Many existing legacy technology installments in hospitality are closed systems they are reluctant to open up to third-party integrations, applications and solutions, depriving the property and its guests from some very innovative and much-needed applications and services.

In the near to mid-term, any full-service 3-4-5-star hotel will need over 100 plus APIs (application programming interface) with third-party tech applications and solutions to be able to function and meet the basic needs and wants of today's tech-savvy travelers. These include mobile and contactless guest experience, mobile locks, issue resolution apps, guest messaging, virtual concierge, IoT devices and utility management, smart room technology, entertainment hubs, CRM programs, etc.

Until recently, this type of connectivity has been close to impossible or super expensive to achieve for properties with legacy technology installments of PMS,RMS, CRS, CRM and other components of the tech stack, which are hostile to any third-party interfaces by default.

Luckily for our industry, the future is already here in the form of two types of third-party technology integration platforms:

  • Cloud PMS with Open API like Opera Cloud PMS, StayNTouch, Protel, CloudBeds, Mews, etc. and their integration platforms, and
  • Independent integration hubs, like Impala, Hapi, APS, NoniusHub, etc., which are focusing on serving properties with existing legacy tech stack.

The question is, can the new integration hubs save our legacy tech-prone industry and elevate it to meet the demands of today's tech-savvy travelers?

Mark Fancourt
Mark Fancourt
Co-Founder at TRAVHOTECH

A short answer to a very large question is that interface hubs are a positive step in the right direction to address what is specifically a technology challenge.

Interface hub technology is not new and also not new to the industry. The companies mentioned in the question are the current market modern application of the core of this style of technology using the current technology environment. Products like Comtrol have long been used in the hospitality software ecosystem to achieve this result. The gaming hospitality industry adopted service bus technology in the noughties in an effort to streamline the movement of data between disparate systems.

Today we see multiple players leveraging the current technology in an effort to further streamline the movement of business information.

Generally this is a sound technical solution to the broader industry challenge.

With that said the point that needs to be clear for the casual reader is that these latest tools are the modern version of yesterdays interfaces. In the same way that the general view speaks toward software generally being in the cloud, connectivity between systems should also be on the current technology, leveraging modern service bus style architecture and ideally open Application Programming Interfaces.

They are still interfaces moving information between disparate and distributed systems, but more efficiently than one-to-one. Despite the common use of the marketing term they are not integrations. Integration means one. If there is one system interfaces are no longer required.

In a world of interface hubs we still have a wealth of traditional interfaces being regularly deployed in the industry. This is because the business of building connections between disparate systems is costly and time consuming and requires a significant development capability. The latest technology has streamlined the process and improved the speed and efficiency. But make no mistake that it is still time consuming to produce.

A term often heard is, "it's OK because we have an API or an open API for that..". The next step is actually getting the work done between the two parties or one party in the case of the interface hub, provided that the second system is already a connection. We are still hearing dialogue about, "we don't have an interface to that. We could do it, but perhaps you could look at another solution we already have a connection too...".

These companies are definitely moving things in the right direction. Although as the question refers to 100's we are moving from an environment where the most connected systems in industry had multiple thousands of third party system connections. Still much work to be done to bridge the gap.

It beggars the question does the future see hotels with multiple interface hubs? As a result of different interface hubs supporting different partners. Or even in the various lines of business having their own interface hub. Currently this is a reality in our industry as we continue operate along the same pillars of business - rooms, dining, lifestyle, events, retail. Our business oriented view of how we think we should work as compared to the customers view of the entire product.

The better option generally is to aim to remove the need for interfaces and consolidate operational capability. Therefore information into single or less customer facing (guests and staff) applications to improve workforce and job design, synergize operations and optimize the staff experience when curating customer experiences. How many manager reports does a hotel General Manager usually desire every day? One. Imagine if it wasn't just consolidated data, but consolidated functionality along with it.

I digress.

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