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Loyalty — Gone in 60 Seconds

Loyalty — Gone in 60 Seconds

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 20 April 2026
Executive Brief In hospitality, billions are spent on loyalty programs, CRM systems, personalization engines, and brand standards. Yet the single most decisive moment in the entire guest journey is rarely engineered, rarely measured, and frequently mishandled: The first 60 seconds of arrival. This paper introduces a blunt but accurate framing: Loyalty isn’t built over time. It is either sparked — or lost — within the first minute. And in that moment, no system, no AI, and no process can compensate for the absence of a genuine human connection. 1. The 60-Second Reality A guest arrives. They are tired. Observant. Subconsciously evaluating everything. Within seconds, they determine: Am I expected here? Am I just another check-in? Does anyone actually see me? The Outcome Matrix First 60 seconds experience Emotional outcome Commercial impact Warm, personal, human "I belong here" Loyalty begins Neutral, efficient "This is fine" Replaceable stay Cold, transactional "I'm just a number" Loyalty lost No recovery strategy fully reverses a poor first impression. Service recovery is mitigation—not creation. 2. The Illusion of “Second Visit” Familiarity The most sophisticated operators do something deceptively simple: They make a first-time guest feel like a returning one. Not through data. Not through scripted personalization. But through human presence and intent. The Mechanics of the Illusion Eye contact that signals recognition Language that implies anticipation Tone that conveys genuine welcome Micro-behaviors that say: “You matter here.” This is not technology-enabled personalization. This is human-led emotional design. 3. Where the Industry Is Getting It Wrong The industry is currently over-indexed on: AI-driven personalization Workflow efficiency Contactless experiences Labor cost reduction All valid. All necessary. But dangerously incomplete. The Blind Spot In optimizing for efficiency, many operations have: Stripped away spontaneity Standardized human interaction into scripts Reduced staff to process executors The result? A perfectly efficient experience… that no one remembers. 4. AI Cannot Save the First Minute Let’s be precise. AI can: Predict arrival times Pre-assign rooms Automate check-in Suggest preferences But AI cannot: Create emotional warmth Deliver authentic recognition Adapt to human nuance in real time Make someone feel genuinely valued The Strategic Miscalculation Many operators believe AI will replace the human layer. In reality: AI increases the importance of the human moment — because everything else becomes commoditized. 5. The Cost of Getting It Wrong When the first 60 seconds fail: Loyalty programs become irrelevant Price becomes the primary differentiator Brand equity erodes silently Repeat intent drops — often permanently And critically: The guest may never complain. They simply never return. This is invisible churn — the most dangerous kind. 6. The Opportunity: Engineering the First Minute The first minute should be treated as a designed experience , not an operational byproduct. The “60-Second Protocol.” 0–10 seconds: Recognition Acknowledge presence immediately — no ambiguity 10–30 seconds: Human Connection Eye contact, tone, and phrasing establish emotional context 30–60 seconds: Personal Framing Position the stay as anticipated, not processed 7. Leadership Implications If you are not measuring the first 60 seconds, you are not managing loyalty.
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Hotel ARI: What it is and what it reveals about performance

