Gordon Wilson is stepping down as CEO and president at Travelport - a move that will see Oracle's Greg Webb come in to take over as boss of the company.
Travelport came off the public markets in May this year.
In his most recent role, Webb spent just a year as senior vice president and general manager for hospitality at Oracle.
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He is best known as a seasoned Sabre executive, having joined the company in 1997 and working his way through a number of departments.
He left briefly in 2000 for a 16-month stint at AT&T and had previously worked at American Airlines in the mid-1990s.
During his time at Sabre, Webb was chief marketing officer for five years and president of the GDS division for a similar length of time until 2015. He was vice chairman of the business until 2017.
Webb joins Travelport following a $4.4 billion deal that took it off the New York Stock Exchange and back to private equity under the auspices of Siris Capital Group and Evergreen Capital.
Wilson, who spent 28 years at the company and its earlier incarnation (Galileo), says: "It is time for me to hand over to someone else to run this business and the recent change in ownership of Travelport is the right occasion for this to happen.
"I firmly believe that Travelport’s new investors, Siris Capital and Evergreen Coast Capital, will be good for the company and I am delighted to be handing over to an executive as well tenured and experienced in travel technology as Greg Webb.”
Financial state
Travelport's last financial earnings statement to the public markets gave a downbeat assessment of the first quarter in 2019.
After ending 2018 with over $2.5 billion in annual revenue for the first time in its history (up 4% on the previous year), net revenue during the first quarter of 2019 fell by 3% to $657 million year-over-year.
Income over the same period fell to $20 million from $59 million over the same period.
The company's figures were hit by a decline in revenue from its distribution division, with Europe and the U.S. bearing the brunt of the losses.
Revenues from the Travel Commerce Platform took in $633 million in Q1 (down from $653 million in Q1 2018).
Growth in its Beyond Air revenues was flat ($180 million) but the continued star of the organization, its eNett payments division, posted a 12% increase to $83 million.
The new ownership structure saw John Swainson, an executive partner at Siris and current director at Visa, installed as executive chairman of the business.
Welcoming the new CEO, Swainson says Webb has "the industry knowledge, customer-focused experience and understanding of how to best monetize technology platforms will provide Travelport with strong leadership in this new era.”
In The Big Chair
Wilson's profile interview with PhocusWire from late-2017.