10 Minutes News for Hoteliers 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers
  • Top News
    • Airbnb news
    • AI News in Hospitality
    • Marriott news
    • Booking.com news
    • OTA News
    • UCP news
    • PMS news
  • The Columns
  • Posts
    • Hotel Marketing
    • Revenue Management
    • CSR and Sustainability
    • Events
    • Hotel Openings
    • Hotel Operations
    • Human Resources
    • Innovation
    • Market Trends
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Regulatory and Legal Affairs
  • 👉 Sign-up
  • 🌎 Languages
    • 🇫🇷 French
    • 🇮🇹 Italian
    • 🇪🇸 Spain
  • 📰 More
    • Largest Hotel Brands by Traffic
    • Hotel Brands of the World
    • OTAs of the World
    • Most read Articles
  • About us
10 Minutes News for Hoteliers 10 Minutes News for Hoteliers
  • Top News
    • Airbnb news
    • AI News in Hospitality
    • Marriott news
    • Booking.com news
    • OTA News
    • UCP news
    • PMS news
  • The Columns
  • Posts
    • Hotel Marketing
    • Revenue Management
    • CSR and Sustainability
    • Events
    • Hotel Openings
    • Hotel Operations
    • Human Resources
    • Innovation
    • Market Trends
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Regulatory and Legal Affairs
  • 👉 Sign-up
  • 🌎 Languages
    • 🇫🇷 French
    • 🇮🇹 Italian
    • 🇪🇸 Spain
  • 📰 More
    • Largest Hotel Brands by Traffic
    • Hotel Brands of the World
    • OTAs of the World
    • Most read Articles
  • About us

Categorizing…

5060 posts

HSMAI 2026 Commercial Strategy Conference Coming to San Antonio, Texas

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 1 May 2026
McLean, VA – The Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International’s (HSMAI) Commercial Strategy Conference for the Americas will take place in San Antonio, Texas from June 16-17, 2026, at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center. The event combines key commercial disciplines—marketing, revenue optimization, sales, and distribution—bringing together hospitality professionals for one dynamic, cross-functional experience. Attendees can expect a mix of keynote presentations, breakout sessions, partner showcases, and high-impact networking opportunities. The conference, along with its pre- and post-event workshops, training sessions, and executive roundtables, helps hospitality professionals stay ahead of emerging challenges, uncover new opportunities, and better align commercial functions. Attendees will gain the tools and strategic perspective to adapt in a rapidly evolving landscape and drive profitability across the entire customer journey. Hospitality is evolving at an unprecedented pace, and success today requires a more integrated and agile commercial approach. Our Commercial Strategy Conference brings together the industry’s brightest minds to share ideas, challenge convention, and shape what’s next. We’re excited to welcome professionals from across the industry to learn from one another, gain real-world insights, and leave equipped with actionable strategies. Brian Hicks, President & CEO of HSMAI The lineup of educational sessions, presentations, and networking opportunities includes: June 15 | Pre-Event Workshops & Roundtables Executive Roundtables *by invitation Rising Leader Council Joint Meeting Partner Insights Workshops Emerging Leaders Reception June 16 | Commercial Strategy Conference Day 1 General Sessions: Change Mindset: Change. Simply. Do It. From Occupancy to Obsession: What Hotels Can Learn from Fan Culture Thunderclaps: Powerful Ideas. Lightning Fast. Breakouts: 14 breakout sessions over the course of the day will address the most important issues facing commercial professionals Partner Showcase Networking breakfast, lunch, and reception June 17 | Commercial Strategy Conference Day 2 General Sessions: New Realities Ahead: Navigating North America’s Economic and Geopolitical Crosswind Spotlight Conversation: Honoring Excellence in Commercial Strategy Unconventional Wisdom: Winning Commercial Strategies from Unexpected Places The Future of Hospitality Breakouts: 14 breakout sessions over the course of the day will address the most important issues facing commercial professionals Partner Showcase Networking breakfast, lunch, and reception June 18 | Post-Event Workshops & Roundtables Executive Roundtables *by invitation View additional information and the full conference schedule here . Industry partners supporting HSMAI’s Commercial Strategy Conference include: Premiere: IDeaS, Tambourine Platinum: Cendyn, Duetto, Lighthouse Gold: Amadeus, Aven Hospitality, Booking.com , Kalibri, SiteMinder, Sojern, Visiting Media Silver: Amaze, Curacity , FlexPay, FLYR, Milestone, Onyx, Plusgrade Bronze: Flip.to , HEDNA, HFTP, Nuitee, RoomPriceGenie, STR, The Guestbook, Travel Media Group, Triptease Media Partners : The Future of Hospitality and Hospitality Upgrade To learn about partnership opportunities, contact Mat Havrilla at partnership@hsmai.org . Registration details are available here . Registration savings are available to hotel companies when registering five or more people. To inquire about media passes, please contact hsmaipr@mmgy.com . The Commercial Strategy Conference is being held in conjunction with Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals’ (HFTP) Hospitality Industry Technology Exposition & Conference (HITEC).
View Post
Share

