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Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
22 March 2024


Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit
Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin

ITB Berlin 2024 provided a platform for seasoned industry leaders to share insights and their predictions on the innovations destined to influence the hospitality landscape. The Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) discussion, contributed to by seasoned industry insiders Lucile CORNET (Eight Roads), Wietse Bijzeit (Shiji Group), Lucas Höfer (Ruby Hotels), Matthijs Welle (Mews) and Frank Seedorff (B&B Hotels Germany GmbH). Lea Jordan solidified her position as one of our industry’s best moderators by skillfully encouraging each panellist to provide practical insights and predictions whilst respectfully challenging at the right moment to get that little extra.

What the Experts Said

Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit

Wietse Bijzeit highlighted the hospitality industry’s significant moment with its increasing embrace of cloud technologies, marking a foundation for subsequent technological progress. He emphasised the potential impact of robotics, digital identities, and the integration of AI with large action models in the sector.

According to Wietse, these large action models offer a groundbreaking way to enhance hotel decision-making by converting complex challenges into straightforward, actionable insights. This indicates a major shift towards more efficient and innovative operational strategies.

Lucile Cornet, bringing a venture capitalist’s perspective, emphasised the crucial need for hotels to forge direct connections with guests and move away from the dependency on third-party platforms that has grown over the years.

She sees a future where hotels can rekindle personal connections with guests, significantly enhancing customer engagement through personalisation.

Lucile elaborated on her investment approach, stressing the value of learning from other sectors, such as neobanks, social media, and gaming, to understand and cater to the changing behaviours of younger consumers.

Lea probed Lucile, questioning the comparability of these different markets. Lucile affirmed the relevance, pointing to the trend of seamless payments within apps and the preference for AI-driven customer support and chat systems over traditional phone calls.

Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin
Wietse Bijzeit speaking at ITB 2024 ANALYSISLEARN Hotel Technology Trends (or Hypes?) – A Panel of Industry Leaders at ITB Berlin

Frank Seedorff outlined four key technological areas vital for the progress of the hospitality sector. AI in customer service, data platform integration, revenue management automation, and corporate social responsibility (CSR). Frank suggested using AI to improve customer service and pricing accuracy, enhancing the guest experience.

Frank recommended that hotel chains adopt technology that aligns with their business strategy and provides direct benefits. He emphasized involving the team in tech decisions and evaluating new tech based on the hotel’s strengths.

Lucas Hoefer added that the hotel industry is shifting towards active analysis and application of guest data through AI to enhance the guest experience. AI is predicted to revolutionise guest service by creating personalised experiences and making hotel operations more efficient.

The trend towards tailored guest experiences is on the rise. Travellers now prefer longer stays and flexible services. Adaptable technology, particularly AI, is critical in meeting these new consumer preferences.

Lucas stressed the importance of differentiating between fleeting trends and those worth investing in. He advised prioritizing clear business objectives and customer service goals over following fads and recommended strategic planning instead of quick fixes with ad-hoc software solutions.

He advised hotels to assess their team’s capabilities to decide if they need help from an experienced supplier to implement new ideas. Understanding their capacity for executing new concepts is crucial to drive innovation.

Matthijs Welle emphasised investor confidence in cloud-based solutions within the travel industry. He highlighted the critical role of cloud-based systems and APIs as foundational elements that enable the effective use of AI, allowing hotels to stay abreast of the evolving technological landscape.

Mat stressed the significance of investments as catalysts for technological innovation in travel, advocating for the adoption of cloud-based systems with open APIs. Saying hotels must adapt to technological advancements and provide seamless experiences by investing in innovation.

Challenges and Change Management

The panellists were united in addressing the challenges posed by integrating new technologies into existing hotel ecosystems. They highlighted the issue of fragmentation across hotel tech stacks and emphasised the importance of strategically consolidating data to create a more unified system.

The discussion underscored that effective change management is crucial for hotels to realise the full benefits of new technologies. Merely selecting new tools is not enough; hotels must also be capable of adapting to and meaningfully adopting these technologies within their operational framework.

Actionable Advice for Hoteliers

When asked for advice, the panel provided practical guidance for hoteliers aiming to embrace innovation, emphasising several key steps:

Start with the vision: Determine the guest experience your brand aims to provide before exploring technological options.

Embrace the cloud: Opt for cloud-based systems featuring open APIs to establish a tech stack that is both scalable and adaptable.

Understand your brand: Recognize whether your hotel’s strength lies in operational efficiency or customer intimacy, and select technologies that bolster these areas.

Own your data: Ensure secure control over the flow of your data and your organisational structures to maximise their usefulness.

Conclusion

Hoteliers should have a clear brand vision and select technologies that align with it. Before choosing technology, they need to understand their strategic positioning – operational efficiency or customer engagement.

The conversation highlighted the significance of incorporating change management practices with technology adoption. There was unanimous agreement on managing data flow and precisely understanding business objectives for fostering successful innovation.

Lea again demonstrated her expert moderation skills, despite the occasional microphone glitches. Ensuring a balanced conversation where each speaker could convey and emphasise their message. Encouraging hoteliers to engage in dialogue actively, pose questions, and pursue technologies that offer genuine value to their operations.

Shiji is a multi-national technology company that provides software solutions and services for enterprise companies in the hospitality, food service, retail and entertainment industries, ranging from hospitality technology platform, hotel property management solutions, food and beverage and retail systems, payment gateways, data management, online distribution and more. Founded in 1998 as a network solutions provider for hotels, Shiji Group today comprises over 5,000 employees in 80+ subsidiaries and brands in over 31 countries, serving more than 91,000 hotels, 200,000 restaurants and 600,000 retail outlets. For more information, visit www.shijigroup.com.


Related Event
ITB Berlin 2024
5-7 March 2024
Messe Berlin
Bezirk Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf
Berlin, 14055
Germany



Organization
Shiji Group
www.shijigroup.com/
Tempelhofer Ufer 1
Berlin, 10961
Germany

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