Picture a scenario where a hacker poses as an employee and tricks IT support into resetting credentials, bypassing multi-factor authentication and gaining access to core systems. That’s exactly what happened to one of the world’s leading casino brands in 2023, when a social engineering attack brought down everything from check-in kiosks to room keys and slot machines. Operations were disrupted for over a week, costing the company more than $100 million in lost revenue and leading to a $45 million class-action settlement. Hotels manage deeply personal, high-value data such as credit cards, loyalty info, stay history, rate structures, which makes them prime targets for cybercrime groups and state-sponsored attackers. Failing to protect that data risks not just compliance penalties but operational shutdowns and public trust. Here's what to keep in mind when building a hotel tech stack that protects your operations, uncovers risks, and reinforces guest confidence.1. Train Staff to Resist Social Engineering
Social engineering is one of the most effective tactics hackers use to breach even the most secure environments. During the casino attack, criminals impersonated IT staff to manipulate a help desk agent into handing over login credentials. With just a few pieces of publicly available information such as employee names, job roles, and social profiles, they bypassed technical barriers entirely. Hotels frequently rely on seasonal employees, who often have limited experience. That, together with high turnover, makes the sector more susceptible to cyber threats.
Social engineering thrives on human weaknesses, not technical flaws. Training is your first line of defense, and a single support structure and internal knowledge base makes it easier to standardize response procedures and train staff consistently across the business.
The hotel business is driven by data that holds value not only for hotels, but also for cybercriminals. They may try to steal payment card information, guests’ personal details, or even market-sensitive rate data. Make sure every project involving IT systems includes a cybersecurity dimension and never prioritize speed and ease of implementation over security.
Centralizing guest data with a single provider can drastically reduce the number of potential entry points for attackers. A unified platform means fewer integrations to secure, and less vendor overlap to manage.
Hackers usually infiltrate networks via compromised endpoint devices. One laptop, one kiosk, one infected email, and they’re in.
When endpoints share a consistent configuration and are protected using a unified set of leading tools, they are easier to manage, secure, and monitor, even at scale.
Hotel staff often have broad access to guest data for convenience and to ensure high-quality service. If a criminal gains control of an employee’s account, it can provide access to sensitive customer information.
With one vendor supporting your identity provider, role-based access can be managed across all systems in a consistent and streamlined way, making it easier to enforce and audit.
Your vendors (PMS, POS, booking platforms) are part of your security surface. Weak security practices by one vendor can compromise your entire stack.
The fewer vendors you rely on, the fewer third-party risk assessments you need to run, and the easier it becomes to ensure compliance with privacy laws across jurisdictions. A single provider simplifies oversight and dramatically narrows your threat landscape.
Cybersecurity isn’t just a compliance checkbox, it’s foundational to guest trust and operational continuity in today’s hospitality landscape. With average breach costs now topping $3.8 million per breach in hospitality (up from $3.6M just a year earlier), the cost of inaction has never been higher. Just as importantly, working with a single trusted provider allows hotels to enforce security policy, data governance, and compliance across the board rather than juggling different standards and protocols across a patchwork of vendors.
Ultimately, hotels that bake security into every tech decision, from system design to decommissioning, are not only compliant. They’re future-ready. Are you?
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