Hotel pipeline activity up globally, except in the Americas

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 1 May 2026
At the end of the first quarter, the Americas was the only world region to show a decrease in hotel pipeline activity, according to CoStar 's March 2026 pipeline data. CoStar is a leading provider of online real estate marketplaces, information and analytics in the property markets. Europe In construction: 185,419 rooms (+6.6%) Final Planning: 77,253 rooms (0.0%) Planning: 193,351 rooms (+9.7%) Total Under Contract: 456,023 (+6.7%) The United Kingdom led Europe in total rooms in construction (26,458), closely followed by Germany (23,748). Asia Pacific In construction: 492,970 rooms (-7.7%) Final Planning: 74,487 rooms (+70.2%) Planning: 415,172 rooms (+6.5%) Total Under Contract: 982,629 (+1.6%) Among countries in the region, China (278,283) led in construction activity, followed by Vietnam (43,858) and India (43,290). Middle East & Africa In construction: 107,653 rooms (+4.5%) Final Planning: 29,290 rooms (+3.8%) Planning: 94,998 rooms (-2.9%) Total Under Contract: 231,941 (+1.3%) Most of the region’s pipeline activity is focused in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia (51,513) and the United Arab Emirates (16,072) have the most rooms in construction. Americas In construction: 193,145 rooms (-2.1%) Final Planning: 282,246 rooms (-7.9%) Planning: 402,723 rooms (-5.0%) Total Under Contract: 878,114 (-5.3%) The U.S. (333,467) holds the majority of rooms in construction in the region . After the U.S., Mexico (15,267), Canada (9,589) and the Dominican Republic (6,190) show the highest number of rooms in construction. For more information about the company and its products and services, please visit costargroup.com .
View Post
Share

Uber is in the hotel business now, thanks in part to AI

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 1 May 2026
Uber is expanding beyond ride-hailing and food delivery into a broader “app for everything” travel platform, starting with direct hotel booking in the U.S. through an Expedia Group partnership that gives users access to more than 700,000 hotels worldwide. The move, announced at Uber’s Go-Get event, is tightly linked to Uber One, with member discounts and Uber Credits designed to increase subscription value and loyalty. The article also highlights how Uber is using agentic AI tools to accelerate product development, reportedly cutting launch timelines for major features such as hotel booking from around a year to roughly half that. Alongside hotels, Uber is adding travel-focused features like destination guides, room-service-style delivery hubs, food and drink preorders for Uber Black rides, and future integrations with Vrbo and OpenTable, signaling a strategic push to own more moments across the customer travel journey. 5 key takeaways Uber is becoming a travel marketplace: Hotel booking marks a major step beyond rides and Eats into end-to-end travel planning. Expedia is central to the launch: The partnership gives Uber instant hotel inventory at global scale, while also reflecting CEO Dara Khosrowshahi’s Expedia background. Uber One is a major strategic lever: Discounts of up to 20% on selected hotels and 10% back in Uber Credits are designed to make the subscription more valuable. AI is speeding up product development: Uber says agentic AI tools have helped reduce development timelines for features like hotel booking from about a year to around six months. Uber wants to capture the full trip experience: Travel mode, Eats “room service,” Uber Black snack preorders, future Vrbo inventory, and OpenTable reservations all point to Uber embedding itself before, during, and after a trip.
View Post
Share
View Post
  • 0 min

