From the days of holidex, Fidelio v6 and Micros 2700 we have for the last 30 years been adding technology upon technology in hospitality. In my last classes with my students (online), one reoccurring question was always, "why is there not one solution that can do everything". Once we discussed this more (language requirements, local fiscal reporting, support, etc…), the students got the complexity of using software and systems to run businesses. But moving forward, future managers are going to want their hospitality software to behave more like WhatsApp, Instagram or Snapchat. Download, install and work. No training or massive configuration to be done. So, where does this leave the hospitality industry? Do we keep on going with our "Lego" approach or do we need to say hold on, that's enough? Let's restart from scratch and what would that look like and how could we conceivably even do that.

Wolfgang Emperger
Wolfgang Emperger
Senior VP Europe, Africa and UK & Ireland Region at Shiji

The goal to develop and implement solutions that lend immediate out of the box value is always going to be a priority. Technology of any kind is ultimately just a vehicle to help users and their organizations get to where they want to go. That's the most useful horizon line we've got as software providers. It helps to keep in mind that applications should not be based on a monolithic set of assumptions. They must be scalable, sometimes more in one area than in others. In this, the modular nature of hospitality technology solutions that can be unified as a whole platform via seamless integrations is a strength, not a weakness.

Embracing diversity, expecting change, and understanding that one size does not fit all is an important set of concepts in our industry. As technology and culture shift, responding to the needs and expectations of hospitality organizations to best serve their guests is a constant, even if the specifics change – which they have done and will continue to do. The question of continuing as we have been or rethinking everything from scratch should always center on how well we can meet that objective. What the technology looks like at the other end of that process will be in whatever form it needs to be.

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