Connecting the adventurously grungy world of hostel-hopping international travel to the social web seemed like a colossal task. Most hostels have outdated systems or just use pen and paper to register guests, making it difficult for people staying in them to make new friends with fellow travelers in foreign lands. InBed.me is a social booking site for hostels as well as privately owned beds and couches. Believing its not “just about where you travel, but who you meet,” inBed.me provides social tools so travelers can meet with like minded travelers on their trips.
I met founder Diego Saez-Gil at InBed.me’s office at the (nearing ubiquitous) General Assembly co-working space on the morning of their launch party being held at NYC’s biggest hostel (more on this later). His Argentine accent started at a manic full-throttle and barely paused during an hour long ping-pong conversation. He started by expressing genuine appreciation for the power of the internet to connect people with opportunities across geographies, exemplified early in his career by obtaining a scholarship to the prominent Universidad Nacional de Tucuman in Barcelona from the small town of Concepcion where he grew up.
- Sign in through Facebook, or create a custom travel profile.
- Search through a growing database of hostels (with more on the way through a potential partnership with a major competitor).
- Check out their ‘social value’ through past visitor reviews.
- See who else is planning to stay during your prospective visit.
- ‘Future Check In’ indicating you plan to be there too.
- Book your stay.
- Network with other travelers to make plans for when you’re in the same place (with an Events feature coming soon).
With online travel being a $26B industry and hostels representing $1.4B alone, inBed.me stands to monetize fairly well off their 10% cut of booking charges. Diego divulged that they’ve drawn inspiration from similar companies, admiring the active CouchSurfing community and strong product design of Airbnb. Another tidbit I enjoyed is that the company name is a riff on John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Bed-In for Peace in 1969. The launch event alluded to earlier was held at Hostelling International — New York on the Upper East Side with 350 travel industry and press registered attendees intermingled with the night’s lucky hostel residents, drawn in by the allure of free wine, beer and door prizes. It was an eclectic crowd, comprised mostly of what I imagine to be the Latin American and European ‘jet-set on a budget’ types, with most people one item of clothing short of a hiking excursion. More than anything, I admired the event because it was hosted in the heart of their core user base. Most web startups launch at tech conferences in front of other geeks who go right back to promoting their own projects and bombarding investors the moment speeches are over. These guys convinced a crowd of early supporters to come out on a weeknight and promote their platform to friends who will do the same. After all, as Diego is fond of repeating, “Travel is about people, not places.”