HVS U.S. Market Pulse: April 2026

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 1 May 2026
U.S. hotel performance is posting notable gains compared with 2025 levels, as travel continues to be a priority for many despite persistent inflation, the Middle Eastern conflict, and lackluster job growth. While luxury hotels are posting the greatest RevPAR gains, even economy and midscale hotels are showing occupancy improvement and ADR gains. Since January 1, our RevPAR forecast has been notably higher than others in our sector, and performance so far this year suggests that even our forecast may be too conservative. As of late April, despite persistent inflation, the Middle Eastern conflict, and lackluster job growth, occupancy is increasing across all hotel classes nationally. In the trailing-28-day period ending April 18, national RevPAR was up 4.5%, according to STR/CoStar (March RevPAR was up 4.4%). If the first quarter is any indication, we are looking at what may ultimately be a strong year for our industry, all things considered. We did see this coming. Last year had its significant challenges. Great uncertainty took hold with the announcement of the tariffs, disruption occurred in the government sector (and its normally steady demand) with DOGE efforts, and interest rate cuts didn’t occur until the last three Fed meetings of the year. Some cities had “off” convention years or closed their convention centers for reconstruction, the L.A. metro area experienced unprecedented fires, and Houston had a bad comparison year given weather events in 2024. Other factors further diminished the sector’s performance. And while this year’s challenges are not minimal by any means, last year was, quite simply, worse. Our latest U.S. forecast is as follows. It’s a positive sign that funding has resumed for the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and security lines have normalized at major U.S. airports. We can certainly hope that oil prices stabilize, inflation wanes, and our government finds that “exit ramp” from the Middle Eastern conflict sooner rather than later. These possibilities, coupled with further potential interest-rate relief, should fuel continued economic growth and occupancy gains. ADRs will be lifted by special events this year, such as the highly anticipated FIFA World Cup . Better convention calendars are also on tap for certain cities, and atypical 2025 conditions in other cities (such as Austin and Houston) should not recur in 2026. The Bay Area continues its strong rebound this year, aided by Super Bowl. Furthermore, if we enter a period of greater economic certainty this year, corporations are expected to bolster hiring efforts and travel budgets. The industry’s overall average cap rate is on the decline, with transactions averaging 8.3% for Q4, similar to the 8.2% average for the year. We expect average cap rates to trend downward in 2026, as we see more turnaround properties with challenged NOI levels being sold. These hotels, which often sell with a cap rate in the low single digits, will bring down the average that is blended with stabilized assets that sell at 8% to 9% cap rates. A normal cap rate in today’s market (for a stabilized or near-stabilized property) remains
View Post
Share
View Post
  • 0 min

AI & Recruiting: Why Human Judgment Still Determines Hiring Success

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 1 May 2026
Artificial intelligence continues to expand its role across the hiring lifecycle. Resume screening, interview scheduling, job description drafting, and candidate communications now move faster than ever. These tools improve efficiency and reduce administrative burden. They do not replace the recruiter. Hiring remains a human decision rooted in judgment, context, and trust. Technology supports the process. Recruiters determine the outcome. Organizations adopting AI-driven recruiting often expect better results through speed alone. The reality looks different. Faster processing does not guarantee stronger hires. In many cases, it increases risk when human oversight fades. Recruiters remain responsible for interpreting information, assessing nuance, and protecting long-term hiring success. This dynamic becomes even more pronounced in corporate, hospitality, hotel, and travel technology environments. These industries operate on brand perception, service delivery, revenue performance, and client retention. A single hiring mistake at the leadership or revenue-generating level impacts far more than one department. It affects guest experience, investor confidence, and long-term growth. In these sectors, a recruiter functions as a risk manager as much as a talent advisor. The Role of AI in Modern Recruiting AI performs best when managing volume. Applicant tracking systems sort large numbers of resumes quickly. Automated scheduling tools reduce coordination friction. AI-generated content accelerates early drafts of job postings and outreach messages. These improvements free recruiters from repetitive tasks and create space for higher-value work. Problems arise when automation replaces evaluation rather than supporting it. AI operates on patterns, keywords, and predefined criteria. Hiring decisions rarely fit neatly inside those boundaries. According to Harvard Business Review , AI tools in hiring require constant human oversight to avoid bias and misinterpretation of candidate data. Recruiters supply oversight. Without them, efficiency replaces accuracy. In corporate environments, roles often blend strategy, cross-functional leadership, and revenue responsibility. A Chief Revenue Officer in a hotel management company, for example, must align sales, marketing, distribution, and operations. No algorithm evaluates executive presence in a board setting or assesses how a candidate navigates ownership expectations. A recruiter probes these factors through targeted questioning and reference validation. Resume Screening and the Cost of False Rejection Automated screening systems excel at sorting resumes at scale. They struggle with context. Qualified candidates often exit the process early due to missing keywords, formatting issues, or outdated job titles. Transferable skills frequently go unnoticed. Career progression inside a single organization sometimes appears as stagnation rather than growth. False rejection creates hidden costs. Strong candidates never reach a conversation. Hiring managers see thinner shortlists. Diversity suffers. SHRM continues to report that over-automated screening reduces talent pool quality and increases unintended exclusion. Recruiters counter this risk through review and interpretation. They spot experience that does not match rigid criteria but fits the role. They understand industry nuance, branding changes, and non-linear career paths. This intervention protects quality and equity. In hospitality recruiting, this human filter becomes critical. Many high-performing hotel leaders rise through operations rather than formal education pathways. A General Manager who built RevPAR growth over five years at an independent property might not
View Post
Share
View Post
  • 0 min

