The technology and data fragmentation in hospitality is a huge challenge and impediment to the post-COVID rebound the industry faces today. Data - guest data, comp set and market BI data - lives in multiple "data islands" that do not talk to each other: PMS, CRS, WBE, CRM, ORM, CMS, DMS, Social Media, and BI. Practically, no hotel company can boast a single view guest data that is being constantly refreshed and enriched with real-time, “live” data feeds from ALL touchpoints with the traveler and their Digital Customer Journey.
Quite often, different teams at the property or corporate use different sets of data in their day-to-day operations, creating a total "data integrity mess," which directly affects the property's guest acquisition and retention efforts. Ex. Most of the time, CRM data is not being utilized to engage and retain past guests, upsell amenities and services to on-property guests, and to create similar audiences in the property's new guest acquisition marketing efforts.
The goal here is very clear: bridge the guest data and technology silos and create an end-to-end real-time data platform, empowering hotels to acquire new guests, engage current guests, and retain past guests.
Here is the big question: Can the property hire a data scientist to do all that? The answer is no: there is a shortage of data scientists plus they are very expensive. The average salary for a data scientist in the U.S. is $154,000/year (Glassdoor). Expedia employs 365 data scientists at an average salary of $135,000; Facebook - over 500 of those at $152,000/year.Very few hotel companies can afford that.
Therefore, I believe it is up to the hotel tech vendor sector to carry the torch and help the industry overcome its technology deficiencies and create solutions to bridge the data silos in order to better serve the rising tide of tech-savvy travel consumers. In this respect, encouraging are the new type of Open API Marketplaces, offered by cloud PMS vendors like the Opera Cloud PMS with APIs to over 3,100 third-party tech solutions; StayNTouch PMS, CloudBeds and Protel PMS own marketplaces, as well as API Marketplaces like SiteMinder, HappiCloud, and IReconU.
The lack of hospitality-focused technology and data sciences education exacerbates the problem. Hoteliers are ill-equipped not only to deal with the fragmented data situation in-house but also to work with outside tech vendors providing next-gen AI-powered data solutions. How many hospitality schools today teach hospitality technology courses? Only a few. New York University's Tisch Center of Hospitality is one of the few to have a course on Hospitality Technology, which is a great start to educating future hoteliers on the importance of technology and data science in the industry.