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Recent posts

Extended Stay America Opens New Premier Suites Hotel in Denver, Colorado

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  • 1 min

Extended Stay America Opens New Premier Suites Hotel in Denver, Colorado

  • LODGING Staff
  • 3 April 2026
This article was written by Lodging Magazine. Click here to read the original article Photo Credit: Extended Stay America Premier Suites—Denver International Airport RICHMOND, Virginia—Sandpiper Hospitality announced the opening of the newly built Extended Stay America Premier Suites—Denver International Airport. Owned by Blueline Equity Partners and developed in partnership with Integrated Hospitality Construction,…
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How hotels should use AI and a smarter commercial strategy to protect profit margins against rising costs

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 3 April 2026
While room rates saw a post-pandemic surge, that growth has now plateaued, leaving you in the uncomfortable position of managing both inflationary operating costs and shrinking room revenue in the hotel industry. When you pair this margin squeeze with an unpredictable global economic and political landscape , which negatively impacts traveler demand , it’s easy to feel like the walls are closing in. In this scenario, many hoteliers will go onto the back foot with a defensive, either/or mentality that assumes you must choose between prioritizing cost-cutting or revenue growth. But aggressive cost-cutting in a traditional sense, such as slashing amenities and reducing headcount (or just passing the cost on to the consumer in surcharges) is a race to the bottom. It erodes the guest experience, damages your brand and burns out staff. On the other hand, chasing blind revenue growth often comes at a cost of acquisition that eats the very profit it aims to create. Your path forward should be focused on operating smarter. You will find true financial resilience in pulling the dual levers of strategic cost allocation and careful investment in artificial intelligence (AI) driven commercial technology. {{cta id="12"}} By moving from panic saving toward proactive commercial agility, you can protect your profitability without sacrificing the quality of your brand, freeing up the capital and capacity to capture more of the traveler’s total spend. This playbook outlines five actionable strategies to maintain hotel profitability. We’ll look at how to move past the either/or trap and protect profitability, secure the guest experience, and enable you to thrive in a time of operational volatility. Key takeaways Rising labor, energy, insurance and F&B costs are squeezing hotel profit margins at a time when room rate growth has plateaued. Aggressive cost-cutting alone is a race to the bottom — the smarter path is combining strategic cost allocation with AI-driven commercial technology. AI-powered digital concierges, integrated with your PMS, can handle routine guest inquiries at scale, freeing staff for high-value interactions. Hidden fees and surcharges damage brand loyalty — dynamic AI-powered room pricing captures revenue without alienating guests. Personalized upselling and attribution-based selling drives significant TRevPAR gains, with 60% of guests willing to pay more for amenities tailored to them. Agentic AI tools can scan billions of data points daily to autonomously identify pricing opportunities and act on them in real time. A unified tech stack closes the loop between demand intelligence and direct booking conversion, turning volatility into predictable revenue. 1. Smarter hotel operations without sacrificing your guest experience Invisible efficiency gains Utility costs and rigid staffing models can be an unchecked drain on profitability when it comes to hotel management. Many properties struggle with high energy bills in unoccupied rooms and a reliance on expensive agency labor to cover peak periods. Your strategic response: Implement Energy Management Systems (EMS) leveraging Internet-of-things (IoT) technology to allow for real-time adjustments to HVAC and lighting, triggered by actual room usage. Simultaneously, adopting a Guest Service Gold model breaks down traditional department silos
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  • 2 min

Former Mondrian Los Angeles Rebrands as The Valorian Los Angeles, Curio Collection by Hilton   

  • LODGING Staff
  • 3 April 2026
This article was written by Lodging Magazine. Click here to read the original article Photo Credit: The Valorian Los Angeles LOS ANGELES, California—Hilton announced that the former Mondrian Los Angeles…
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  • 2 min

