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Our Purpose

About the Alliance

Together, we’re building the future of direct booking.

The Team

People Behind the Alliance

Meet the people helping to build the direct booking ecosystem.

Arlen Ritchie

Arlen Ritchie

Executive Director

Executive Director

Arlen is the Executive Director of the Direct Booking Alliance and the founder of Kicbak, a peer-to-peer protocol for cooperation within the travel industry to help accelerate the shift to direct bookings. Through the Alliance, he works with operators, technology partners, and industry leaders to build shared infrastructure for direct distribution.

Kay Walten

Kay Walten

Director

Founder & Direct Booking Strategist • USA

Founder of Smart Pineapple, a SaaS Marketing Suite for independent accommodations. With 35+ years in hospitality, Kay built one of Mexico's first online travel services and has grown online communities to 100,000+ members. Director of Destination Partnerships at Blueview Productions.

Stefan St. Marie

Stefan St. Marie

Ambassador

Founder @ Revnest • Boise, Idaho, United States

Founder of Revnest, a marketplace for buying and selling vacation homes and short-term rentals, helping owners and property managers market listings before they reach the MLS.

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Mission

To connect and strengthen the direct booking ecosystem.

Vision

A future where booking direct is the default.

Why It Matters

The direct channel has always lacked a shared layer.

The Problem

Without coordination, the OTAs fill the gap.

The direct booking world is full of good operators, good tools, and good intentions — but too much of that effort happens in isolation. Operators solve the same problems in parallel. Good work rarely carries forward. And when the ecosystem doesn’t have its own coordination layer, the OTAs fill that role by default — and charge accordingly.

The Alliance Answer

Cooperative strength changes the equation.

The Alliance is the community and coordination layer the direct booking ecosystem has always needed. We help operators, technology partners, platforms, and industry allies find each other, work together, and build shared momentum — so that the direct channel can grow in ways no individual business can accomplish alone.

Arlen Ritchie

A note from our Executive Director


Today, OTAs drain $60–$80 billion a year out of the travel industry. And for nearly twenty years, I helped them do it.

That money flows out of the pockets of travelers, operators, and local economies — and into the hands of Big Travel and Big Tech. It enriches those who coordinate the industry rather than those who provide the experience. Over the long term, that isn’t healthy for travel.

As an affiliate of Travelocity, Expedia, and later Booking.com, I routed over $100 million in hotel bookings to the major OTAs. There was no easy way for me to monetize sending travelers straight to the operators. So like most other affiliates, I sent the bookings through the middlemen instead, reinforcing their position with each one.

Don’t get me wrong — the OTAs add real value. They give travelers trust, recourse, and the ability to compare options at once. They’ve built recognizable brands, rewards programs that span the industry, and an experience that makes booking online feel safe and simple. And the direct channel hasn’t really had an alternative. Each operator is a silo, with no shared layer to give the channel platform advantages of its own. When a traveler wants to book somewhere new, they have nowhere to turn but back to the OTAs. So the OTAs became the coordination layer by default — facilitating the recirculation of travelers across the industry, and extracting substantial profits for the service.

The expectation in the AI era is that operators will connect directly with travelers and bypass the OTAs altogether. What’s playing out is different. AI engines are turning to the OTAs first because they have what AI needs: aggregated supply, live availability and rates, recognizable brands, and a one-stop solution. The direct channel is still fragmented, and it’s far more efficient for an AI engine to query a handful of OTA pipelines than to engage with hundreds or thousands of individual operators to compare prices across a destination. So during search and price comparison, AI engines default to the OTA pipeline — and the risk is that the OTAs become even more entrenched. The direct channel needs an aggregation layer of its own to compete on equal footing.

That’s why I’m building the Direct Booking Alliance. Not to tear down what exists, but to build what’s always been missing: a place for operators, technology partners, platforms, and industry allies to find each other, work together, and create a more efficient, more fair travel industry — one that returns more value to the people who contribute to it.

If you’ve ever felt like the deck was stacked against direct booking, you were right. But the opportunity to change that has never been greater. I hope you’ll join us.

Arlen
Arlen Ritchie
Executive Director, Direct Booking Alliance

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