Expert Views (10)

By HITEC 2030, AI will not have eaten established hospitality tech. It will have eaten the repetitive workflow layer around it.

Hotels will still rely on PMS, CRS, RMS, payments, distribution, and other systems of record. Those systems are too operationally critical to disappear quickly. But the way hotel teams and guests interact with them will change completely.

The real opportunity is not another chatbot or another dashboard. It is AI that sits across fragmented systems, understands hotel knowledge and live data, and turns guest inquiries into completed actions: faster replies, better direct booking conversion, upsells, service recovery, and cleaner handoffs to staff.

I expect fewer core platforms, but more specialized AI agents around them. The winners will be the companies that make fragmentation feel invisible for hotel teams.

AI will not replace hospitality tech. It will replace the unnecessary manual work that keeps teams away from hospitality.

More fragmented or less by 2030? Neither.

Hospitality stays fragmented because much of the industry wants it that way. The lack of transparency is not a problem to solve, it is something some want to keep. A large part of the industry still runs on-premise and resists the cloud, building workarounds to control its own data. Consolidation has been promised for twenty years. It has not fully arrived, because some do not want to be consolidated.

What changes is that fragmentation stops mattering, and so does standardization. The acronyms blur by one of two routes. One is consolidation, collapsing everything into a single platform, the bold bet Richard Valtr and Mews Operating System are making. The other is abstraction, an intelligence layer that sits on top of the mess and makes it workable as it is. My instinct leans to the second. I am not convinced data and intelligence must live in the same box. Apaleo, open and API-first, is the counter-example. The value migrates to the intelligence on top.

Connectivity stays important, but stops being the gate. The new question is not "is there an API," it is "can an agent operate this system." With computer use, the answer is yes.

The hospitality industry is undergoing a paradigm shift from fragmented Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications to an autonomous Agent-as-a-Service (AaaS) ecosystem. This new infrastructure merges an Autonomous AI Agent with a property’s centralized intelligence layer to orchestrate the entire guest lifecycle through a single, continuous conversation.

Operating 24/7 across hundreds of native languages, this ecosystem eliminates the heavy administrative burden of digital data entry, freeing on-site hotel teams to focus entirely on high-touch guest experiences. At the core of this architecture sits an omniscient memory layer—unifying Customer Experience (CXP) review sentiment with Customer Data Platform (CDP) behavioral data. This ultimate memory understands everything about the property and the guest, moving hotels past disconnected transactions into a unified, lifelong dialogue that flows effortlessly from discovery to post-stay feedback.

By 2030, I do not expect AI-native challengers to replace most established hospitality technology providers.

Hospitality is a high-trust, operationally complex industry with significant switching costs. Hotels do not change core systems easily—not only because of the financial investment, but because of the operational disruption, training and risk involved.

At the same time, AI addresses one of hospitality’s biggest challenges: fragmented systems, disconnected data and manual processes. Hotels are eager to simplify operations, but precisely because AI touches the operational core of the business, trust will matter as much as innovation.

This gives established vendors a clear advantage. They already have customer relationships, integrations, operational credibility and deep domain expertise. However, that advantage is not guaranteed. Many incumbents must modernize legacy platforms, attract new talent and rethink products built for a pre-AI world.

My expectation is a hybrid future: core hospitality platforms will remain, becoming more open and AI-enabled, while a new ecosystem of specialized AI agents emerges on top of them.

The winners will not necessarily be the oldest companies, the newest ones, the biggest players or even the most innovative. They will be the companies that earn the trust of hotels while successfully reinventing themselves for an AI-driven world.

The industry dialogue right now is far too narrow. We ask if AI-native start-ups will completely vaporize legacy systems by 2030, but we ignore the non-negotiable reality of information architecture.

A functioning hospitality operation relies on a patchwork of hundreds of foundational building blocks. This new layer of technology still runs structurally on the same underlying data frameworks; even if quantum acceleration transforms processing power, it still executes on a physical chip somewhere. For AI to completely bypass this structure—to ingest a chaotic data "blob," decipher its operational intent, and flawlessly execute an outcome—requires an advanced reasoning capability that simply does not exist today.

By 2030, the human buffer will decrease as systems interact directly tech-to-tech. But this shift demands more structural discipline, not less. Software-based Soft AI will handle enterprise data automation, while robotic-based Hard AI replaces physical execution.

