Trivago Wants to Find Profitability and Spend Big on Marketing, Too


Skift Take

Your eyes weren't fooling you. Late last year, Trivago really did spend more on its TV ads than ever before in many markets. In its first financial report as a public company, the price-comparison company says the ads are working.

Can a company that seemingly spends almost every euro it earns off customers on more TV and digital marketing find a path to profitability? That was the question on the minds of some analysts as Trivago, the digital hotel search company majority-owned by Expedia, released its first quarterly earnings report since it went public in December at a $4 billion valuation. On a call Friday, the Düsseldorf-based company said its selling and marketing expense (including money for all of those Trivago Guy TV ads) increased by 70 percent, year-over-year, in 2016. The path to making money is there, executives said. In some countries, the company has met its long-term profitability targets, though the executives wouldn't name the countries. Some of the near-profitable countries are likely European, though a few may not be. For the first time, the Düsseldorf-based business earns the majority of its revenue outside of its core European market. Executives said their key measure of advertisi