, Tripit, niche travel products, off-the-beaten-path vacation search Tripology, and many others. The larger of these startups may now be acquisition bait, as leading travel sites like Expedia and Orbitz or large internet companies like Yahoo and Google look to expand their travel search services.
Kayak will be the main brand, and Sidestep will use Kayak’s search technology, although Sidestep will keep its brand, Marshall said. Key members of SideStep will join Kayak’s team. The companies say they will combine travel data, such as travel rates and availability, and other services. Affiliate partners of the companies include: About.com, Comcast, LonelyPlanet, Rand McNally and USA Today.
Both companies are generating large amounts of cash through CPM (where advertisers pay per thousand advertising views), CPA (where advertisers pay when a user actually buys a fare or ticket) and CPC advertising (where advertisers pay when a user clicks through to their site), according to Marshall. The Techcrunch article reports Kayak is doing roughly $50 million in annual revenues, while SideStep does $35 million.
The advantage of an IPO will be to boost the company’s brand awareness. Cash isn’t the paramount consideration, since the merged company already has ample funds for further expansion, Marshall says.
Both companies have racked up venture capital funding. Kayak took funding from General Catalyst, a Boston firm that first looked at Sidestep (see here), as well as Sequoia (Michael Moritz was the lead investor, and will now join Kayak’s board), Accel Partners, and AOL. Our previous coverage here.
Sidestep has taken a total of $27 million in funding from Trident Capital, Leader Ventures, Saints Capital, Norwest Venture Partners. Our previous coverage here.
Sequoia, Accel, General Catalyst, Trident and Norwest put money into this latest round, along with new investors Oak Investment Partners and Lehman Brothers Venture Partners, and debt lenders Silicon Valley Bank and Gold Hill Capital.
Tags: co:kayak, co:sidestep, deal, inv:Leader-Ventures, inv:Norwest-Venture-Partners, inv:Saints-Capital, inv:Trident-Capital9 Comments
-
Wondering said:
One important question- Are these revenue numbers grossed up to include the ‘amounts booked’ through these sites (like priceline.com did back in 1999 and 2000)?
Or these real numbers-that is cpc, cpm and cpa based? -
Joe Blough said:
They are real numbers.
-
Joe said:
Yahoo! already has travel search; they bought FareChase a few years back.
-
Elliott Ng said:
The most interesting fact (or claim) is that there is only 10% overlap in traffic. We at Kango think this is a signal that the overall search and discovery needs of customers are still not being addressed by the overall industry. That means that there is upside potential in this specific segment of price comparison, as well as other search/discovery services as they get more traffic/awareness.
-
Yen said:
What’s a couple of hundred million dollars between friends?
I have talked to a VC involved who says Kayak will do a “billion” dollar IPO in 2008. Well, that might be necessary for the VCs who invested in the last round assuming Kayak raised ~$150M in equity (and the remaining ~$45M in debt) for 25% of Kayak. Let’s do some back of the envelope analysis on a possible valuation. The dominant online travel agency, Expedia (owner of Hotels.com, TripAdvisor, HotWire…) trades at 3X revenue. Assuming 40% growth on their current revenue of $85M and a multiple of 6 instead of 3 because of a faster growth/higher margin story, perhaps an IPO range of $700M?
-
Payday Advance said:
This information on Travel sites Kayak and Sidestep merge, aim to become market leader is terrific wisdom for any reader to be thankful for. Thanks for such smashing illumination!
-
Melanie Gray said:
Get paid to travel with deep travel discounts.
-
kayak said:
i thot this site was about kayaking. Just as well - just learnt that kayak also refers to travel search engine. Got to try it
-
Debbie Sare said:
We stayed for a weekend at the Alias Kandinsky hotel and we had a fantastic time. We have previously stayed at other hotels in the Alias chain and we like the relaxed contemporary environment. The Kandinsky was not disappointing.
We had a lovely room - it was large (a king), beautifully furnished and had a great bathroom. The bed was extremely comfortable, as were the chairs in the room.
We enjoyed drinks in the hotel bar and then had dinner in the hotel restaurant. The restaurant was fine - above average for hotel dining. Afterwards we went for a few drinks in the downstairs bar and sampled the cocktails.

8 Trackbacks
1:22 am
Kayak and SideStep to merge « Adventure Capitalist said:
[...] no sense in rehashing the particulars here, although props should go out to Matt Marshall and the VentureBeat crew for — if not entirely breaking the story — certainly covering it with depth and [...]
12:37 am
Kango Blog » Blog Archive » Kayak & Sidestep Merger Highlights Trends In Online Travel said:
[...] VentureBeat brings together all the funding details in [...]
3:57 pm
VentureBeat » Holiday Roundup: Apple devices for store purchases? Digg, and more said:
[...] the most significant news items of 2007,” here. Our previous coverage of the deal is here. Tagged co:Apple, co:Digg, co:EMI, co:kayak, co:sidestep, co:Universal, co:warner [...]
11:31 pm
Hitchhiker's Guide to 650 said:
SideStep’s Funny Business?…
Was looking for a new car insurance carrier the other day and noticed the following ad on Google.
On the bottom right corner is an SideStep paid search ad. If its a little small, you can go to google and search for “all state car” and …
7:01 am
cVillain » Blog Archive » Future Internet Stars in Charlottesville said:
[...] in its space. Heard of Kayak or Expedia? Well if you haven’t think about this. Kayak has raised over $200 million dollars and Expedia is worth over $6 billion dollars. Charles explains that [...]
9:00 am
TripIt raises $5.1M to better organize your travels » VentureBeat said:
[...] are a lot of online traveling sites such as Kayak (our coverage), but TripIt sets itself apart by organizing your travel information after you have scheduled [...]
7:01 pm
Microsoft buys travel site Farecast for $115M » VentureBeat said:
[...] definitely been a lot of money pumped into online travel. For example, travel search engine Kayak raised $196 million and purchased rival site Sidestep for $193 million last December. Also, as we reported this [...]
3:00 am
NileGuide aims to own trip itinerary business » VentureBeat said:
[...] players in the online travel space include Kayak and the larger sites Expedia, Travelocity, Orbitz and [...]