The argument is deceptively simple: in luxury hospitality, genuine excellence has never been about technology for technology’s sake.
It is always elevated the experience of the guest, out of sight and beyond their expectations. As part of the keynote, hoteliers will be encouraged to ask themselves: is your technology today facilitating effortless luxury as your silent butler, or getting in the way as a silent butler?
The Risk of Continued Fragmentation
While hotels are rapidly accelerating their journey towards digital transformation, fragmentation remains a persistent challenge. Too often, both IT and Franchise, as well as Corporate, Marketing, Digital, AI and Innovation are still working in silos, adding layers of complexity, not collaboration. This ends up creating competing systems, more burdens for staff, all under the guise of empowering the staff to do their job.
Guests can barely recall a booking engine or a segment on CRM platform. What guests do recall is how the stay made them feel. The keynote warns that if the experience allows for guest-facing screens and systems, it will – at some point – gain credibility over authentic service. If that happens, the industry risks losing that which distinguishes luxury as a value proposition which is a seamless effortlessness.
Humanity in innovation
The keynote does not argue against technology. In fact, celebrates the possibilities of the power of AI and no-code AI tools to innovate back of the house capabilities, anticipate guest needs, and free up staff time to focus human interaction. Innovation must be humans focused to resource the section of empathy, not vanity.
Technology in luxury should be invisible. A quiet enabler that will ensures that everything should work effortlessly from room preferences to check-out. When used effectively, technology gives staff confidence and guests comfort while remaining invisible to guests.
The Leadership Challenge
Luxury hospitality is fortunate to approach innovation through a series of upgrades. Change management must operate as a cultural organizational transformation rather than just new technology. Inspire staff, rather than intimidate or overwhelm them to change.
This may also mean implementing nimble tools to boutique hotels to be personal without undue complication. For global branded hotels it may mean democratizing information to be agile in multiple regions or departments for customer satisfaction. Ultimately, organizations need leaders who align process efficiency with compassion.
Looking Behind the Curtain
The keynote will close with a call to action of reflection looking at their own thoughts behind the curtain, as hotelier ask themselves some difficult questions about how technology operates in their own hotel. Is technology sustainable in the hotel? Is it helping, or hindering the staff? Is it relative to customers experience with the messiness and noises of technology in the atmosphere?
Luxury has nothing to do with technology, but what it provides. Invisible seamlessness, discretion and ease of connections to humans. The “future” will belong to hotels who know how to use technology invisibly – where everything just works like a silent butler, providing effortless and unforgettable experiences.