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 20 April 2026
Key takeaways Average rate index (ARI) measures how your hotel's ADR compares to your competitive set, expressed as a score where 100 equals parity with the market. Calculate ARI by dividing your ADR by your comp set's ADR and multiplying by 100 — track it at least monthly using your STAR report or a market intelligence tool. A "good" ARI depends on your strategy. Luxury hotels often target 110–120, while volume-focused properties may aim for 95–100 to maximise occupancy. ARI is most valuable when used alongside MPI (occupancy) and RGI (revenue), which together give a complete picture of competitive performance. A high ARI with low occupancy can signal overpricing; a low ARI with high occupancy suggests you're leaving revenue on the table. Regular ARI tracking helps you benchmark against competitors, time rate adjustments and make confident, data-backed pricing decisions. What is average rate index (ARI)? Average rate index or ARI is a hotel performance metric that compares a property’s average daily rate (ADR) to the average rate of its competitive set . With demand patterns shifting constantly and competition just a click away, staying on top of your key performance indicators (KPIs) is essential. Keeping a close eye on the right metrics doesn’t just help you understand how your hotel is performing, it enables you to make smarter, more informed decisions that drive profitability. Among these KPIs, average rate index (ARI) stands out as one of the most crucial tools for understanding how your room rates compare to your competitors. Whether you're trying to improve market share, refine your pricing strategy or spot new revenue opportunities, ARI provides the context you need. Expressed as a percentage, ARI helps you as a hotelier to understand how your room pricing stacks up against similar hotels in the same market. An ARI of 100 means your ADR is exactly in line with the comp set. Above 100 means you’re charging more. Below 100 means you’re charging less. One of the three main index metrics, ARI is commonly found in a STR (or STAR) report , alongside occupancy and revenue per available room (RevPAR) indexes. Of course, while ARI doesn’t reveal everything about your performance, it offers a quick snapshot of how well your pricing strategy is keeping pace with your competitors. How to calculate hotel ARI To calculate your hotel’s ARI, use this simple formula: ARI = (your ADR ÷ comp set ADR) × 100 For example, if your average daily rate is $120 and your comp set’s ADR is $100, your ARI is 120, meaning that, on average, you're charging 20% more than your competitors. To ensure accuracy, always use ADR data from the same time period for both your property and your comp set, whether it’s daily, weekly, monthly or year-to-date. Most hotels use data from their STAR report, which benchmarks performance using anonymized market data. If you don’t have access to such a report, you’ll need a reliable internal or third-party source for competitor rates, ideally updated no less than
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Manniello hotels

  • Justine de Almeida
  • 20 April 2026
As a seasonal luxury hotel group, Manniello Hotels operates within a concentrated trading period, with most properties open from spring to autumn and limited activity during the winter months. This…
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Agrobiodiversity as the Next, Next Big Thing for Regenerative Tourism

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 20 April 2026
Regenerative tourism and stewardship are now mainstream. They are both buzz terms and hugely profitable ventures for those hotels and resorts that put in the blood, sweat and tears to set up the programs up properly. Without burying the lead, for hotel brands and owners, agrobiodiversity is a niche way to create exceptional guest experiences, especially in luxury, and drive demand or ADR uplift. In today’s world of endless brand expansions and the explosion of luxury hotels, guests yearn for places that are offering more than just beach access. They want exclusivity and are willing to pay more for it: exclusive access to historic sights, private excursions to remote destinations or, in this case, the ability to taste unique, esoteric foods. The Next Step for Regenerative Tourism But there’s another step that hotels can take, one that’s both noble and also barely understood outside of small groups of ecology or climate science circle. And because few are engaged with it, that means there’s tremendous potential for hotel product differentiation to drive ADR, ancillaries and overall business value. This is agrobiodiversity, and it will become increasingly important as climate resiliency efforts become more common. Agrobiodiversity involves the planning efforts to shift away from monocropping which is both a major contributor to carbon emissions as well as putting us at risk for superbug-born famines or crop collapse events. The revenue opportunity for hotels is to support food crop resiliency through agrobiodiversity as a method to ramp up a brand’s regenerative cachet, heighten the availability of locally sourced nutritious foods and create culinary, wellness or agricultural experiences that sell. What Is Agrobiodiversity? A clinical definition of this term is increasing the variety of food crops grown, both within a species by using heirloom cultivars or landraces and by farming different edible species that are either highly regional or not commonly known at the supermarket. This definition is often confused with ingredient diversity. As an example, a tropical fruit salad may comprise a high ingredient count with shredded coconut, papaya, pineapple, mango, dragon fruit and kiwi. But at the end of the day, those fruits have more or less the same genetics whether they are purchased in New York, Cape Town or Bangkok. Corn tells an even more dire story. In the pursuit of yield, we’ve domesticated and genetically modified this cash crop from its near-inedible, but tough-as-nails, ancestor, teosinte, into white corn which we recognize by its massive, uniform cob at its peak. The tradeoff is that our modern corn is all-but-completely dependent on herbicides and pesticides, which all seep into the water supply, as well as fertilizers which have a big carbon footprint. Landraces and indigenous crops are hardier and well-adapted to their region, most often requiring no chemical sprays or other human-made additives besides TLC and perhaps intercropping layouts like the Aztec milpa system (rows of maize, beans and squash). Yields and growing difficulties aside, agrobiodiversity is next-level regenerative agriculture, helping provide foods that may resist blights that infect common crops
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The Quiet Cost of Bad Hotel Data