”If You Can’t Be Replaced, You Can’t Be Promoted” — The Leadership Trap Most High Performers Don’t See

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 1 May 2026
It was 2017. A luxury hotel sales office. One of the best sales directors I’ve ever worked with was sitting across from me—frustrated, confused, and honestly a bit angry. His numbers were phenomenal. ADR growth: +23% year over year. Corporate accounts: 47 active contracts. Group pipeline: stronger than the previous two years combined. Yet when the Director of Commercial role opened… he wasn’t even considered. Someone from another property got the job. He looked at me and said something I’ve heard hundreds of times in hospitality leadership circles: "I don’t understand. I’m the best performer on the team." And that’s exactly why he didn’t get promoted. Because here’s the uncomfortable truth most high performers in hospitality never hear: If you can’t be replaced, you can’t be promoted. The Hospitality Leadership Myth Nobody Talks About Most professionals in hotel sales, revenue management, and commercial leadership believe promotions follow a simple formula. Perform well. Hit targets. Work harder than everyone else. Promotion follows. Sounds logical. But hospitality organizations don’t promote performance alone . They promote scalability . Think about it from a GM or COO’s perspective. If you’re running the most important corporate accounts personally… If you’re the only one who understands the RFP strategy… If group revenue collapses the moment you take a week off… Promoting you creates risk. Not opportunity. So the company does the rational thing. They keep you exactly where you are. Because you’re too valuable in that seat . And yes—this happens constantly in hotels across the globe. The “Irreplaceable Employee” Trap High performers often think being indispensable is a strength. But in leadership pipelines, it’s often a career bottleneck . Let me explain. If the organization believes three things about you, your promotion chances drop dramatically: 1. The business depends on you personally Not your system. Not your strategy. You. I once met a hotel sales director in Kuala Lumpur who personally handled 83% of the property's corporate revenue . Impressive? Sure. Promotable? Not really. Because removing him would instantly destabilize the revenue engine. And senior leadership knew it. 2. Your knowledge isn’t transferable Another common scenario. The sales director who knows every client relationship… Every negotiation tactic… Every account history going back 12 years. But none of it is documented. None of it is systemized. None of it is transferable to the team. Which means replacing that person would take months—sometimes years . So leadership delays the promotion. Indefinitely. 3. The team can't perform without you Here’s the brutal one. If your team collapses when you step away… You’re not leading. You’re holding the system together manually . And organizations don’t promote people who are acting as the system. They promote people who build the system . Big difference. The Leadership Shift Most Sales Directors Miss At some point in your career, the job changes. Early stage: Your job is to produce revenue . Later stage: Your job is to produce leaders who produce revenue . That shift separates senior managers from executives. And many
View Post
Share
View Post
  • 0 min

Three things to know about the Italy travel market

  • 1 May 2026
This article was written by Phocuswright. Click here to read the original article
View Post
Share
View Post
  • 0 min

