The KUBE mantra is to incubate and accelerate start-ups in hospitality. We understand that in order to affect substantive change we need to reach a tipping point for the growth of start-ups. In technology, we are witnessing impressive growth in startups, meanwhile, for hospitality, we're not seeing that same growth.

So our question to you is: "How do we encourage a start-up culture in hospitality?"

David Keen
David Keen
Co-Founder at KUBE Ventures

Start-ups ignite transformation. Any industry that is either embryonic or in dire need of change has to deconstruct and regenerate in a more coherent, dynamic form. This is what happened to the food industry in many countries and to the many industries pre the advent of technology. Start-ups were formed through individual applications that were then adopted by the larger organizations. Individual chefs began the transition in the food industry. They have created a culture of desire and, individual restaurants, each one a start-up, have adopted the creativity of a handful of chefs to create food cultures that 20 years ago were unimaginable.

Today the same is true for the hospitality industry. A group of start-up brands began emerging about 20 years ago. They began what is now known as the lifestyle revolution. In fact, they have just equalized values and brought back desire and joy to the hotel experience. They have taken away the dull standardized box room and lobby and created desirable spaces. In technology, the archaic property management system structure is being eroded through the creation of a system of individualized apps (each one a start-up).

We need to create more advanced thinking for human resource management and through a start-up culture, we will inject dynamism and shared values into operational structures. Marketing itself is being reinvented through an accumulation of start-up ideas and technology.

It is an accumulation of startups that come to a tipping point which then drives that substantive change.

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