Hyatt Regency Denver Completes Renovation

  • LODGING Staff
  • 3 April 2026
This article was written by Lodging Magazine. Click here to read the original article Photo Credit: Hyatt Regency Denver at Colorado Convention Center DENVER, Colorado—Hyatt Regency Denver at Colorado Convention Center announced the completion of its…
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  • 1 min

Independent Hotels: Focusing on One Audience for Clarity and Impact | Guillaume Thevenot posted on the topic | LinkedIn

  • 3 April 2026
When a family books a hotel, they rely on star ratings, review scores, and the words “family-friendly” somewhere on the page. Star ratings measure service quality not whether a property…
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  • 5 min

Hospitality in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

  • 3 April 2026
Artificial intelligence is no longer a revolutionary idea in hospitality, but it is already shaping the way hotels operate and the way guests experience their stay. From automated booking systems…
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AI Enables Hotel Marketers to Launch Direct Channel Campaigns in Seconds, US RevPAR Climbs 8.3%

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 3 April 2026
The technology advancement tackles a fundamental constraint: marketing teams recognizing personalization value but lacking bandwidth to execute campaigns matching OTA sophistication. US weekly RevPAR increased 8.3% nationally with San Francisco leading at 121.1% growth, and analysis shows hotel revenue strategies remain built for markets that no longer exist. AI Reduces Direct Channel Campaign Creation From Days to Seconds AI-powered personalization tools now enable hotel marketers to create targeted website campaigns in seconds rather than days, addressing the execution gap that prevented teams from capitalizing on direct booking opportunities despite understanding personalization's value proposition. The speed transformation directly attacks the capacity bottleneck limiting direct channel performance. Hotel marketing teams historically recognized that matching OTA personalization sophistication required creating dozens of targeted landing pages, dynamic offers, and segment-specific messaging, yet lacked resources to execute at scale. A three-person team might spend weeks building campaigns OTAs deploy automatically, forcing properties to accept higher commission dependency rather than invest scarce hours in direct channel optimization. AI platforms now generate complete campaign assets including copy variations, imagery selections, and audience targeting rules in seconds, enabling small teams to launch personalization matching enterprise OTA capabilities. The execution acceleration shifts competitive dynamics from resource advantage to strategic deployment, allowing boutique properties to test and iterate campaigns faster than larger competitors constrained by approval processes and legacy systems. Read the analysis → US Weekly RevPAR Increases 8.3%, San Francisco Surges 121.1% US hotel RevPAR increased 8.3% nationally for the week ending March 28, with San Francisco leading at 121.1% growth driven by the RSA Conference generating concentrated corporate demand in downtown properties. The San Francisco performance illustrates how major conferences create temporary supply-demand imbalances delivering exceptional pricing power. The RSA Conference drew tens of thousands of cybersecurity professionals to a city where hotel supply cannot expand rapidly to match sudden demand spikes, enabling properties to implement aggressive rate strategies that would fail during normal periods. The 121.1% growth reflects both significantly higher ADR and near-total occupancy compression as attendees exhaust available inventory. Properties benefit from advance corporate bookings at negotiated rates plus walk-in premium pricing for stragglers, while also capturing ancillary revenue from F&B and meeting space during multi-day events. The performance validates targeting conference and event-driven demand as revenue strategy, though requires properties to balance rate optimization against reputation risk from excessive gouging that alienates future visitors. Read the data → Hotel Revenue Strategies Built for Markets That No Longer Exist Hotels continue using outdated revenue strategies designed for stable, predictable markets while today's demand patterns are fragmented and volatile, requiring different optimization approaches than traditional yield management assumptions. The strategic mismatch stems from revenue management evolution during decades when demand followed reliable seasonal patterns and advance booking windows stretched 30-60 days. Hotels optimized pricing around historical data showing consistent Tuesday business travel, weekend leisure patterns, and predictable holiday demand enabling accurate forecasting and inventory allocation. Today's environment exhibits demand fragmentation into unpredictable micro-segments, compression of booking windows to days rather than weeks, and volatility from geopolitical
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How AI is reshaping the direct channel opportunity for hotel marketers

