Created as a consequence of COVID-19, CONTACTLESS TECH is at the heart of the paradigm shift that most industries, especially those in Travel and Hospitality have had to lean on to ensure their survival and avert the spread of the virus. The Guest journey comprising numerous round and square pegs has had to be re-imagined and at the same time dynamically re-engineered to cope with the fluidity and complexity of requirements and compliance needs of the new now. Technology has inevitably had to undergo change constantly, and at lightning speed, and customer investments are sometimes forcibly made to enable this industry to ride the trend, and comply with safety and customer requirements as well as deal with staff scarcity and rising costs.

All of these have shrunk and recalibrated the guest experience to fit the palm-of-the-hand, with nearly all the once human-centric touchpoints, becoming touchless. Some may say this development has turned this once service-oriented business, into what many might consider soulless…

During this pandemic, face-to-face human contact has been one of the casualties of our existence. As we emerge and learn to co-exist with COVID, how will that impact the contactless journey going forward? Will we experience another change where contactless tech becomes hybrid - with a dash or more of humanity thrown into the mix?

Nuvola

This World Panel Viewpoint is sponsored by Nuvola
More information

Martin Soler
Martin Soler
Partner at Soler & Associates

I believe contactless is here to stay. There is just no real added value to standing in line and waiting for a key or a check-in. I can't see anybody yearning for a queue again. But I think we (in the hotel industry) have erroneously linked the check-in and check-out experience with "human contact" and "service". Apple stores famously got inspired by luxury hotels to build a great experience - but the check-out experience wasn't the one they kept. They created roaming payment systems where any staff could check one out. And they've now moved to self-check-out. Amazon is creating stores with no lines.

View all 16 views in this viewpoint


Nuvola

This World Panel Viewpoint is sponsored by Nuvola
More information