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 20 April 2026
A hotel revenue team walks into its weekly strategy meeting confident that pricing is under control. Demand remains steadfast with a good booking level. But after a few hours, someone spots that many online travel agencies are now offering a cheaper price than that of the hotel site. The revenue strategy was never the problem. The data was. According to the Expedia Group, 98% of the hoteliers have lost revenues due to rate misuse. That, too, almost once every four days on average. According to industry experts at CoStar and Tourism Economics, U.S. hotel occupancy will reach approximately 62.3% in 2025. Furthermore, they have forecasted only 0.8% growth in ADR, while RevPAR is reportedly notorious for slightly declining in the same year. Under a constraint of such weak revenue growth, inaccurate operational data can affect pricing, staffing and investment decisions. Future U.S. hotel performance metrics are projected to barely grow revenues in 2025, giving more importance to real-time operational data. Source: CoStar / STR Hospitality Forecast Why Hotel Data Breaks Down When integration and validation do not get enough attention, there are risks of discrepancies, as multiple different systems provide dashboard data. Modern hotels use many different technology platforms, including property-management systems, revenue management tools, distribution systems, guest-experience platforms, and financial-reporting systems. According to the research carried out by Revinate & Hapi, 49% of the hospitality professionals find it difficult to get hold of critical data, while 40% believe that disconnected systems pose the biggest challenge for effective data use. Hotels do not have a dashboard problem. They have a data trust problem. When Data Problems Become Revenue Problems As stated by the B2B Distribution Study of the Expedia Group, around 98% of hotels lost revenue due to rate misuse. The most frequent causes of discrepancies identified by the system are rates sold through unintended partners, input errors in manual rate-loading, and unauthorized resellers displaying hotel rates. Rate leakage across hotel booking channels is mainly caused by distribution complexity and operational mistakes. When pricing data is inconsistent across systems, revenue strategy becomes guesswork. Operational Consequences The HotelData 2025 Labor Cost Report, which analyzes nearly 5,000 hotels using Actabl’s Hotel Effectiveness, has a lot to do with labor efficiency and accurate demand forecasting. Despite improving staffing efficiency, hotels continued to experience rising labor costs associated with wage growth and operational pressures. Hotel Data Validation Checklist Reporting more will not serve the required purpose. It is stricter authority over what is behind the reporting. Most hotel organizations rely on five internal controls. Control Action Risk if ignored Align metric definitions Quarterly KPI alignment meeting Departments report different numbers Validate dashboards Monthly PMS spot checks Hidden data errors persist Document manual fixes Maintain correction logs Reporting fails when staff change Label verified reports Mark preliminary vs confirmed data Decisions based on incomplete numbers Review data quality Include in leadership reviews Loss of confidence in reporting Reconfirm key metric definitions. All teams should attribute the same meaning to occupancy, ADR, RevPAR, channel performance, guest
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How Hotel Cost Controls Will Change in 2026