Driving this autonomous future requires highly structured, well-established information layers to reliably feed the intelligent engines. The winning strategy is the HumAIn Framework—a state of "auto-automation" where technology amplifies human-centered hospitality, steered by captains providing strategic direction based on intelligent system feedback.

If we do want to simplify, we will see platforms and consolidated capability. Bigger drivers dictate this need that go beyond AI.

No. But it will expose how fragile much of it really is.

78% of hotel chains already deploy AI, yet only 22% have the data infrastructure to use it effectively. And only a small minority treat AI as central to their business model. Because AI is only as good as the foundation it sits on and in most cases, that foundation was never designed for it.

AI won’t eat established vendors, but it will force a choice: either become part of an intelligent, connected decision layer across the business or remain another silo that AI learns to route around.

I think that's the wrong question.

Hospitality tech in 2030 will likely be both more consolidated and more fragmented. The infrastructure layer will likely consolidate around a handful of vendors, but the intelligence layer will likely explode.

The hotelier of 2030 may never log into a PMS, but the PMS will still exist, much like nobody thinks about TCP/IP when sending a WhatsApp message.

Will integration finally be solved? Yes and no.

Connectivity will improve, but fragmentation will remain because interoperability has never been purely a technical problem. It is, and always has been, a business problem: vendors still have incentives to protect data and preserve competitive advantage.

What changes with AI is not fragmentation, but our relationship with fragmentation. Hoteliers have been forced to adapt to software limitations, jumping between interfaces and manually connecting data.

AI reverses that logic: the future may not be a world where everything is connected, but one where intelligent agents become so effective at navigating fragmented environments that fragmentation becomes irrelevant.

So my prediction is: whether a company is AI-native or not will matter less than we think. The real winners will likely be those who control the foundations while allowing intelligence to flourish on top of them.

AI is currently enabling software development at unprecedented speeds. This kind of guerilla phenomenon will undoubtedly give rise to many new hospitality software companies in the near future that will either integrate existing applications or try to replace them.

For hotel companies, the ideal software infrastructure uses as few different programs as possible with the lowest operational costs. This allows for both new and old players to remain viable in the coming years, bu there is no doubt that the amount of suppliers will increase by 2030.

That being said, AI primarily deals with "In the box" technology that relates to information systems. Given the current issues in hospitality, there is also a clear need for technology dealing with staffing and operational issues in hospitality, and I would very much like to see companies tackling those when 2030 rolls around.

Hospitality tech isn't fragmented by accident. It's fragmented because fragmentation is the business model. Every incumbent owns a silo, and the walls around it (grudging integrations, data you can't get out, connectivity "on the roadmap") protect their renewal rate. AI doesn't change that; it doesn't change incentives.

An incumbent that wins the AI wave doesn't become open. It becomes a smarter walled garden. You get islands of intelligence: a brilliant agent inside the PMS, another in the RMS, another in F&B, but none are able to reason across the others. If anything, fragmentation worsens: forty AIs instead of forty dashboards.

So the answer is cleaner than it looks. Incumbents won't consolidate, as it works against their interests. Specialised agents multiplying won't connect anything, they just add smarter silos. Neither path ends in connectivity.

Seamless connectivity can only come from a layer whose incentive is the connection itself; neutral intelligence that sits across the systems a hotel already runs, rather than owning one of them.

My prediction for HITEC 2030? The silos will look roughly the same. What's different is the intelligence layer on top will finally be unified. The winners will own that layer, not the silos beneath it.

2030 is a long time from now, especially in AI-years, which are only about 60 days long!

If I think about the current trajectories and strategies of the bigger companies that will lead this movement, I see larger travel enterprises implementing foundational agentic backbones like Frontier from OpenAI or Claude Enterprise from Anthropic. These foundational layers will unify the company’s resources (human, physical, and digital), facilitate agentic orchestration, and provide a substrate for 3rd party vertical applications of all kinds.

Instead of large, integrated travel applications like we have today, these vertical applications will perform specific tasks and integrate with other applications via the agentic backbone. Agents will orchestrate their work and optimize future actions based on what they’ve learned over time.

In this environment, client companies will be able to install, trial, and monitor these applications and compare their performance in real time. I suspect that contracts will be shorter but bundles will be more prevalent. Proprietary interfaces will be a thing of the past; vendors will compete on the value they deliver, not on the ability to sequester data and resisting sharing it.

And we’ll see a raft of AI-facilitated applications we can’t even imagine today!