Last year I participated in the research and illustration of the last 100 years of hotel technology in our series "The History of Hotel & Travel Technology" (read article). In many cases, we've seen hotel distribution and technology change during or after a global crisis. But is this a trend that will continue? And what could be the innovation from these crises?

Up until the early 2000s, managing the guest experience was still a very human to human experience, yet today the experience happens primarily through technology. Human interactions still hold value, but with the incredible growth of the internet, smartphones and an always-on lifestyle, people are no longer willing to wait very long for their desired outcome.

Hotels have so many touchpoints where customers interact with the property and staff, and this is what has set a hotel experience apart from a retail experience, hoteliers recognise this. They excel at delivering guest service. Yet more so than ever in today's climate, we need technology to facilitate many expectations that guests are not only used to but also expect. Today's hotel guests expect a quality experience from before, during and after their stay.

We all agree that people will want to travel again as soon as possible for holidays and business trips. Until travel resembles anything to pre-covid times we have a chance for innovation.

Looking beyond the obvious needs to support health concerns, 'contactless technology', how should we prioritize the data and innovate from what is available - what innovation will/should come from the current crisis?

André Baljeu
André Baljeu
Founder & Managing Director at techtalk.travel

Now more than ever, it's critical to not only understand what customers want but to use data to help customize and tailor experiences to each guest. When talking with any solutions provider requiring data to streamline the customer journey and guest profiles, an ongoing challenge is accessing clean data from other platforms or locations to collate that data and build the ultimate guest experience based on a true single guest profile.

One could argue that the four most significant challenges faced by the hospitality industry that not only affect overall guest satisfaction but also impact hotel revenues are.

  • The lack of automatization and customer-centric processes (Interoperability between systems)
  • Data Management
  • Security & Privacy
  • Responsiveness – both digital and human

Perhaps future innovation can be guided by these four pillars. We all agree interoperability is crucial between systems in a hotel tech stack. Data management does not only include hotels ensuring they have clean data running through their primary system, whether that be the PMS or CRM, but that that data can be shared across platforms by different service providers with no limits or barriers. Innovation could flourish once a solution to data barriers is derived. 

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