I’m still buzzing a bit from a recent event. I was at the Hospitality Design Awards in Vegas—the big night for the architectural, interior design, and product community. These are the people who literally build the stage we perform on. It occurred to me, watching the nominees and the winners roll through, that we spend so much time talking about the tech, the operations, or the marketing, that we overlook the sheer, staggering scale of the diaspora that actually creates the hospitality environment.
It’s easy to get siloed in our own little corner of the business. But when you see a truly international crowd like that—organizations from every corner of the globe dedicated to the “built environment”—it’s a humbling reminder of the sheer breath of our industry. We are talking about thousands of designers, craftsmen, and visionaries whose sole mission is to make the physical act of “being elsewhere” a better experience.
Last night wasn’t about a better booking engine or a faster Wi-Fi network; it was about the texture of a fabric, the curve of a chair, and the way light hits a lobby. It’s the physical manifestation of hospitality. And the scale is just massive. To see winners from half a dozen different countries proves that the drive to improve the guest experience isn’t just a local effort—it’s a global movement of organizations contributing their collective industriousness to the cause.
Sometimes we need these moments to step back and realize we aren’t just an industry of rooms and rates. We are a massive, interconnected ecosystem of creators. It’s quite an extraordinary thing to realize how many hands it takes to craft that “high touch” feeling we all strive for. While I’m usually the first to talk about how the digital layer improves the journey, last night was a reminder that the foundation is made of something much more solid—and the talent behind it is vast.
Life is so tech. But the world we build for it is absolutely massive.
Mark Fancourt
