Vacatia

Vacatia, founded in 2013 and based in San Francisco, California, spun out of Vacation Listing Service Inc., launching originally as an online marketplace for buying and selling timeshare interests.[1][2]

Vacatia
IndustryInternet, resorts, vacation rentals
Founded2013 (2013)
Headquarters
San Francisco, California
,
United States
Area served
U.S.
ProductsOnline marketplace

History

In September 2013, the company raised a $5 million seed round from travel, hotel and vacation rental industry veterans, such as Spencer Rascoff (Zillow, Expedia, Hotwire), Erik Blachford (Expedia), Robert Spottswood (Hyatt Vacation Ownership), Raymond L. “Rip” Gallein Jr. (Starwood Vacation Ownership and Marriott Vacations Worldwide), and Barry Sternlicht and Steve Hankin (Starwood Capital Group). Other investors included Bee Partners, Peterson Ventures and Meyer Ventures, as well as personal investments from Egon Durban of Silver Lake Partners and Gene Frantz of Google Capital.[3]

In April 2015, the company raised $8.8 million in a Series A round led by Javelin Venture Partners. [4][5]

At the same time Vacatia announced its Series A funding, it announced substantial management team changes, the most prominent being the promotion of co-founder Caroline Shin from COO to CEO, with co-founder and former CEO Keith Cox being named Chairman. In addition, Mike Janes, formerly CMO at StubHub and GM of the online store at Apple Inc., joined as Chief Marketing Officer.[6]

In November 2015, Vacatia publicly launched its vacation rental marketplace.[7]

In May 2016, Vacatia expanded beyond the U.S. by adding 20 resorts in Cancun and Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.[8]

In April 2016, Vacatia was integrated with HomeToGo.[9]

In May 2016, Disney Vacation Club approved Vacatia as a seller.[10]

gollark: But making your own probably wildly insecure P2P network to propagate commands is cooler!
gollark: I suppose you *could* do that.
gollark: Ideally several cheap VPSes and fallback to IPFS or something.
gollark: I mean, you could also anonymously rent a cheap VPS.
gollark: For purposes?

References

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