Jeff Hoffman, founder of Booking.com: How Web3 and AI are reshaping the trillion-dollar social travel market
This article is sourced from a third-party submission and does not represent the views and positions of ChainCatcher.
Original title: 'Booking alone is not enough anymore' --- Interview with Jeff Hoffman*
Original author: Nihatcan Yanik, Cointelegraph
1. Please briefly share your career journey. What field did you primarily focus on before engaging with Web3?
Jeff: I am a co-founder of Priceline and helped create one of the most successful cases in the online travel industry. Priceline later acquired Booking.com, and its parent company eventually evolved into what is now Booking Holdings—a giant with a market value of about $160 billion, listed on NASDAQ. My focus has always been consistent: to find large-scale but problematic markets and make them simpler, more transparent, and more valuable. Before engaging with Web3, I was dedicated to eliminating friction in the booking and distribution process. What attracted me to the Web3 space was not the hype, but the opportunity to reimagine ownership and incentive mechanisms. The current travel industry is still too fragmented. Therefore, I firmly believe that social travel driven by Web3 and AI is the right direction for the next step.
2. How do you view the disruption that Web3 brings to traditional travel agency models?
Jeff: Traditional online travel agencies have indeed made significant contributions, but they have also added layers—intermediaries, opaque economic models, and loyalty systems that are more inclined towards platforms than travelers. Web3 is disrupting this. It promotes direct connections, transparency, and faster settlements. For investors, this is where the significant opportunity lies: improving profit margins while enhancing user experience. The future winners will not be satisfied with merely listing hotels. They will build ecosystems that can reduce friction and return value to travelers. This is a structural transformation, not just a simple functional upgrade.
3. What global market trends make Web3+AI social travel platforms more advantageous than traditional intermediaries?
Jeff: The following three trends are crucial. First, travelers need flexibility and real rewards, not points that expire. Second, digital payments and borderless commerce have become the norm, especially for younger users. Third, people trust communities more than advertisements. Traditional systems were not built for this. Social travel platforms driven by Web3 and AI are exactly that. They integrate booking, payment, rewards, and personalized experiences into one interconnected ecosystem. This is what modern travelers expect and what traditional online travel agencies struggle to provide.
4. What prompted you to transition from traditional online travel agencies to the Staynex platform?
Jeff: I joined Staynex not because it has the Web3 label, but because the travel industry is undergoing transformation again, and Staynex is in line with this trend. Today, merely providing booking services is far from enough. Future leaders will integrate business, rewards, AI, and payments. Staynex's goal is not to become a slightly better OTA, but to build for the real way people travel today. Notably, Staynex has announced that its token STAY will be gradually listed on three top ten exchanges starting April 23, 2026. This is real growth momentum, not just talk.
5. What inefficiencies did you discover in the industry while working at Priceline, and how does Staynex address them?
Jeff: The biggest issue is fragmentation. Travelers experience a coherent journey, but the industry delivers services through fragmented systems, incentive mechanisms, and relational networks. This creates friction and loses value. Staynex addresses this by integrating booking, flexible payments, AI-driven itinerary planning, and reward systems into an interconnected ecosystem. For investors, this means higher user retention and longer-term value. For users, the travel experience becomes simpler and more rewarding. This is what we call the Web2.5 dual-track model—combining the scale effects of Web2 with the incentive models of Web3. This model works.
6. What qualities of the Staynex team give you confidence to serve as the chairman of the project?
Jeff: I always prioritize the "human" factor. While markets and ideas are important, execution is everything. What convinced me? The team's focus on practicality rather than narrative. This is quite rare in the Web3 space. Narratives can attract attention, but only execution can earn trust. What I see is a team that truly understands products, user growth, and long-term value. They are not looking for shortcuts. I would almost refuse all invitations, but this time I accepted because they possess the discipline and ambition to build a real business.
7. How will blockchain + AI redefine global travel as a social experience in the next decade?
Jeff: Simply put: travel will evolve from one-time transactions to ongoing relationships. Blockchain enables transparent reward mechanisms and seamless cross-border payments. AI provides personalized experiences and smart recommendations. The combination of the two will make travel experiences coherent rather than fragmented. You will not focus on the underlying technology, but you will feel faster bookings, better rewards, and tailor-made journeys. This is the future. For investors, this means a new layer is evolving into infrastructure, rather than just a novelty. The enormous scale of the travel industry gives it the potential to realize this vision.
8. What predictions do you have for the long-term development of Web3+AI social travel platforms compared to traditional online travel agencies?
Jeff: Traditional online travel agencies will not disappear, but the value center will shift. The most valuable platforms will not just be aggregators of suppliers; they will also have relational networks around payments, loyalty, and communities. This is where social travel platforms have an advantage. Programmable rewards, AI recommendations, and other features will become standardized rather than specialized. The ultimate winners will be those platforms that deeply align with the real travel needs of digital users. In my view, travel remains one of the most underestimated opportunities in Web3, and social travel is the clearest entry point.
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