Property Management System transitions have a reputation problem. In most hotels, the mere mention of a new PMS triggers anxiety, resistance, and sometimes outright panic. Staff brace for disruption. Finance expects reporting chaos. Operations worry about guest impact. And leadership hopes the vendor will somehow make it all painless.
Listening to the latest episode of the Modern Hotelier podcast with Ryan King, SVP Americas at Shiji, one thing becomes very clear. PMS transitions do not fail because of software. They fail because of how change is managed inside hotel organizations.
Ryan’s perspective is particularly sharp because he has lived on both sides. He started in hotel operations, ran properties, and later moved into hospitality technology. That dual view exposes a recurring pattern across regions, brands, and property types. The technology almost always works. The transition often does not.
This article was written based on the above podcast with Modern Hotelier.
The Real Friction Is Not the System
One of the most revealing insights from the conversation is how small operational decisions can derail an entire rollout. Something as trivial as whether minibar items are sold tax inclusive or tax exclusive can create weeks of chaos if corporate leadership has not made a clear decision upfront.
In many failed implementations, ownership of decisions is unclear. Corporate teams defer choices to the vendor. Properties push back with local preferences. Finance reacts late when data hits downstream systems. Front desk teams get caught in the middle, blamed for problems they did not create.
The result is noise. Confusion. Emotional resistance. And a growing belief that the new PMS is “the problem”.
Ryan is blunt about this. When corporate teams abdicate ownership and expect the vendor to decide operational standards, the rollout almost always struggles. When leadership aligns early and communicates clearly, resistance drops dramatically within weeks.
Change Management Is the Core System
Another recurring theme is how deeply humans resist workflow change, even when the outcome is better. Moving a button from the left side of the screen to the right can feel trivial. In reality, it disrupts muscle memory built over years. Multiply that by every task performed during a shift and you understand why staff react emotionally.
Successful hotel groups treat PMS transitions as organizational change programs, not IT projects. They spend months preparing communication, aligning leadership, defining non negotiables, and explaining the “why” repeatedly before a single system goes live.
One group Ryan references rolled out a new PMS across 74 hotels in a single year. Their secret was not speed or vendor pressure. It was discipline. They invested nearly a year aligning leadership, documenting workflows, and cascading the same message from corporate to property level. When go live started, fear had already been replaced by familiarity.
Why Ownership Matters More Than Features
A powerful takeaway from the podcast is the danger of focusing on features instead of outcomes. Many hotels approach a new PMS asking what buttons exist and how workflows are built today. This locks them into old thinking.
The groups that succeed flip the question. They start with what they want to accomplish operationally. Faster check in. Fewer manual finance touches. Better guest recognition. Cleaner data flows. Only then do they work with the vendor to design workflows that achieve those goals.
When hotels try to recreate old processes inside new systems, friction skyrockets. When they collaborate on outcomes, adoption accelerates.
The Guest Always Feels the Failure
Perhaps the most important reminder is that PMS issues never stay backstage. Guests feel them immediately. A failed Wi Fi integration. A delayed room release. A broken key workflow. From the guest’s perspective, it is not a vendor problem or an integration issue. It is simply a bad hotel experience.
This is why core systems matter. PMS decisions ripple outward into POS, Wi Fi, payments, mobile check in, loyalty recognition, and staff confidence. When the foundation is unstable, hospitality magic disappears fast.
A Practical PMS Transition Checklist for Hoteliers
Below is a step by step sequence distilled directly from the insights shared in the podcast. This is designed as a working checklist a hotelier can follow before and during a PMS transition.
Step 1. Define Why the Change Is Happening
Before selecting a vendor or timeline, leadership must clearly articulate why the PMS change is happening. Cost reduction, scalability, mobility, integration limits, security, or guest experience improvements must be explicit. This reason must be shared consistently across corporate, property, and department heads. Without a shared why, resistance will dominate.
Step 2. Assign Clear Ownership for Decisions
Every core area must have a single decision owner. Finance owns tax logic and reporting rules. Operations own front desk workflows. Revenue owns rate structures. Technology owns integrations. Vendors should never be asked to decide operational standards. Their role is to implement what leadership defines.
Step 3. Lock Core Standards Before Configuration
Standardization decisions must be finalized before system configuration begins. This includes payment logic, rate plans, room types, folios, night audit rules, and downstream integrations. Allowing properties to decide later creates rework, confusion, and data conflicts.
Step 4. Build a Communication Cascade
A PMS transition requires a formal communication plan. Leadership messages must cascade from corporate to regional teams, property management, and line level staff. Everyone must hear the same message, understand the timeline, and know what will change and when. Silence creates fear. Clarity creates momentum.
Step 5. Train for Outcomes, Not Screens
Training should focus on what teams are trying to achieve, not which button to click. Staff should understand how workflows improve their day to day work. When people understand the benefit to themselves and the guest, adoption accelerates naturally.
Step 6. Expect Resistance and Plan for It
Resistance is not failure. It is normal. Leadership should expect frustration during the first weeks and stay visible. Clear escalation paths, empathetic support, and fast clarification prevent small issues from becoming cultural blockers.
Step 7. Stabilize Before Optimizing
After go live, resist the urge to keep changing rules. Stability builds confidence. Once teams are comfortable and noise drops, optimization can begin. The fastest successes come from letting people settle before refining.

