10 Minutes News for Hoteliers 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers
  • Top News
  • Posts
    • CSR and Sustainability
    • Events
    • Hotel Openings
    • Hotel Operations
    • Human Resources
    • Innovation
    • Market Trends
    • Marketing
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Regulatory and Legal Affairs
    • Revenue Management
  • 🎙️ Podcast
  • 👉 Sign-up
  • 🌎 Languages
    • 🇫🇷 French
    • 🇩🇪 German
    • 🇮🇹 Italian
    • 🇪🇸 Spain
  • 📰 Columns
  • About us
10 Minutes News for Hoteliers 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers
  • Top News
  • Posts
    • CSR and Sustainability
    • Events
    • Hotel Openings
    • Hotel Operations
    • Human Resources
    • Innovation
    • Market Trends
    • Marketing
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Regulatory and Legal Affairs
    • Revenue Management
  • 🎙️ Podcast
  • 👉 Sign-up
  • 🌎 Languages
    • 🇫🇷 French
    • 🇩🇪 German
    • 🇮🇹 Italian
    • 🇪🇸 Spain
  • 📰 Columns
  • About us

How Hotels Are Thinking About Gen AI

  • Automatic
  • 27 September 2024
  • 4 minute read
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0
image

Skift Take

Many execs at hotels and online travel agencies are playing a fun game called “Guess How AI Will Disrupt Us Before It Actually Does.”

Sean O’Neill

Hotel companies are continuing to game out how the innovations and disruptions brought about by generative AI will impact them. But it’s still early days.

“There’s been a lot of hype,” said Jess Petitt, SVP of commercial strategy, insights, and analytics at Hilton.

“The number of hotel bookings that are actually generated using Generative AI is infinitesimally small,” Petitt said. “But in the next five years, the [technology] will make a huge impact.”

Here are several themes we heard from Petitt and others who spoke on-stage at the Destination AI summit in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

Distribution Will Get More Complex

Hotel executives frequently asked how device makers like Apple, Amazon (with its Alexa products), and Samsung might weave generative AI into their operating systems.

In one vision of the future, tech giants like Apple will apply generative AI to all of a person’s personal data on their phones. Gen AI will allow them to make more relevant travel recommendations than other companies.

Country estate hotel gives nature a buzz with new beehives
Trending
Country estate hotel gives nature a buzz with new beehives

“In a demo at the Google I/O conference this summer, a woman said, ‘I want to go to Chicago for four days with my husband and two kids,’” noted George Roukas, president of the consulting firm Gaipan.

“Boom! Out came not a static itinerary but a fully dynamic itinerary,” he said. “So when she wanted to wake up later on the second day, she could make that change, and the agent intelligently reflowed the itinerary because it knew how long it will take to get from here to there.”

Gen AI may be embedded in interfaces like your phone or voice-powered computers in your kitchen or car. Travelers may by default enjoy Gen AI’s knowledge of their history and inferences about their preferences — information suppliers like Marriott and online travel agencies like Expedia won’t have as ready access.

“What if it’s not pay-to-play?” asked Cindy Estis Green, co-founder and CEO of Kalibri Labs. “What if it’s happening in the background as this new form of super SEO? If you’re a supplier, how do you get to the consumer?”

Challenge to the Expedias of the World?

Some experts envision a future in which online travel agencies and hotel companies won’t be able to compete with what tech players know about customers, given that your phone may know more about you than they do.

“If an AI agent has a personalization capability, it should ultimately take the traveler to the best place to book a hotel that the user wants to actually sleep in rather than to another place that’s going to search for the best deal,” said Chris Hemmeter, managing director at Thayer Ventures. “So does it ultimately serve a direct channel better?”

“In the short run, the OTAs [online travel agencies] are going to harvest customers because they have thousands of engineers and a head start in investing in AI,” Hemmeter said. “Their business model will take a while to exhaust itself. But it seems this tech is taking us in a direction that has to be very threatening to the OTAs.”

Banks that issue popular travel credit cards might be another spoiler in the distribution wars, too, taking advantage of spending history data they have on customers and their brand-agnostic loyalty programs to customize recommendations for future trips.

Yet other experts are skeptical that Gen AI will significantly change the balance of power in how hotels acquire customers. If hotel companies don’t adequately invest in Gen AI and related capital, they’ll be out-competed technologically.

Some people see a vision of the internet first popularized by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web, when speaking at an Amadeus customer event in Madrid in 2019.

Roughly speaking, people will have their data and preferences stored on their devices and will have a mechanism to share parts of that with third parties — be it hotel companies or online travel agencies — to improve their experience when interacting with them.

