The PMS' role as the center of a hotel's technology ecosystem is coming to an end. Crucial guest data sits locked up in today's disconnected data silos, making it very difficult for hotels/brands to optimize and bank in on the 'digital guest journey'. True? If so, how could a future application/data infrastructure or migration path look like? What's your take?

Michael Schubach
Michael Schubach
Vice President of Product Management for Infor Hospitality

The history of the electronic PMS system will not define its future: it was an anomaly born of its time, the dawn of the Information Age when computerization costs were so exorbitant that the PMS had to enter the industry as an accounting system, and then only in the largest hotels in the world. It also explains why IT departments have traditionally reported to the accounting team – in the beginning, they were symbiotic parts of the same whole.

The PMS is in the process of being deconstructed into its core components. There are entirely separate systems that manage room inventory, distribution channels, rates, revenue, customer relationships, and service optimization. Each deals with more data than was offered in traditional PMS products that attempted to manage every site from five to five thousand rooms.

Still, we think in time-locked anomalies; we can't imagine what we can't imagine. Nonetheless, stir in Artificial Intelligence, robotics, enlightened self-service, data privacy, and ownership issues, and supercharge it all through a smartphone network that puts every human online 24x7 and the outcome will be totally unlike its predecessors. Expect that hospitality apps and data will be globalized above the chain level; property management will cease being individualized. Transportation and accommodation providers will subscribe, recognizing every traveler on a first visit or a fiftieth. I wonder if major chains realize they're in the process of being Uberized?

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