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  • 2 min

Wyndham Hotels & Resorts signs Rajasthan property

  • Swasti Sharma
  • 6 April 2026
One of Rajasthan’s most storied cities is set for a new hotel. Bhanfort Palace Resorts Pvt. Ltd. has signed an agreement with Wyndham Hotels & Resorts to develop Wyndham Garden…
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  • 0 min

Luxury vs. Ultra-Luxury Hospitality — Where the Line Is Actually Drawn

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 6 April 2026
A Difference in Intent, Not Degree Luxury and ultra-luxury are often used interchangeably in hospitality, but the difference between the two is not simply a matter of degree, it is a difference in intent. Luxury hospitality focuses on providing exceptional comfort, quality, and service within a refined environment. Ultra-luxury hospitality goes further. It is designed to create rare, highly personalized, and often transformative experiences that cannot easily be replicated elsewhere. That distinction is subtle, but it is critical . Luxury is built to deliver excellence consistently. Ultra-luxury is built to deliver something that feels entirely specific to the individual guest. Consistency vs. Individualization The divergence begins with how the experience is structured. Luxury hotels operate within a framework of standards. They are designed to ensure that no matter where a guest is in the world, the experience meets a high and predictable level of quality. This consistency is what defines the category and what makes it scalable across markets and geographies. Ultra-luxury does not follow that model. It intentionally moves away from standardization in favor of individualization . The goal is not to deliver the same experience flawlessly, but to deliver a different experience for each guest, one that reflects their preferences, habits, and expectations without requiring them to articulate it. This shift also changes the customer profile. Luxury targets a broad affluent audience, while ultra-luxury is designed for a far narrower segment, often ultra-high-net-worth travelers who prioritize privacy, personalization, and control over their time. Anticipatory Service vs. Responsive Service This difference becomes most apparent in service. In luxury hospitality, service is polished, professional, and highly trained. It is designed to respond efficiently to guest needs and delivers a seamless experience. In ultra-luxury hospitality, service becomes anticipatory and highly personalized . It is not defined by responsiveness, but by awareness. Teams are expected to understand the guest well enough that needs are met before they are expressed, creating an experience that feels intuitive rather than procedural. This often requires significantly higher staffing models, with some ultra-luxury properties operating at staff-to-guest ratios approaching or exceeding 1:1 , compared to more traditional luxury environments that operate at scale. That shift fundamentally changes how the guest interacts with the property. Instead of navigating a system, the guest feels as though the environment is adapting around them . Amenities vs. Experience Creation The same contrast applies to the experience itself. Luxury hotels offer a strong portfolio of amenities and programming, dining, spa, wellness, concierge services, that elevate the stay. Ultra-luxury properties place less emphasis on offering options and more emphasis on shaping experiences around the individual . The difference is not in having more, but in being more precise. This is where the concept of “bespoke” is often misunderstood. In luxury, customization is typically an enhancement to an existing offering. In ultra-luxury, the experience is not predefined to begin with. It is built in real time around the guest, making the outcome feel far more personal and difficult to replicate. This is reflected in
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  • 0 min

BLLA’s Investment Conference Brings Blank Rome LLP Into the Room

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 6 April 2026
NEW YORK, NY — The Boutique & Luxury Lodging Association (BLLA) today announced Blank Rome LLP will serve as a Partner-Level sponsor of its 2026 Boutique Hotel Investment Conference , taking place June 3, 2026, at Convene 237 Park in Midtown Manhattan. With a market‑leading hospitality practice and significant experience advising clients on sophisticated matters, Blank Rome brings a strategic, business‑focused perspective to the conference, spanning growth initiatives, complex transactions, and high‑stakes disputes across premier hotel projects. Now in its 14th year, the conference is the only event dedicated exclusively to independent boutique hospitality, a curated one-day forum where owners, investors, developers, and operators convene to shape the sector's future. The day event continues into the evening with an After-Party at Neuehouse Madison Square for all registered attendees. Blank Rome’s partnership reflects the firm’s long-standing commitment to the hospitality industry and its understanding of the unique dynamics of independent boutique hospitality, where success is shaped by distinct brand vision, operational flexibility, and differentiated guest experiences. The firm advises clients throughout the full lifecycle of hotel, restaurant, and mixed-use projects, representing developers, owners, operators, lenders, and investors across matters, including joint ventures, capital structuring, brand and licensing strategies, dispute resolution, and workforce challenges. “Blank Rome brings something to this partnership that goes beyond legal expertise. They bring a genuine belief in what boutique hospitality represents. Having their firm in the room signals to every investor, developer, and owner attending that this conference is where the real conversation happens.” — Frances Kiradjian, Founder & CEO of BLLA. “We are proud to support the BLLA conference as a Partner‑Level sponsor, reflecting Blank Rome’s deep commitment to the hospitality sector and our clients, many of whom share a common thread of commitment to unique and creative hospitality experiences,” said Christy Reuter, co‑chair of Blank Rome’s Hospitality practice. “This event brings together the leadership shaping the future of independent hospitality, and we are thrilled to connect with like-minded hospitality owners and professionals who share the same passion for cultivating design-forward projects and unique guest experiences across the independent hotel landscape.” “Having recently joined Blank Rome, I am excited to leverage the firm’s expanded platform and deep hospitality bench to help clients navigate increasingly complex development, investment, and operational challenges,” said David Sudeck, co-chair of Blank Rome’s Hospitality practice. “The BLLA conference is exactly the right forum to connect with forward-thinking hospitality leaders and to support clients as they bring innovative, independent hotel concepts to market.” The Blank Rome Partnership Representing Blank Rome at the conference will be Christy Reuter and David Sudeck , Partners and Co-Chairs of the firm's Hospitality practice, along with Partner Mark Adams . Leveraging their extensive industry knowledge, the Blank Rome team supports clients across the hospitality sector. Their global reach and real-world perspective help navigate the complexities of hotel projects, offering tailored guidance on deal structuring, conflict resolution, and strategic business decisions within the evolving hospitality landscape. "This conference has always attracted the right people, and Blank Rome is exactly
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  • 0 min

