When it comes to hotel tech, we may all agree that PMSs are at the top of the food chain. It's semantically already in the name itself: a PMS is the SYSTEM used to MANAGE your PROPERTY. This gives the software connotations of centrality in operations. However, a new wave of leaner systems is rising: PMSs are becoming "hubs" rather than all-in-one solutions, using open APIs to allow users to plug in other software and tools as needed. These systems are less about "managing the property," and more about integrating third-party software.

In this environment, where do PMSs sit in one's tech stack? Is the classic notion of PMS outdated? Will the future of hotel tech be less reliant on PMSs as we know them?

New Agilysys Logo

This World Panel Viewpoint is sponsored by Agilysys, Inc.
More information

Kathryn Murphy
Kathryn Murphy
Owner, The Murphy Gallery & Hotel Dublin

When it comes to integrating different technologies, the devil really is in the detail. The only way to truly understand how a software works, and crucially, if it works for you - and with the other softwares you use, is to trial it. And to trial it, you need to integrate it, quickly, and cheaply, which means open APIs and free integrations.

However, even then, it's worth pointing out that free doesn't really mean free, as depending on the system, you could spend days or even weeks configuring it.

At a conference a couple of years ago, I heard a hotelier relaying how their new open API PMS allowed them to integrate a chatbot to the hotel PMS and try it out for free. The PMS integration was totally free, and the chatbot offered a month's free trial. Amazing. They then went on to say that just a week later, after they had finished configuring the chatbot, they were ready to trial it. Amazing? That week's work still had to be paid for...

To my mind it's a given that PMSs will have to have open APIs going forward. There is so much great new technology being developed, and open APIs are essential for hotels to be able to try them out easily and find what works for them.

However, it's still far from straightforward. Many exciting new technologies, like chatbots, voice assistants, in-room tablets, hotel apps & PWAs, city guides, and unified inboxes offering multi-channel communication like SMS, WhatsApp, messenger, etc, all need extensive configuration. And a huge issue is that there is currently no way (at least that I'm aware of) to do this in an integrated way that can be easily managed and kept up to date.

I'd love to see the PMS evolve to include a 'headless content management system' to store the hotel specific content needed for these technologies. Content could then be automatically synced via the PMS integration, making it truly 'free' to integrate and try out new technologies. It would also make it possible to universally update content without have to individually log into each system.

Coincidentally, I heard the same hotelier speaking on a webinar recently. Having enthusiastically adopted numerous technologies made accessible by the open API integrations with their PMS just a few years ago, the hotel is currently trying to reduce the number of technologies in their tech stack. The reason being that guests are frequently being presented with incorrect information - whilst their technologies were integrated, their content remained siloed, and it has proved impossible to keep their content up to date across so many systems. 

View all 21 views in this viewpoint


New Agilysys Logo

This World Panel Viewpoint is sponsored by Agilysys, Inc.
More information