SIA subsidy for professors' platform HTIT-EN – Hospitality, Tourism, Innovation & Technology Experts Network

In 5 years, the platform aims to grow into a globally renowned knowledge platform, specialising in technological innovation in the hospitality and tourism industry.

The professors’ platform Hospitality, Tourism, Innovation & Technology Experts Network (further HTIT-EN) has been granted a subsidy of 100,000 euros by the SIA. HTIT-EN brings together researchers from five universities of applied sciences in the field of tourism and hospitality. This unique collaboration contributes to technological innovation within the domain of hospitality and tourism.

Professors from the Dutch public hotel schools, researchers, and technology experts come together to develop a joint research agenda around the question “How can the Dutch hospitality and tourism sector, which has a profound societal presence and encompasses a diverse range of workers and stakeholders, leverage its transversal character to generate extensive societal impact through the utilisation of emerging technological innovations?"

Unique collaboration
The professors from the five initiating institutions join forces with more than 30 professors and researchers from 10 Dutch knowledge institutions within this platform. The participants come from various academic backgrounds, including strategic foresight, engineering, disruptive transformations, digital transformation, design, psychology and the creative industry. The platform builds on commitment from the Centre of Expertise Leisure, Tourism and Hospitality (CELTH), Koninklijke Horeca Nederland (KHN) and is connected to more than 50 SMEs. Through this diversity, the researchers expect to showcase how the hospitality & tourism industry can become an accelerator for technology-driven social impact creation.

We are the first initiative that unites professors from all public Dutch hospitality and tourism schools with a broad array of researchers and industry partners. Together we will engage in practice-based research on the potential of technological innovation in hospitality and tourism. Such a setup is unique on a global scale. We are enthusiastic to create knowledge about how technology can be a catalyst for positive societal impact in hospitality and tourism – and beyond. Dr. Alexander Lennart Schmidt, Professor of Technological Innovation, Hotelschool The Hague
The Leisure, Tourism, and Hospitality domain requires cross-cutting technological innovation, considering the impacts and challenges that significant technological developments have on companies and organisations. Great to see that five leading academies in hospitality and tourism and CELTH work together and align their expertise and efforts, with lasting innovation and with that sustainable development of the domain as the ultimate goal.Menno Stokman, director of Centre of Expertise Leisure, Tourism & Hospitality (CELTH)
This platform is a foundational step for us to bring partners across institutes in The Netherlands together to create novel initiatives that will drive technological development and innovation in our industries and society. Dr. Dai-In Danny Han, Professor of Research Centre Future of Food, Hotelmanagement School Maastricht, Zuyd University.
If you think today is about exponential change in technology, this is nothing compared to tomorrow. The new platform allows researchers and partners to make sense of the future for the betterment of industry and future innovations. Dr. Ian Yeoman, Professor of Disruption, Innovation and New Phenomena in Hospitality and Tourism, Hotel Management School, NHL Stenden.
This platform will be a place of experimentation and exploration of digital spheres. We are not only bringing together leading researchers in the field but also building bridges to the tourism, hospitality and creative industries. Dr. Jessika Weber Sabil, Professor of Digital Transformation in Cultural Tourism, Academy for Tourism, Breda University
Let us be aware that technology is loaded with values. The applications of technology, but also technology itself can be hospitable - or hostile. Responsible Innovation, critically considering the purpose and effects of technologies, is what we need to make sure that technology brings positive impact to hospitality businesses.Dr. Steven Dorrestijn, Professor Ethics & Technology, Hospitality Business School, Saxion

If you are an industry partner and interested in collaborating with HTIT-EN, please contact Dr. Alexander Lennart Schmidt via [email protected]

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Hotelschool The Hague, founded in 1929, is one of the oldest and most prominent independent hotel schools in the world. With campuses in The Hague and Amsterdam, the school educates more than 2,850 students to become future-facing hospitality professionals and managers in the hospitality industry. Since 2014, Hotelschool The Hague has been annually voted the best public hotel school in the Netherlands and is highly regarded globally according...