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 Is the classic notion of PMS outdated?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?

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Simone Puorto
Simone Puorto
Founder | CEO | Futurist

Over the years, in my job as a journalist, I had the pleasure of interviewing the CEOs of most of the PMSs currently available in the market (and some extinct ones, as well). During these conversations, I've always found it fascinating to observe how diverse their approaches towards technology are. Most vendors, especially from the "new wave" of cloud providers, seem to take a distance from the canonical concept of property management system, with some even rejecting the PMS acronym tout-court. Others, vice-versa, defend the notion of a centralised, all-in-one system to death. 

My view on the subject is, probably, somewhere in the middle. Even though I wish for a more open-API, inter-connectable, plug&play industry (typical of new players), I still feel that traditional PMSs play a central role in the day-to-day hotel operation and, as such, should not be relegated to simplistic "connection hubs." 

Especially in more complicated environments, such as resorts or groups, where you have multiple outlets, point-of-sales, and revenue streams, having a robust PMS can make all the difference in the world, both in terms of efficiency, quality of reporting, and costs. Sure, smaller properties, such as city boutique hotels, could probably operate even without a PMS, and rely entirely on other systems, such as CRMs, but, if you've ever worked or consulted for a bigger property/chain, you know that you simply cannot run it without a "real" property management system. 

So, to close up, I think that smaller, more agile properties will likely become less dependent on PMSs as-we-know-them in the near future (and, to a certain extent, this is already the case), while the rest of the properties will keep benefiting from this "obsolete" technology.

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