You Are Asking the Wrong Question When You Hire a Hotel Marketing Agency

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 30 April 2026
Every year, luxury hotel operators search some version of the same question. "What are the best hotel marketing agencies?" "Which hospitality marketing firm should I hire?" "How do I choose a luxury hotel marketing company?" The search returns the same results. Roundup lists. Agency websites. Comparison articles written by agencies about themselves. A rotating cast of familiar names: technology platforms, creative agencies, email and CRM vendors, presented as equivalent options to evaluate on price, capability, and case study quality. The process feels like due diligence. It is not. The reason this process fails is not always that the wrong agency is selected from the list. It is that the list is answering the wrong question. The question is not which agency. The question is which layer. Hotel Demand Is Not One Thing Before any agency comparison is useful, a more fundamental question must be answered: at which layer of the demand stack does your specific problem live? Hotel demand does not arrive from a single source or at a single moment. It forms across a sequence of distinct stages, each governed by different economic logic and requiring different infrastructure to influence. The demand origin layer is where a traveler first encounters a property in a channel the hotel governs, where identity is captured and a direct relationship can begin before intermediary comparison defines the choice set. This is distinct from awareness. Brand advertising, editorial coverage, social media, and PR can all create familiarity and influence consideration, but they do not constitute demand origin unless they also capture identity and establish repeatable access before the traveler enters OTA comparison, Google Hotel Ads, or advisor-mediated booking flows. Awareness creates familiarity. Demand origin creates governable access. Most upstream marketing does the first. Very few systems consistently do the second. The conversion layer is where a traveler who has already discovered a property decides whether to book directly or through an intermediary. Website optimization, booking engine performance, direct booking incentives, and metasearch campaigns operate here. The retention and activation layer is where existing guest relationships are managed, deepened, and reactivated. CRM systems, loyalty programs, email marketing to past guests, and post-stay communication operate here. The brand and awareness layer is where a property's identity is built and distributed across media environments. Brand strategy, advertising, public relations, and content marketing operate here. This layer feeds consideration and can influence which properties enter a traveler's mental shortlist, but it does not by itself capture identity or establish a direct relationship the hotel controls. These layers are not fully interchangeable. A CRM cannot introduce your property to a traveler who has never heard of it. A booking engine cannot capture identity before OTA comparison begins. Brand awareness can create the conditions for demand origin but does not guarantee it. The Test That Separates Upstream Infrastructure from Upstream Influence One question separates demand origin infrastructure from demand origin influence: If you stopped paying tomorrow, would the relationships remain? Paid media stops. Brand campaigns end. PR cycles close. Influencer
View Post
Share
View Post
  • 0 min

Hospitality’s AI opportunity to decompose tasks and reclaim the work that actually matters

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 30 April 2026
Over the last year, there has been no avoiding the artificial intelligence (AI) conversation—from sweeping promises of enhanced productivity and digital transformation to the anxious contemplation of who (or what) might get left behind. And not just the measured, reasonable kind of concern that accompanies any technological shift, but something closer to existential dread: the idea that AI-fuelled job displacement is coming at a scale beyond what we’d normally accept as the inevitable cost of continued evolution. The hospitality industry certainly isn’t exempt from this discussion. If anything, as an industry with a somewhat notorious reputation for its resistance to new-age technology adoption and chronic staffing challenges, we find ourselves at the forefront of it. It’s increasingly easy to view the rapid adoption of AI as a Trojan Horse for the mass displacement of human staff in an industry built on personal connection. But that anxiety misses the mark. Hospitality doesn't have a staffing problem so much as a structural design problem. If you ask me, the implementation of AI isn't going to displace the workforce—it is going to reveal, and hopefully fix, an operating model that has been broken for years. Reframing the hospitality labour shortage story A March 2026 survey from the American Hotel & Lodging Association reports that more than half of respondents describe their properties as somewhat or severely understaffed. Labour costs remain one of the most-cited financial pressures facing operators, accounting for 30–45% of total hotel operating costs according to HVS (a figure that continues to climb). High turnover compounds the issue, with quits rate in accommodation and food services sitting at 4.8% in January 2026. Many operators are attempting to build stable service delivery on top of a routinely fragmented foundation. This is where I think the conventional narrative fails us. The industry isn’t just understaffed—it’s simultaneously understaffed and overstaffed, because it is structurally misallocated. When core systems don’t share a consistent operational truth, humans become the necessary integration layer. They re-key data from one platform into another, spend half their shift reconciling discrepancies that shouldn’t exist, and chase status updates across systems that should have been talking to each other years ago. Industry research published in 2025 revealed that only 24% of hotels report full integration of core systems across PMS, RMS, POS, booking engines, and distribution platforms. Just 34% manage guest data centrally. The remainder rely on disconnected systems, and 16% still use manual methods. That is not a labour shortage. It could be better described as a “faulty operating model” tax that the industry has been paying for so long it’s forgotten about the tab. Think tasks, not job titles The most useful lens for understanding AI’s impact on hospitality isn’t about which jobs disappear. It’s about which tasks move, and what that does to labour economics. Anthropic’s Economic Index is worth paying attention to here. According to their research, observed AI use leans more toward augmentation than full automation. In their initial analysis, 57% of AI-assisted tasks were augmented (the
View Post
Share
View Post
  • 0 min

