Hospitality HR experts estimate there are 100,000 open IT and digital marketing positions in hospitality in North America alone. This labor shortage and lack of adequate investments jeopardize the introduction of the latest technology applications and best practices, curbs new implementations and stifles technology innovations in the industry.  Is the lack of proper education - hospitality technology degrees and courses at hospitality schools, and professional development opportunities on hotel IT and digital marketing - the reason for this labor shortage and for the industry falling behind from a technology perspective? What's your take?

Osvaldo Mauro
Osvaldo Mauro
Entrepreneur & Business Developer

During a recent travel fair, I've asked to a well-known and internationally recognized Educational Institute if they were making any differentiation between their course for hotel Revenue Managers and Digital Marketing Managers. The lady replied, asking me if I knew what a revenue manager is. That brief exchange ended up with the fact that she didn't know what may be the hotel role of someone who takes care of digital marketing, the online distribution overall and its analytical metrics.

Now, opening an OTA's careers page, I randomly pick up their search for a: "Programmatic Operations Specialist". That is a person specialized in buying (through PPC real-time auctions), tuning and reporting just the kind of digital advertising named "programmatic". Apart from the nowadays importance of such type of adverting, I think that this easy parallel demonstrates that the next generation of hotelier's operators will likely not have the competences needed to make our industry compete with the online retailers/resellers. That's all folks. 

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