2035: When Machines Offer Loving Grace, What Do Humans Offer?

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 6 April 2026
Picture this. It is a Tuesday in 2035. You land in Tokyo. You are jet-lagged, dehydrated, and your flight was two hours late. You haven’t spoken to a human since you boarded the plane. You check your phone. A calm, synthetic voice says: “I noticed your flight was delayed, so I pushed your dinner reservation back by 45 minutes to give you time to freshen up. I also asked the hotel to set the thermostat to 68 degrees and ordered that club sandwich you like. It will be waiting in the room.” It feels like magic. It feels like Machines of Loving Grace . It also feels like something else: the moment where intelligence becomes invisible infrastructure, and human connection becomes a luxury good. The Country of Geniuses I have spent the last week digesting two extraordinary essays by Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic ( Machines of Loving Grace and The Adolescence of Technology ). Unless you are deep in the Silicon Valley weeds, you might not know him, but you should know what he is betting on. He isn’t talking about a chatbot that writes slightly stiff marketing emails. He is describing what he calls a “Country of Geniuses in a datacenter.” Imagine a digital population of 50 million agents, each smarter than a Nobel Prize winner, capable of working 100 times faster than a human, available 24/7 to solve problems in biology, logistics, and code. Amodei predicts this could lead to a “compressed 21st century,” where 100 years of progress happens in ten. The Precarious Wager Now, I know what you’re thinking. “We are an industry that still relies on mainframes. We can barely get the PMS to talk to the CRM. This sounds like science fiction.” You are right. It is science fiction – for now. But the speed of this wave is different. Amodei outlines a precarious wager : he believes we can build this God-like intelligence and control it with a “Constitution” written by a private company, regulated by slow-moving governments, and secured by the goodwill of democratic nations. It is, to put it mildly, quite the bet. It’s like adopting a dragon and assuming it won’t burn the house down because you read it the HOA rules. But if his wager pays off over the next decade – or even if the dice just land somewhere in the middle – the definition of “guest” is about to change forever. Travel is the business of being human. We trade in sleep, food, connection, and the tangible reality of a mountain view. If intelligence becomes free and ubiquitous by 2035, much of what we do today will be automated. But what remains – the messy, human stuff – will become infinitely more valuable. Here are ten ways the landscape shifts over the next decade, and what we must preserve. 1. The “Beige Age” of Efficiency The Future (2035): If AI becomes millions of times cheaper and smarter than humans, “efficiency” will become a commodity. The
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  • 0 min