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 20 April 2026
1. The New Cost Control Reality The Fundamental Shift The hospitality industry is transitioning from revenue-recovery to margin preservation. Global hotel rates will increase by only 1-2% in 2026, significantly below inflation rates. Occupancy rates will remain flat in the low-to-mid 60% range, with RevPAR growing at best 0-1%. Labor expenses increased approximately 11% in 2024. Food costs remain unstable due to supply chain disruptions and tariff uncertainties. Capital expenditure requirements escalate as brands push for renovations and technology upgrades. Success demands continuous operational discipline. Hotels must implement systematic cost management that preserves service quality while eliminating waste and inefficiency. 2. Food and Beverage Cost Controls The F&B Profitability Challenge Food and beverage operations present both opportunity and challenge. While per-occupied-room F&B revenue increased 3.8% in early 2025, operators face pressure from rising costs and changing preferences. Tariff instability makes product costs unpredictable. Ingredient and contract costs have increased significantly, forcing focus on contribution margins rather than top-line revenue alone. AI-Driven Menu Engineering Traditional menu engineering analyzed profitability quarterly. In 2026, leading hotels employ AI systems that continuously optimize offerings based on real-time data, analyzing contribution margins, ingredient availability, preparation complexity, and guest preferences. AI algorithms consider seasonal pricing, labor availability, equipment utilization, and competitive positioning, enabling weekly or daily menu refinements that maximize profitability without compromising satisfaction. Best-in-class operators shrink menus to reduce preparation requirements and labor costs while elevating quality. This strategy reduces waste, simplifies inventory, and enables consistency. Smart Procurement and Inventory Management Advanced hotels utilize procurement software that automatically compares supplier pricing, tracks quality metrics, and forecasts demand based on historical patterns and upcoming reservations. The system flags unusual price movements and recommends alternative suppliers or menu substitutions when ingredient costs spike. Inventory management has evolved from weekly physical counts to real-time tracking using RFID tags, smart shelving, and integrated point-of-sale systems. Hotels monitor inventory turnover daily, identify slow-moving items immediately, and adjust purchasing to minimize waste. FIFO and FEFO principles are enforced automatically through digital tracking systems. Temperature monitoring sensors alert managers to refrigeration issues before spoilage occurs. Waste tracking systems photograph and categorize discarded items, providing data for root cause analysis. Labor Cost Management in F&B AI-powered workforce management systems forecast F&B demand by meal period using historical data combined with forward-looking indicators such as on-the-books reservations, local events, and weather forecasts. Schedules are generated automatically to match anticipated demand within target labor cost parameters of 30-35% of F&B revenue. The most efficient F&B operations cross-train staff to perform multiple roles. A server might also work as host, bartender, or banquet server depending on demand. This flexibility reduces specialized staff needs during slower periods while maintaining service capacity during peaks. Self-service technologies—digital menus, tableside ordering tablets, mobile payment systems—reduce labor intensity without diminishing guest experience. Hotels report that well-implemented technology can reduce labor requirements by 15-20% while improving order accuracy and table turnover. 3. Rooms Division Cost Controls The Rooms Division Profit Equation The rooms division remains the most profitable department, generating 68-82% of
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Stop Making Resolutions. Start Building Results.

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 20 April 2026
I walked into my local health club the other day and saw a big, bright sign hanging over the entrance: “Resolutions are easy. Results take action.” I actually laughed, because it’s true. We’re only a few weeks into the year, and let’s be honest — a whole lot of resolutions have already drifted into the “nice idea” category. And that’s fine for the general public. But for leaders? For teams? For anyone serious about performance? We need more than resolutions. We need plans. We need fundamentals. We need follow-through. Especially in the hospitality industry. Resolutions Feel Good. Results Do Good. A resolution is basically a wish with a timestamp. A plan is a commitment with a roadmap. And results come from the work in between. In hospitality — or any business — success doesn’t show up because we declared it on January 1st. It shows up because we practiced the basics, stayed accountable, and kept showing up long after the excitement wore off. And the data backs it up. According to Deseret News , “most people quit their resolutions by the second Friday of January — Quitter’s Day . The average resolution doesn’t even make it four months.” If that were a business strategy, we’d shut it down immediately. Goals Need Muscle Behind Them In my book Twist the Familiar , I talk about a simple truth: What gets measured gets done. Teams don’t succeed because they “intend” to. They succeed because they have: Clear goals A plan they understand Accountability they feel Fundamentals they practice Discipline they build People love the rewards — the recognition, the wins, the momentum. But those things are earned through repetition, sweat equity, and the willingness to do the unglamorous work. A Masterclass in Fundamentals Bob Ladouceur — who wrote the foreword to my book — is a Hall of Fame coach who built one of the most successful football programs in history. His De La Salle teams won 151 straight games, 11 national championships, and 20 undefeated seasons. His secret wasn’t magic. It wasn’t hype. It was fundamentals. “Eighty percent of what we’d do was fundamental-oriented and drill work,” he writes in his excellent book Chasing Perfection . He didn’t expect perfect performance — but he expected perfect effort . That translates beautifully to business: Perfect effort from open to close. Every day. Not just on January 1st. As Coach Lad says, “We can’t sprinkle you with fairy dust… You have to earn it and work for it.” A Simple Framework That Actually Works Let’s skip the complicated charts and systems no one remembers. Simplicity wins because people can actually use it. Here’s a clean, practical structure I share with my clients that you can put into play immediately: 1. The Goal (What + Why) What are we trying to achieve, and why does it matter? 2. The Plan (How + Who + When) Define the steps. Assign the roles. Set the timeline. 3. Resources Needed Skills, tools, time, people, money, alliance partnerships,
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The AI Agent Trap: Why Hospitality’s Next Technology Crisis Is Already in Motion

