With travel demand accelerating rapidly, the hospitality industry is experiencing a new challenge: labor shortages resulting in sharply rising labor cost, which consumes as much as 60%-80% of RevPAR (CBRE). In the U.S. alone, hotels need to hire 600,000 more employees by summer to be able to meet demand (BIS.gov). Right now there are 171,800 open positions on LinkedIn for hospitality jobs in the U.S.

Wages in hospitality operations - frontline position such as housekeeping, front desk, wait staff, line cooks, etc. - are up more than 20% since April 2020 (Hotel Effectiveness). Hotels and restaurants alike are offering sign-up bonuses, higher wages and even cash payments to candidates just to come for an interview. In the same time productivity is down due to influx of inexperienced staff, since many of the experienced hospitality professionals left the industry due to furloughs and layoffs during the pandemic.

The question is, how can the hospitality industry solve the current labor shortages and unsustainable labor cost through technology innovations, automation, mobility, robotization and next gen technology applications?

Marco  Correia
Marco Correia
Partner & Co-Founder, T-Hotel Hospitality Knowledge

Now that the recovery seems undeniable, the hospitality industry is facing a shortage of labour. The tsunami of furloughs and layoffs that hit the industry during the pandemic peak has caused many skilled hospitality workers found occupation in other sectors that offer more stability, better wages and a better balance between personal and professional life. Hardly those professionals will return to the industry.

This is a worldwide phenomenon, and although the premise for this viewpoint is very US-centric, there is undoubtedly a search for technological solutions that can reduce the impact of the labour shortage experienced by the industry. We can classify the nature of these tools into three prominent families.

Scheduling and Human Capital Management software – This family of tools aims to optimise the labour resources based on actual demand and accurate forecasts. Its end goal is to transform labour cost from a fixed to a variable cost. We believe that the success of this software family is dependent on the local labour laws. If in the United States these can be very effective tools in markets, such as southern Europe, where legislation is rigid, its effect will be minimal.

Robotization – Discussed in a past Hospitality Net's viewpoint, we believe that robots are far from replacing human labour in many of the positions where the labour shortage occurs. The current state of robotics makes the idea of replacing humans with machines nothing more than wishful thinking.

Process Automation – This is the area that, in our opinion, brings more possibilities to tackle the current problem. By automating repetitive and mundane tasks while, at the same, transferring to guest some business processes ( e.g self-service check-in) will allow hotels to do more with fewer people.

In conclusion, we believe that technology can help optimise labour spending and fight the lack of skills that the industry is experiencing. However, the big challenge of the current scenario doesn't sit in the IT department but at the HR level, where creative ways of regaining the lost talent are urgently needed.

View all 14 views in this viewpoint