You stayed too long…

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 6 April 2026
Some topics settle in quietly and become part of your daily rhythm without asking for attention. It is not very loud, just subtle enough. You start noticing it in small ways. The way your standards begin to adjust. The way your energy feels different walking into the same environment. The way decisions that once felt clear now require more internal negotiation than they used to. Everything still works. The operation runs. The expectations are met. From the outside, nothing appears off. Yet something inside you no longer feels aligned. This is not about the job. It is not about the title. And It is not about the team. It is about YOU. It is about the version of yourself you are becoming while staying where you are. Because alignment is internal, not just external. It is the relationship between YOUR standards, YOUR identity, and the choices YOU make every day. When that starts to drift, the cost is rarely immediate. It shows up surely, but slowly, in the way you think, the way you lead, and the way you carry yourself inside the same environment. Let’s talk about that. Amuse-Bouche: “what’s on my mind…?” Franck-ly Speaking… the cost of staying is not time; it is who you become. What is on my mind lately is how rarely we assess whether we are still growing in the environments we choose to stay in. I know, I know; There are valid reasons to stay. Building consistency inside an operation matters. A paycheck matters. Seeing a property evolve over time matters. A paycheck also matters. Loyalty, when it is intentional, has value in this industry. Did I mention a paycheck too? Staying becomes a different decision when the environment no longer contributes to your growth in a meaningful way. Hospitality does not stand still and never will. Standards move so fast, guest expectations shift constantly, technology changes the way teams operate, and the level of execution required to stay competitive keeps rising. That movement continues whether you are being challenged by it or not. The assessment becomes very personal. I know you start noticing it in your own reactions. You walk into another property, and the pace feels sharper than what you are used to. You observe a front desk handling a complex arrival sequence with a level of coordination that feels more refined. You see a housekeeping operation where the attention to detail is consistent across every room without exception. You recognize the difference immediately because your instinct is still there. I have felt that myself more than once in my career. There were moments where everything looked right on paper. The role made sense. The environment was stable. The expectations were clear. Yet stepping into sharper operations or simply being around leaders operating at a different level, made something very clear internally. I was not being stretched the way I used to be. I was performing, but I was not sharpening. That realization sits quietly and asks a simple question: Am
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  • 1 min

This week, our Group CEO, Barbara Muckermann, attended the International Hospitality Investment Forum (IHIF EMEA) in Berlin, one of the hospitality industry’s leading platforms for investment… | Kempinski Hotels

  • 6 April 2026
At International Hospitality Investment Forum (IHIF EMEA) 2026 in Berlin, a world leading hospitality investment forum, Accor brought together its leaders and teams to share a clear perspective on where…
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  • 0 min

HotelRunner Once Again Recognized as Strategic Partner by Agoda, Strengthening a Trusted Partnership

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 6 April 2026
HotelRunner, a leading travel and hospitality technology platform, has once again been named a Strategic Partner in Agoda’s 2026 Connectivity Partner Program, earning the program’s highest level of recognition. This distinction is reserved for a select group of technology providers that consistently meet Agoda’s highest standards for technical performance, connectivity quality, and partner value. The recognition highlights HotelRunner’s continued ability to deliver reliable integrations, real-time data synchronization, and strong operational performance across Agoda’s global marketplace. This milestone further reinforces a partnership that has been built and strengthened over more than a decade. Since 2011, HotelRunner and Agoda have collaborated closely to enhance connectivity standards, expand distribution capabilities, and create value across the global hospitality ecosystem. Today, that collaboration continues to evolve, driven by a shared focus on innovation, reliability, and long-term growth. HotelRunner’s continued recognition is driven by measurable performance at scale. Maintaining over 98% connection health, the platform ensures consistently accurate rates and availability, minimizing errors and enabling real-time synchronization across Agoda’s marketplace. This strong technical foundation directly translates into commercial success, with HotelRunner securing top 10 in booking ratings, demonstrating its ability to drive visibility, conversion, and demand for its partners. Built on a scalable, automation-first infrastructure and strengthened by its direct integration with Agoda, HotelRunner empowers accommodation providers to operate more efficiently, stay competitive, and respond instantly to changing market dynamics. “Our collaboration with Agoda spans more than 15 years, and it has been defined by trust, innovation, and shared success,” says Rıza Kaynak, Director of Demand Partnerships at HotelRunner. “Being recognized once again as a Strategic Partner is a powerful testament to the consistency of the value we deliver to our hotel partners. Together, we have built a strong foundation that continues to drive performance, efficiency, and sustainable growth across the global travel ecosystem.” At the core of HotelRunner’s vision lies a relentless focus on smarter connectivity. By blending real-time infrastructure with intelligent distribution, AI, and automation-first design, HotelRunner transforms complexity into opportunity. This is reflected through years of recognition by Agoda.
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  • 1 min

Hyatt Ties C-Suite Pay to Direct Bookings and Lifestyle Hotels Goals

  • 6 April 2026
Hyatt tied part of a top executive’s pay to one of the hotel industry’s elusive goals — getting more guests to book directly — and the bet paid out zero.…
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How to price your hotel for the World Cup: Winning revenue in a volatile market

