Sabre’s India Chief on Finding Talent, Tech Shifts, and What Travelers Want Now
Photo Credit: Adobe Stock / Timon
Photo Credit: Adobe Stock / Timon

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Travel technology company Sabre is increasing its focus on India, and leading the push is Samual Machado, who returned to Sabre last year to lead its India and South Asia operations.

The company’s investment plan includes hiring from India’s top business schools like the Indian Institute of Management (IIM), strengthening 24/7 customer support, and building a long-term pipeline of talent.

Rather than pulling in seasoned professionals from rival firms, Machado said Sabre is taking a different route. “I didn’t want to just hire from competitors,” he said speaking to Skift on the sidelines of Sabre's 20th anniversary in India. “We’re building a team for the future, and that means bringing in fresh talent, not just experienced hands.”

Sabre has credited its global capability center (GCC) in Bengaluru with “increasingly shaping” the company’s global technology roadmap. Starting as a back-office delivery centre, it has grown into a core pillar of Sabre’s global technology strategy.

Sabre’s Relevance to India’s Travel Industry

India’s travel industry is changing quickly. What used to be the domain of walk-in travel agencies is now dominated by online platforms and apps.

In all this, global distribution companies like Sabre are helping travel sellers and buyers navigate a fast-changing, tech-heavy world. “Gen Z wants to plan everything themselves,” Machado said. “15 years ago, brick-and-mortar agencies handled most bookings in India. Today, online travel agencies dominate.”

The switch though isn’t just generational. Travelers now expect more options, faster bookings, and the flexibility to make decisions late. While corporate travel remains structured and is almost always planned in advance, leisure travel is increasingly spontaneous. With better deals available closer to the date, many Indian holiday-goers are content waiting till the last minute to book.

Samual Machado, managing director, India and South Asia, Sabre.
Samual Machado, managing director, India and South Asia, Sabre.

How the Pandemic Changed the Indian Traveler

Covid-19 didn’t just pause travel, it changed how Indians travel for good. “The pandemic taught people to value organized travel,” said Machado. “During Covid, I remember how one could book a night’s stay at the Taj or Oberoi for INR 5000 ($58).”

They’re willing to pay more now, Machado noted, because they see the value in premium experiences. It’s a sign of a maturing market and of rising aspirations. “Indian travelers are graduating into spending on themselves.”

These rooms in five-star hotels were earlier filled mostly by foreign tourists.

The improved road infrastructure and growth in domestic air travel have also played a role. As more cities get connected and travel becomes easier, leisure and business travel have surged. Visa delays for international travel have also pushed more people to explore within India, further fueling this domestic growth, Machado said.