64 | FORBES ASIA APRIL 2018
FRANCO VOGT FOR FORBES
O
ne of the most cutting-edge travel apps in the
world makes its home in a decidedly old-fash-
ioned setting: an active zinc factory in Montre-
al’s former garment district. Walking through
a maze of sputtering machines and chemical vats, Fred
Lalonde, founder and CEO of Hopper, the world’s fastest-
growing flight-booking app, explains why he has rented the
space since 2009. “As bad as this place looks, it was prob-
ably the smartest place to start a data center,” he says. The
building is powered by a hydrodam, part of a Canadian sys-
tem that delivers a supply of cheap electricity and a perfect
match for an energy-hungry startup making a big- data bet:
that AI-driven recommendations can make travel more af-
fordable and personalized than what people can craft for
themselves.
Unlike most other travel sites, which generally want
you to book right away, Hopper is predicated on patience.
“Think of an e-commerce site that tells you 70% of the time,
‘Don’t buy,’ ” says Sophie Forest, a partner at Brightspark
Ventures, the startup’s first investor. “Hopper is that anom-
aly.” Aimed primarily at the leisure-travel market, the app
uses a sophisticated algorithm to predict the best deals and
times to fly and buy—alerting users at the optimal moment,
well before prices go up or down by specific amounts.
Since its launch in 2015, Hopper has become the most
formidable newcomer in an $800 billion flight market dom-
inated by Expedia, Lalonde’s former employer, and Booking
Holdings (previously called Priceline), and now boasts more
than 20 million users.
In January, Hopper was the fourth-most-download-
ed travel app in the U.S., after Uber, Lyft and Airbnb. The
120-person company, led by Lalonde, 44, and cofounder and
CTO Joost Ouwerkerk, 46, generated about $15 million in
revenue last year by selling flights, almost entirely through
push notifications.
Customers buy more than $1.5 million in flights per day
across more than 3 00 airlines, and give Hopper a $5-per-
ticket fee (airlines pay a 1% to 4% commission). Hopper
says customers save an average of $50 per ticket and claims
its airfare forecasts are 95% accurate up to a year in advance.
Meanwhile, Kayak predicts flight prices only seven days out,
The Vacation
Predictor
BY KATHLEEN CHAYKOWSKI
While many bank on AI paying of in the future,
one of the world’s hottest apps, Hopper, has
raised $84 million by monetizing it right now.
Technology