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 6 April 2026
With fewer than 90 days to go until the 2026 FIFA World Cup begins across Canada, Mexico, and the United States, the opportunity for hoteliers is obvious. Lighthouse market data still shows all 16 host cities pricing above the same period last year. But the latest data also shows something more nuanced: 12 of the 16 host cities have recently reached a new low point for advertised pricing within the group-stage window. Rates remain elevated, but the market is starting to test where those premiums will actually hold. The market is still up, but expectations are starting to reset The World Cup is still lifting rates across all 16 host cities . But many markets are no longer holding their earlier highs across the full group-stage window. Dallas is a good example. Its average advertised rate across all group-stage dates peaked at $387 around 165 days before kickoff and has since come down to roughly $247. Kansas City is showing a similar pattern, with its peak arriving more recently at around 109 days out before correcting lower. Miami, Atlanta, and San Francisco have also moved off earlier highs. When looking at the entire date range of the group stage, Dallas is still up 154% year over year for the group stage. Kansas City and Houston are each up 122% and 132% respectively and Boston remains up 49%. While game days are still likely to perform strongly, demand across the wider group-stage window is fragmenting. Outside of key fixtures, travelers are showing more price sensitivity, particularly in markets with deeper supply. The question is no longer whether the World Cup will lift rates. It already has. The priority now is identifying where pricing is still holding and where strategy needs to adjust to a more uneven demand curve . One tournament, sixteen different pricing stories Once you look past the topline growth, the differences between markets become much clearer. Vancouver remains one of the clearest examples of absolute pricing power, with average nightly rates around $1,000–$1,200 for much of the booking window. New York earlier spiked toward $1,300 before settling back into a lower, though still elevated, range. Year-over-year growth tells a different story about where the real event pressure is landing. Guadalajara leads all 16 host cities at +333% versus last year, the sharpest increase in the dataset, driven by a fixture list that includes Mexico versus South Korea and Uruguay versus Spain. Monterrey follows at +218%, then Mexico City at +173%, Dallas and Vancouver at +154%, Houston at +132%, and Miami at +130%. Major gateway cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Toronto, and Boston are still up significantly, but not to the same extent. Mexico City is a particularly interesting counterexample. Despite hosting only three group-stage matches, its pricing curve has continued to rise; from around $410 at 200 days out to approaching $590 in the latest data, making it one of the few markets still pushing to new highs rather than correcting lower when looking at all
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Why events like Harry Styles’ tour demand a smarter direct channel strategy for your hotel

  • 10minhotel.com
  • 6 April 2026
Event-driven travelers are among the most motivated visitors you'll ever have on your website. They've already decided to travel. They know exactly which dates they need. They're excited, they're engaged and, if your direct channel is doing its job, they're ready to book. This is the promise of what the industry is starting to call live tourism: travel shaped by what's happening right now, whether concerts, cultural moments or sporting events that turn a specific set of dates into must-travel occasions. In 2026, the calendar is loaded. For hoteliers that see these moments coming, activate their direct channel early and speak to event-driven guests in a way that goes beyond a room rate, they represent some of the year's most valuable direct booking opportunities. Remember the Taylor Swift effect? Let's start with the proof of concept. When the Eras Tour swept through Europe and Asia-Pacific, it didn't just fill stadiums; it reshaped demand in the hospitality industry for a handful of markets almost overnight. But the most interesting story wasn't in the occupancy numbers. It was in how the best-performing hotels responded. The properties that captured the most from the Eras Tour weren't just the ones that adjusted their rates; they were the ones that understood their guests were coming for an experience, not just a room, and built their direct channel around that. That meant themed packages, event-aligned website messaging and personalized on-site campaigns triggered to guests whose search dates matched the concert window. It meant making the property feel like part of the occasion rather than incidental to it. The lesson from the Eras Tour wasn't just "concerts drive demand." It was that hotels who treated the moment as a marketing opportunity, not just a pricing window, captured far more of it. The lesson carries forward, and 2026 has no shortage of moments The Taylor Swift effect wasn't a one-off. Major global tours have repeatedly proven their ability to create compressed, high-intent demand across multiple markets at once, and 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most event-dense years the industry has seen. Ariana Grande, BTS, Bad Bunny and others are all moving through key international markets this year. But one tour stands out for the structural nature of its demand impact. The Harry Styles Together Together Tour covers 68 dates across six countries and eight locations. This isn't a touring sprint; it's a residency model, playing fewer cities but owning them for multiple nights. That means sustained, layered demand windows rather than single-night spikes, and a guest profile that skews heavily toward multi-night stays, high engagement and strong intent to book. Lighthouse data shows forward hotel demand is already up and there’s significant room to move on the direct channel opportunity. And here's the data point that matters most for marketing teams: May 24 in Amsterdam, a date between two shows with no concert of its own, is showing a 67% YoY spike in forward daily demand. That's not a show night. It's a surrounding
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