Travel distribution is no longer a downstream operational function delegated to commercial or IT teams. In 2025, it has become a boardroom-level strategic issue with direct implications for revenue resilience, customer ownership, and long-term competitiveness.
For decades, distribution decisions were largely tactical: which GDS to prioritize, which agency agreements to sign, or how to manage commissions. Today, those decisions shape access to customer data, pricing power, and brand positioning across increasingly fragmented channels.
The rise of NDC, direct APIs, platform ecosystems, and alternative booking models has shifted control away from centralized intermediaries toward suppliers and technology-driven platforms. Airlines and hotels now face critical questions: Which channels should receive the best content? How should pricing differ by channel? Who owns the customer relationship after the booking?
Executives must also confront the operational implications of modern distribution. Maintaining multiple content pipelines increases complexity, costs, and risk. Servicing consistency — especially during disruption — has become a key determinant of brand trust.
From a financial perspective, distribution strategy directly affects margin structure. Fees, commissions, payment costs, and technology investments must be balanced against revenue growth and market reach. Poorly aligned distribution strategies can erode profitability even as volumes increase.
As a result, boards are increasingly involved in distribution decisions, recognizing that distribution is strategy, not infrastructure.