“Theoretically, long-term, the consumer controls their identity via digital wallets and agrees to exchange data with companies like Uber, or hotel groups or airlines that are appropriate for something specific,” said Shane O’Flaherty, global director of travel, transportation, and hospitality at Microsoft.

“Ultimately, as I walk into a hotel, call it a Hilton, my AI assistant will know I’m on a business trip and will share my preferences with Hilton’s AI system to ensure I’ll get the best journey possible,” O’Flaherty said. “They’ll be giving me content to make my trip more personalized. That’s directionally where I think we’re going with this.”

Some hoteliers worry that they’ll have to pay fees to middlemen to make certain types of interactions with travelers work.

“I think it will be monetized somehow,” said Petitt of Hilton. “Our role as hoteliers is to make sure, unlike what’s happened [in third-party distribution] in the past, where we haven’t gotten the best possible terms, we’re going to have stay very close to it.”

Accommodations Sector Stock Index Performance Year-to-Date

What am I looking at? The performance of hotels and short-term rental sector stocks within the ST200. The index includes companies publicly traded across global markets, including international and regional hotel brands, hotel REITs, hotel management companies, alternative accommodations, and timeshares.

The Skift Travel 200 (ST200) combines the financial performance of nearly 200 travel companies worth more than a trillion dollars into a single number. See more hotels and short-term rental financial sector performance.

Read the full methodology behind the Skift Travel 200.

Please click here to access the full original article.

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
You should like too
View Post
  • Innovation

Travel Tech Essentialist #180: Taste

  • Mauricio Prieto
  • 26 July 2025
View Post
  • Innovation

Finding Creative Inspiration Beyond Hospitality: How Sage’s Chief Creative Officer Stays Ahead – Jessica Werner, Sage Hospitality Group

  • Automatic
  • 26 July 2025
View Post
  • Innovation

A Growing Cost Center: Monitoring and Managing the Rise in Technology Expenditures 

  • Robert Mandelbaum John Pomposello and Adam Barry
  • 25 July 2025
View Post
  • Innovation

TrustYou at RBOT 2025: Empowering Tourism Observatories with Smart, AI-Driven Solutions

  • Cara Lai Miles
  • 25 July 2025
View Post
  • Innovation

Maestro PMS Alternatives in Canada – Enterprise-Grade Cloud PMS for Hoteliers

  • Vanshikha Dhar
  • 25 July 2025
View Post
  • Innovation

AI in Hospitality: How Sage’s Chief Creative Officer Uses Tech Without Losing the Human Touch – Jessica Werner, Sage Hospitality Group

  • Automatic
  • 25 July 2025
View Post
  • Innovation

From Grand Lobbies to Micro Living: Inside A Few of Sage Hospitality’s Innovative Denver Projects – Jessica Werner, Sage Hospitality Group

  • Automatic
  • 25 July 2025
View Post
  • Innovation

KE Hotels acquires The Queens Hotel Cheltenham

  • Cynera Rodricks
  • 25 July 2025
Sponsored Posts
  • The Future of Revenue Management Is Strategic Leadership – LodgIQ

    View Post
  • Influence Society Publishes Q2 Edition of Societies Quarterly for Visionary Hoteliers

    View Post
  • Case Study: Refinery Hotel Redefines Revenue Management with LodgIQ

    View Post
Last Posts
  • Travel Tech Essentialist #180: Taste
    • 26 July 2025
  • Finding Creative Inspiration Beyond Hospitality: How Sage’s Chief Creative Officer Stays Ahead – Jessica Werner, Sage Hospitality Group
    • 26 July 2025
  • New on the Menu: Four summertime dishes in New York City
    • 25 July 2025
  • Renaissance Chicago North Shore Hotel Completes Renovation
    • 25 July 2025
  • Crescent Hotels & Resorts Announces Opening of The REMI Scottsdale, Autograph Collection
    • 25 July 2025
Sponsors
  • The Future of Revenue Management Is Strategic Leadership – LodgIQ
  • Influence Society Publishes Q2 Edition of Societies Quarterly for Visionary Hoteliers
  • Case Study: Refinery Hotel Redefines Revenue Management with LodgIQ
Contact informations

contact@10minutes.news

Advertise with us
Contact Marjolaine to learn more: marjolaine@wearepragmatik.com
Press release
pr@10minutes.news
10 Minutes News for Hoteliers 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers
  • Top News
  • Posts
  • 🎙️ Podcast
  • 👉 Sign-up
  • 🌎 Languages
  • 📰 Columns
  • About us
Discover the best of international hotel news. Categorized, and sign-up to the newsletter

Input your search keywords and press Enter.