According to the Global Travel Staffing Barometer, due to the pandemic, travel companies around the world have laid off or furloughed over half a million people, and the number of LinkedIn users in the hospitality space applying the #opentowork hashtag to their profiles grows day after day. Most hotels are struggling to run operations with skeleton crews only, yet they do not have any real alternative. In some countries, in fact, the financial help coming from governments is close to zero, so the only option for these hotels is to get rid of "superfluous" staff and try to run their businesses with a fraction of their employees. This forced most properties to heavily concentrate and focus on productivity, trying to get the best out of dire circumstances. How will this situation affect hotels? Can a global reset actually be a good thing, after all, forcing the industry to get more done with fewer resources? Or will this trend damage the guest experience in the long run?

Federica Salvatori
Federica Salvatori
Revenue & Commercial Strategy and Founder of Federica Salvatori Consulting

The layoff of so many workers in the hospitality has caused the loss of some brilliant minds who moved to other industries, the other to wait for new positions to open and the "survival" workers to cover more tasks and roles.

In this new scenario, the only way out is to speed up and optimize the work. For this goal 2 aspects are key:

  1. a smart, flexible and agile staff able to face the change and re-adapt. And to see the glass half full, this is an opportunity to grow and develop new skills 
  2. Automation. This is not a choice anymore! It can replace all those manual, annoying and time consuming tasks for human and on the other hand optimize and personalize the sale and support to develop a right strategy. The less resources for more tasks would not be manageable without automation!

But this is not always easy to apply. In some contexts you cannot cut the service level. Let's think at the luxury, where the service level is everything. Here the open hotels had to make a choice: to reduce the own level or to keep it with an even bigger loss. An Hamletic question.

I am sure there has been a reset, but I also think that guest experience will always come first, so as soon as occupancy level will increase and a certain normality will come back, the actual approach and structure will be modified and adapted to the new conditions in order to favor the customer experience. But it would be stupid to throw out what good the pandemic has taught us: to be original creative, automated and more efficient. So some tasks have been forever replaced by technology (thanks God).

Whatever will happen, please take the good and leave the bad so that we can get out stronger. 

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