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Monday, 29 June 2026

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Skift · 29 Jun 2026

Two of India's largest OTAs launched creator-commerce programs within five weeks of each other, but split on attribution: one pays creators only on confirmed bookings via comment-triggered DMs that fire a unique booking link, pre-filled search and coupon, with no follower minimum; MakeMyTrip, partnered with Meta on Instagram, still pays on engagement and sets a 10,000-follower floor, with a stated plan to move to outcome-based payouts in six to nine months. Both recruit on engagement over reach and lean on regional-language tier-2/3 micro-creators, with Telugu content cited as the fastest-converting early segment.

Industry lens

If a platform like Meta restricts the comment-triggered DM automation these programs depend on, does the booking-attributed creator model survive — or does it collapse back into the engagement-paid model it was built to replace?

Two near-identical launches in five weeks prove that creator-led travel commerce is here. The hard part now is proving that a reel can turn into a booking, and deciding how much the companies are willing to spend before they have that proof.

Skift

Also today

India’s Next Hotel Boom Is Being Built by Companies That Don’t Run Hotels

Non-operator players — real estate developers, infrastructure firms and airport operators — are funding India's next wave of hotel supply, putting up land and capital while global brands run operations. A developer's roughly $656 million (INR 62 billion) plan for 19 hotels across 13 cities, twelve of them in Uttar Pradesh and weighted toward religious and business tourism, follows airport-operator and realty moves into hospitality, against a supply-demand gap where premium room supply grows 5-6% annually versus 8-9% demand.

Skift·29 Jun 2026