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 20 April 2026
Every week, another hospitality technology vendor announces their new AI agent. The language is consistent: transformative, intelligent, purpose-built for hotels. The demos are compelling. The case studies are carefully selected. And the announcements are, in almost every case, telling only half the story. The missing half is this: most of these agents live entirely inside the vendor's own ecosystem. They read that vendor's data, automate that vendor's workflows, and speak exclusively to that vendor's modules. The moment a hotel needs that agent to interact with a different system, a PMS from another provider, a revenue management platform, or an F&B solution, the intelligence stops. The agent hits a wall that it was never designed to cross. I have spent more than a decade working across the hospitality technology landscape on the product side at Oracle Hospitality, then in commercial roles at NOR1 and Shiji, and then as part of Sciant before it was acquired by Sirma and became the foundation of what is now the Sirma Travel and Hospitality vertical. Across more than 900+ projects and every tier of the industry, I have sat on both sides of this table long enough to recognize a pattern when it is forming. And what is forming right now deserves a more honest conversation than the one we are currently having. A familiar story wearing a new outfit For two decades, the hospitality technology industry has operated on a mantra that sounds generous but is usually not: open APIs, open ecosystems, connect with anyone. And technically, that has always been true. You can absolutely connect. But someone has to build the connection. Someone has to maintain it. Someone has to absorb the cost of every API call that passes through it. The openness was always conditionally dependent on engineering capacity, budget, and the willingness of vendors to prioritise interoperability over lock-in. AI agents have not changed that equation. They have made it more consequential. When a hotel's property management system had limited reporting capabilities, the cost was inconvenience. When a hotel's AI agent cannot access operational data from the three other systems it needs to make a meaningful decision, the cost is the entire promise of AI. A siloed agent is not a partial solution. It is a sophisticated tool that cannot do the one thing hotels actually need: see the whole picture and act on it. To be fair to the vendors building these products and I say this as someone whose business works alongside them every day the domain intelligence embedded in many of these agents is genuinely impressive. Companies that have spent years accumulating operational data in a specific area of hotel management are well-positioned to build agents that understand that domain deeply. That expertise is real, it has value, and it is not going anywhere. The problem is not what these agents know. The problem is the architecture that contains them and that is a problem vendors and their partners can solve together, if the industry is willing to
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An alternative roadmap to address overtourism

  • By Noam Toister - Travelier
  • 20 April 2026
As Earth Day approaches, Noam Toister, founder of Travelier, argues that digitizing ground and sea transport is key to enabling dispersal and easing overtourism.
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Startup Stage: First Wave AI automates hotel guest communications and revenue intelligence

  • By Cathy Walsh
  • 20 April 2026
The startup offers an AI platform that manages guest interactions across channels while providing staff support and operational insights.
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