The 17 most influential people in travel of 2013
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| Football icon Lionel Messi and basketball star Kobe Bryant tried to show one another up in the The Selfie Shootout. (YouTube) |
Travel isn’t just about hotels, airlines, cruise ships, theme parks, and destinations. It’s about the people who make these things work. And when it comes to people who make our work at Skift interesting, these 17 men and women helped shaped the travel news that made 2013 so exciting. They not only made mega mergers, smart social campaigns, and disruptive technologies happen, they set the bar for their competitors and imitators.
Here they are, in no particular order.
Travis Kalanick, CEO of Uber
The smart, opinionated CEO has barreled through the ground transportation industry with all the delicacy of a rabid bull in a china shop. He’s done such a masterful job performing for the media that few bother to question how big the opportunities really are
Nick Bilton at the New York Times
The New York Times‘ technology reporter didn’t begin his one-man crusade against the FAA’s rules for using electronic devices on airplanes this year, but 2013 is when everything changed for people eager to keep their their Kindles turned on throughout the flight. In October the FAA announced that gate-to-gate use of electronics would be allowed if the airlines met certain guidelines. Flyers took to Twitter to thank Bilton
Carolyn McCall, CEO of easyJet
McCall could get attention simply for being one of the very few women in a leadership position at an airline, but that won’t do. This is the year that easyJet began showing Europe’s low-cost carriers how you can keep some prices low, but fine-tune your offering enough to attract business travelers
Lionel Messi of FC Barcelona
Every four years around World Cup time, soccer/fĂștbol players help make or break one big destination. But Lionel Messi gets people traveling every day of every year. As the face of Turkish Airlines (along with basketball player Kobe Bryant) and Qatar Airways, too (with his teammates at FC Barcelona), Messi is the most influential travel pitchman on billboards, TV, magazines, or the Internet — sorry William Shatner. His “selfie shootout” video for Turkish Air was the most-watched travel video on YouTube
Janette Sadik-Khan, New York City Transport Commissioner
Under the 12-year reign of New York City mayor/benevolent dictator Michael Bloomberg, the city made more changes to how people moved
Doug Parker at American Airlines
While outgoing American Air CEO Tom Horton got a bigger pay day, former US Airways boss Doug Parker is walking away with the reins to the world’s largest airline. He did it by courting both stock holders and labor unions before approaching the airline itself, and keeping a cool head during the U.S. Justice Department’s challenge to the merger. Parker has, as Bloomberg’s Mary Schlangenstein wrote
Jesse Desjardins at Tourism Australia
Bigger destinations with better attractions look to Tourism Australia as the example for destination marketing in a social age. It’s Jesse Desjardins and the organization’s social team who are responsible for bringing the island continent into the Facebook feeds, Twitter streams, and Instagram apps of more than five million potential visitors worldwide. This year Tourism Australia completed another successful (and very much copied) “Best Jobs in the World” campaign, activated its social followers by curating and sharing hundreds of their fan photos (including a racy kangaroo one
Ray LaHood, former Secretary of Transportation
Ray LaHood, who left office in July, used his four years as head of the U.S. Department of Transportation to change how people move about the U.S., and to encourage us to think smarter
Dilma Rousseff, president of Brazil
It’s rare that a world leader has the World Cup and the Olympics on her calendar just two years apart. But President Rousseff does, and the two sets of games have given her the opportunity to remake her nation’s ground transportation network, sell off the country’s largest airports
Ben Baldanza, CEO of Spirit Airlines
A pariah in the media, Spirit Airlines and its CEO Ben Baldanza has shaken up U.S. aviation with contrarian thinking, big fees, and a huge success story
Lydia Tenaglia, founder of Zero Point Zero
With Anthony Bourdain as the face man, Tenaglia and production company Zero Point Zero started No Reservations on the Travel Channel in 2004. In the place of vanilla hosts promoting a cruise ship or a hotel that’s given them a freebie, ZPZ’s hosts dig deeper into how people live, eat, and even hunt. As Tenaglia told Skift this summer
Brian Sharples, CEO of HomeAway
Airbnb may get all the attention, but HomeAway’s Brian Sharples is happier running a profitable public company. After going on a buying spree over the last twelve months
Jonathan Gray, Blackstone Global Head of Real Estate
This was a remarkable year for Blackstone in the lodging sector and as head of its global real estate unit, with some $70 billion in investor capital management, Jonathan Gray was calling the shots and managed to execute Hilton Worldwide’s $2.35 billion IPO, the largest in hotel industry history
Sam Shank, CEO of HotelTonight
HotelTonight is available only on mobile, offers only one product, and knows what its customers want as soon as they open the app. HotelTonight’s last-minute hotel deals have sparked copy cats across the industry
Pam Nicholson, CEO of Enterprise Holdings
This year Nicholson became the first non-family member to run Enterprise
Alex Calderwood, Co-Founder of Ace Hotels
2013 was shaping up to be Calderwood and Ace’s best year when the hotelier’s tragic death in November made the discussion not about what Calderwood would do next (new hotels in Panama, Los Angeles, and London), but about everything he’d already done. He had an outsize position in the industry that was a result of a business sense that, “encouraged the unwise allocation of human resources to risky ventures that took no heed to consumer research,” as one employee described
James Hogan, CEO of Etihad Airways
Under Hogan, Etihad has reinvented how airlines work together. Instead of alliances, Etihad has partnerships and investments. It has 45 codeshares and equity stakes in Virgin Australia, Jet Airways, Aer Lingus, Air Sechelles, and airberlin (with Alitalia a strong possibility
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