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 3 April 2026
On average, 98% of hotel website visitors leave without booking. The opportunity isn't more traffic. It's converting the traffic that's already there, and website personalization is the most powerful lever marketing teams have to do it. The direct booking channel has always represented something more than a lower-cost transaction. It's where the guest relationship begins on your terms, where you control the experience, capture the data, and set the tone for everything that follows. For hotel marketing teams, converting your own website traffic is one of the highest-leverage moves you can make: better margin, richer guest insight, and a booking you can build on. The ambition has always been there. The gap has been execution. Hoteliers know what they want to achieve. Drive more direct bookings from international traffic. Capitalize on a peak demand window. Turn a seasonal offer into a conversion campaign before the moment passes. The challenge has rarely been the strategy. It's been the time, resources, and technical lift required to bring that strategy to life before the moment passed. Without clear visibility into how their direct channel performance compared to competitors, teams were often left optimizing blindly rather than knowing exactly where to focus. Artificial intelligence is changing that equation. And for hotel marketing professionals, the timing couldn't be better. The direct channel ambition and what held it back Hotel marketing teams have spent the better part of the last decade building the case for direct. The logic is compelling: a guest who books through your own channel costs less to acquire, gives you first-party guest data to work with, and arrives with a relationship already in place. Acting on that logic, at speed, is harder than it sounds. Creating a personalized website campaign used to mean briefing a designer, drafting copy, configuring targeting rules, and testing across devices before anything went live. For a lean marketing team managing a content calendar, agency relationships, and cross-functional dependencies with revenue management, that kind of campaign cycle could take days. By the time a campaign was live, the demand window it was designed to capture had sometimes already shifted. And that was just for basic personalization. Without the right tools, meaningful website personalization, the kind that adapts in real time to each visitor’s intent, origin, and booking stage, simply wasn’t possible. Even modest implementations required developer involvement, significant lead time, and ongoing technical maintenance most marketing teams couldn’t sustain. The bottleneck was never ambition. It was execution bandwidth. Marketing teams knew what they wanted to do. They just didn’t always have the resources to do it fast enough. That’s the constraint AI has already removed. How AI moved into the hotel marketing stack AI’s entry into hotel marketing wasn’t a single moment. It was a gradual migration up the value chain. It started in revenue management: dynamic pricing models, demand forecasting, and rate intelligence. Then it moved into the distribution layer, helping hotels understand where their rates stood relative to competitors and flagging parity issues in real time.
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Signage solutions that match real building needs

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 3 April 2026
Clear signage is not only about labeling doors. It is about helping people understand a space without asking questions or second-guessing directions. Offices, administrative buildings, medical centers, and hotels all depend on consistent identification to keep daily routines predictable. When signage systems are planned around how people actually move through a building, navigation becomes effortless and operations run more smoothly. Different environments require different types of signs. A quiet private office, a busy coworking floor, and a medical reception area all have distinct needs. Choosing the right material and sign type for each group of spaces ensures that identification remains clear, durable, and appropriate to the environment. Well-structured signage systems, such as those developed by Bsign, are typically organized around real movement patterns rather than decorative concepts. This approach helps buildings remain readable even during peak hours. Where different sign types are needed Signage requirements change depending on how a building is used. Instead of a single solution, most interiors benefit from a combination of identification, directional, and informational signs. Typical placement includes: door identification signs for offices, meeting rooms, and service spaces; directional signs in corridors, near elevators, and at intersections; information panels at reception areas or shared zones. This layered structure allows people to move step by step, receiving only the information they need at each moment. Matching sign materials to office types Different work environments place different demands on signage. Material choice affects durability, readability, and how well the sign fits into the overall interior logic. Three practical material options Functional signage systems usually rely on three proven materials: wood, which provides a stable surface suited to calm, people-focused offices; stainless steel, which resists wear and cleaning in high-traffic business environments; acrylic glass, which offers precise edges and clear readability in modern workspaces. Each material supports different operational needs rather than purely stylistic preferences. Comparing materials for common office groups The choice of material often depends on the type of office or building. A practical comparison helps clarify which option works best in each environment. For small private offices Best option: wood Why: creates a calm atmosphere and suits spaces with steady, low traffic Typical use: individual offices, consulting rooms, creative studios For large corporate or administrative buildings Best option: stainless steel Why: resists frequent contact and cleaning, maintains clarity over time Typical use: corridors, departments, meeting rooms, service areas For modern coworking or tech spaces Best option: acrylic glass Why: allows sharp readability and consistent dimensions across flexible layouts Typical use: shared offices, conference zones, open-plan workspaces This comparison shows that material selection is primarily about function and durability, not decoration. Practical signage elements that support navigation A functional office signage system often includes several coordinated elements: room number or name signs placed consistently on every door; directional arrows guiding movement between departments or floors; desk or reception signs identifying staff roles or service points. When these elements follow a single logic, people learn the system quickly and rely on it without hesitation. Solutions based on
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Lifestyle Hotels: Catering to Modern Traveler Preferences

