Oral History of Online Travel: How Hostelworld Backpacked Its Way to Success


Skift Take

Hostelworld needed to automate the online booking of hostels because there just wasn't enough money in it if employees or call center agents had to handle bookings over the phone. The company gave away free software to attract owners and then came up with a business model that was midway between Expedia's prepay model and Booking.com's pay at the hotel formula.

Skift launched its largest and most ambitious project yet, The Definitive Oral History of Online Travel, on June 1. In nearly 40,000 words founders, CEOs, other executives and insiders tell a story in their own words about the creation of Internet giants such as Expedia, Priceline, Travelocity, Orbitz, TripAdvisor and more. Not all of the interviews fit into the big story so we are publishing standalone stories that offer deeper insight into information we collected during the three-month research process. Read the Definitive Oral History of Online Travel Feargal Mooney, who currently is CEO of Hostelworld Group, the largest standalone hostel-booking platform on the globe, joined the company as COO in 2002 when he says "there were 12 people working out of a bedroom or two or three bedrooms in a house" in Dublin. The company, founded by software developer Ray Nolan, brought hostels online by offering them free property management system software and only charged them 10