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World’s largest online travel agency
turns to DocuSign Web-based electronic signature service to
help make hotel inventory available in less time SEATTLE, WA (March 19, 2007) –DocuSign, the leading Web-based
electronic signature service, today announced that Expedia Inc.,
the world’s largest online travel agency, has begun using
the DocuSign service to help it speed contracts to corporate
headquarters for electronic signatures from locations around
the world, enabling new hotel inventory to be made available
to customers in record time, with less effort and more control. Through its use of DocuSign, Expedia’s international market
development managers can now obtain signatures from U.S.-based
vice presidents in near real time. This means that customers
can start booking travel to more hotels that much sooner. In
addition, since many hotels offer introductory rates when joining
the Expedia service, Expedia is able to make these special rates
available to customers for a longer period of time. For a high
traffic service such as Expedia, even a few days makes a significant
impact on revenue generation and customer satisfaction. “Expedia is a fast moving, online business, and we want
to use the smartest services available. We were impressed from
the start with how quickly and easily DocuSign helped us obtain
signed contracts,” said Gene Harden, Director of Lodging
for Expedia. “We knew that printing, faxing and manual
signing processes were not going to be able meet our requirements
for speed, or scale up to handle hundreds of contracts per week.” Before Expedia can offer a travel product to consumers through
its Web sites, the company must have signed contracts in place
detailing the product’s pricing rates, special offers and
many other conditions. The contracts range from a few pages to
tens of pages in length. The process of adding a new hotel to Expedia’s database
begins when signed contracts are obtained by market development
mangers based in travel destinations around the world. Prior
to DocuSign, these contracts were converted to PDF (portable
document format) files and e-mailed to Expedia corporate headquarters.
At headquarters, Harden and his team would print the PDFs, route
them to the appropriate vice presidents for review and obtain “wet
ink” signatures. Once signed, the contracts then had to
be faxed back to the hotel partners. “After printing out all the contracts, we would typically
have a 12- to 15-inch stack of paper that had to routed, signed
and faxed every day,” Harden said. “The fax machine
would be running for four to five hours six days a week sending
signed contracts to locations across Europe and Asia.” To sign the document, the vice president simply clicks on the “sign
here” tabs and hits send to complete the process. A two-minute
Web demonstration* made it easy for managers and executives to
learn the DocuSign service. The signed contracts are fully encrypted,
stored electronically and easily accessible through a Web browser. In addition to speed, DocuSign gives Expedia’s market
development managers better control over the signing process,
enabling them to see where each contract is in the signing process,
and whether it may have gotten stuck waiting for review or authorization.
Moreover, the managers have a permanent, online record of each
contract, giving them better control over their hotel relationships,
or allowing new managers to easily step in with full access to
current and past records. “Expedia is another example of how DocuSign’s electronic
signature service helps companies to remove costs, increase revenues,
and accelerate the velocity of their business by using the Internet
to replace paper agreements,” said Matthew J. Schiltz,
CEO and President of DocuSign. “Electronic signatures make
great economic sense for any business. The DocuSign electronic
signature service has made the cumbersome process of signing
paper agreements obsolete.” About DocuSign Rob Goodman
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