A recent University of Houston report on robots in hospitality claims that by 2030 over a quarter of hospitality jobs will be replaced by robots. Will robots ever replace all humans in hospitality? Next-gen technology will undoubtedly replace mundane, repetitive, and dangerous jobs in hospitality performed by housekeepers, porters and baggage handlers, concierges, security guards, line cooks, room service, bartenders, waiters, etc. Some hoteliers claim that hospitality is an industry of "people serving people" and robots will be playing only a marginal role. Others, citing the high labor costs which constitute as much as 50%-84% of overall hotel costs in these low travel demand, low occupancies era, predict that robots will replace humans in all dangerous, repetitive and mundane jobs at the property.

The question is, are robots coming to a hotel near you anytime soon? 

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

In a limited capacity and when it's proven to make financial and operational sense. I do not believe that hotels offering a higher level of service, whose reputation and brands have been established on product and service quality will want to hand important human to human relationships over to a robot anytime soon.

Robots cannot emotionally or empathetically respond to delicate guest situations that might be critical for brand reputation where a human can. I feel this still holds a lot of weight in the discussion. Of course, in ten years, the status could be completely different.

Unionisation is stronger in some places than others so I think replacing a bartender with a robot is still a very long way off. Plus, a robot is in no way qualified to replace your favourite bartender for that chat about all the troubles in the world, is it? 

A realistic way forward is possibly a hybrid approach; introducing Robots to assist with cleaning duties such as vacuuming. We use Robotic vacuums in our homes; why not hotels. 

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