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 3 April 2026
The global lifestyle hotel market has grown rapidly in recent years, valued at $68.3 billion in 2024 and projected to reach $123.3 billion by 2033. Today's modern traveler's expectations are more than just a bed to sleep – they desire experiences that resonate with their personal values, aesthetics, and lifestyles. A new category of hotels has emerged from this evolving demand: lifestyle hotels, a unique blend of design, technology, and local cultures. What is a Lifestyle Hotel? Lifestyle hotels have redefined what it means to stay somewhere memorable. They transform a simple stay into an immersive journey reflecting both the destination and the guest's individuality. Some key features that are prevalent in lifestyle hotels can be: Local cultural immersion: Lifestyle hotels are rooted in the connection of guests with the authenticity of a destination through local design, cuisine, and community. From architecture to amenities, they tell a story inspired by the surrounding culture. Personalized service: Utilizing guest data, design, and service philosophy to tailor each guest's stay . Every element is crafted to align with individual tastes and routines through music choice, flexible living space, and thoughtful gestures. Technology: Tools like digital check-ins and mobile concierge services are vital in simplifying the client journey without overshadowing human warmth. Unique designs: Designs act as the bridge between function and storytelling. Lifestyle hotels often express a distinct aesthetic—sometimes minimalistic, other times electric or culturally infused. Lifestyle Hotels vs Boutique Hotels Lifestyle hotels and boutique hotels are in many respects two birds of a feather in their individuality and design, yet they represent distinct interpretations of personalized hospitality. Boutique hotels have been traditionally intimate, independently owned, smaller properties with a strong sense of character. They usually come with limited room numbers and owner-driven concepts and cater to high-end customers willing to pay a premium for exclusivity. The success of boutique hotels often relies on strong word-of-mouth driven by the owner's creative vision rather than brand power. Lifestyle hotels extend the spirit of individuality from boutique hotels within a brand framework. They borrow the design-led philosophy, subsequently translating it into a scalable format across various markets. A lifestyle brand might belong to a parent group, such as Marriott's Moxy or Hilton's Canopy, yet still convey the local neighborhood's charm through its design and social events. This hybrid model allows major brands to compete directly with independent boutiques while attracting a broader, more accessible audience. While traditional boutique hotels may follow the notion of a "home away from home," lifestyle properties thrive on energy and engagement. They are found in lively nomad districts animated with art, food, and music. Lifestyle hotels represent how modern travelers want to live: social, inspired, and immersed in culture without the formality or rigidity of traditional luxury. Who Stays in Lifestyle Hotels and Why Guests in lifestyle hotels are not necessarily defined by age or demographic but more by their creativity and profound curiosity to connect with people and cultures. Post-pandemic statistics show that 65% of travelers now prioritize experience-driven
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