MakeMyTrip founder Deep Kalra, who pioneered online travel in India, has constantly adapted to market conditions. And with the company's merger with ibibo Group, he is once again set to change the contours of the travel industry
Deep Kalra, MakeMyTrip founder, says the conviction to start his own business came after he sold his wife’s second-hand car online at a higher price
Image: Amit Verma
When Deep Kalra, founder of travel website MakeMyTrip, planned a holiday to Phuket in 1999 without the help of a travel agent, little did he know that he was on the verge of embarking on an entrepreneurial journey too.
Sixteen years on (MakeMyTrip was launched in 2000), Kalra, 47, who pioneered online travel in India, is the leader in the segment. The merger of his homegrown online travel company with smaller rival Ashish Kashyap’s ibibo Group has not only been a watershed moment for the Indian online travel industry, but has also created a combined entity that leaves little room for a close second. This entity, which will operate as MakeMyTrip, will control about a fifth of the lucrative online air-ticketing segment, besides having a substantial presence in the bus, hotel bookings and ride-sharing space.
To break down the numbers further, MakeMyTrip, in an investor presentation in September 2016, claimed it had a 28 percent share of the Indian online hotel-booking segment and a 30 percent share of the online air-ticketing segment. On the other hand, ibibo Group’s Goibibo holds about 34 percent share in the hotel booking segment and around 20 percent in online airline booking. redBus, owned by ibibo, alone claims to control 65 percent to 70 percent of the market share in the online bus-ticketing segment.
For Kalra, the merger has perhaps been a natural evolution. “Entrepreneurship is all about rediscovering yourself. You have to keep evolving your business with time,” says Kalra as he sits back in the plush conference room of his Gurugram office, which has three tasteful Amit Pasricha photographs of Indian monuments on the walls.
The Game Changer
The announcement of the merger may have come around Diwali this year, but its seeds were sown a year ago. “It was mid-last year when we first contemplated a possible alliance as we realised ibibo is a strong competition, has deep pockets and is here to stay,” says Kalra. “We even met their shareholders briefly, but talks did not fructify at that point in time.”
A year down the line, the deal has been clinched and it is currently awaiting approval from fair trade watchdog Competition Commission of India. Once the clearance comes in, Kalra will take over as group CEO and executive chairman of the combined entity and co-founder Rajesh Magow will be CEO India of MakeMyTrip. Kashyap, founder and CEO of ibibo Group, will join MakeMyTrip’s executive team as co-founder and president.
This alliance seems to have been given destiny’s nod too.
Earlier this year, Kalra and Kashyap, 43, had been brought together in a legal battle they fought jointly against the Directorate General of Central Excise Intelligence at the Delhi High Court. They were both entangled in a service tax case where they were charged with tax evasion to the tune of several crores. “It was during the hearing of the case that we spent a lot of time together,” says Kalra. They won the case in September. In parallel, they also bumped into each other at a social gathering and their conversation went beyond the legal case to the future of the online travel business. It was then that “we talked about joining hands as we had a common ground and a clear vision,” he adds.
What’s more, they have similar backgrounds—both are first-generation businessmen who quit their corporate jobs to foray into the online travel business. “It is our mutual respect for each other that has got us together,” says Kashyap, who launched ibibo Group in 2007 and considers himself a rather late entrant in the industry. “By the time we came in, there were already a lot of entrepreneurs in the market and we were absolutely dismissed.”
But, sometimes, rejection helps people focus and do things differently. At a time when most entrepreneurs in the online travel industry were focusing on air ticketing, which was already dominated by Kalra’s MakeMyTrip, Kashyap says his foray into hotel booking and bus ticketing helped him gain a foothold in the market and get visibility.
(This story appears in the 23 December, 2016 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)