Mews unifies operations and fuels growth for Llano Real Estate Group’s portfolio

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 30 April 2026
[Dallas, 30 April 2026] – Mews , the operating system for hospitality, announced that Llano Real Estate Group has selected Mews to power a growing portfolio of hospitality assets across Texas, including hotels, RV parks and short-term rentals. Llano Real Estate Group is rapidly growing its footprint, with nine properties including Cactus Cove Inn & Suites in Amarillo and multiple RV parks and short-term rentals. As the portfolio expanded, the team needed a more robust and flexible system to manage group bookings, long stays and corporate billing across multiple locations. With Mews, Llano now benefits from centralized multi-property management, allowing teams to oversee all assets from one place. Previously manual processes – such as creating group reservations or managing complex billing arrangements – are now streamlined through automation, significantly reducing administrative workload. “Where we’re going as a business requires a completely different level of operational control,” said Matt Marrs, owner of Cactus Cove Inn & Suites and operator at Llano Real Estate Group. “With Mews, everything is faster, more intuitive and built to scale with us.” Operational improvements are already delivering impact. Group bookings that once required multiple manual steps can now be created in seconds, while corporate billing and invoicing are structured and automated. Beyond efficiency gains, Mews provides the foundation for Llano’s long-term growth strategy. With integrated payments, revenue management and multi-property capabilities, the business is building a modern tech stack designed to support continued expansion. “Llano Real Estate Group is a great example of how ambitious operators are using technology to scale smarter,” said Michael Coscetta, President of Mews. “By unifying their operations and automating complexity, they’ve created the foundation for growth across their entire portfolio.” As Llano continues to expand, Mews will support further innovation across its portfolio, from revenue optimization to advanced operational automation. About Llano Real Estate Group Llano Real Estate Group is a Texas-based real estate and property management company overseeing a growing portfolio of hospitality and residential assets. With properties spanning hotels, RV parks and short-term rentals, the company is focused on building scalable, technology-driven operations that support long-term growth. Backed by decades of experience across development, construction and property management, Llano is committed to delivering high-quality assets and exceptional guest and tenant experiences. Learn more at: https://www.llanorealestategroup.com/
View Post
Share
Downloads
  • The Hotel Internet Is Controlled by a Handful of Brands

    View Post
  • The Hotel Brands of the World Infographic

    View Post
  • The OTA Market, Finally Mapped

    View Post
Join our 300,000+ Readers!
Most Read
  • Operto launches ‘Predatory OTA’ skill within Marketing AI Agent to help hotels combat brand search hijacking
    • 27 April 2026
  • Every Robot was Kung-Fu Fighting!
    • 25 April 2026
  • Pass the Keys expands into Chester and the Wirral with a new holiday-let property management franchise
    • 27 April 2026
  • RMS Partners with Pride of Britain Hotels to Strengthen UK Luxury Hotel Offering
    • 28 April 2026
  • Entertaining marketing
    • 27 April 2026
Sponsors
  • What AI is telling travelers about your hotel tonight. And you have no idea
  • SOCIETIES Vol 5: Google AI Travel, Guerlain, and the Rise of Design Hospitality
  • Luxury Hotels Shift to Mobile Technology, Eliminating Fixed Workstations for Seamless Guest Services and Staff Flexibility
Top News
  • Wyndham's Q1 Highlights: 4% System-Wide Room Growth, $450M AI Investment, Flat U.S. RevPAR, $61M Net Income
    • 30 April 2026
  • Director of Sales and Marketing Role in Hotels Outdated as Specialization Increases, Reveals Industry Analysis
    • 30 April 2026
  • HAMA US Asset Management Award Highlights Importance of Profit Over Revenue in Hospitality Industry Management
    • 28 April 2026
  • Direct Hotel Bookings Generate Over 60% More Revenue Per Reservation Compared to OTAs, Says SiteMinder Report
    • 28 April 2026
  • World Cup Host Cities See 66% Increase in Demand, Hospitality Industry Prepares for Surge with Themed Key Cards
    • 28 April 2026
Sponsored Posts
  • What AI is telling travelers about your hotel tonight. And you have no idea

    View Post
  • SOCIETIES Vol 5: Google AI Travel, Guerlain, and the Rise of Design Hospitality

    View Post
  • Luxury Hotels Shift to Mobile Technology, Eliminating Fixed Workstations for Seamless Guest Services and Staff Flexibility

    View Post
Contact informations

contact@10minutes.news

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

Input your search keywords and press Enter.