Simone Puorto, Head of Innovation at Hospitality Net, Talks AI on the Resilient Tourism Podcast
A Project Framing the Future of Tourism The latest episode of the Resilient Tourism Podcast Series , hosted by Meng-Mei “Maggie” Chen, has just been released as part of the Swiss Travel & Tourism Data-Driven Transformation project, supported by Innosuisse. The initiative brings together several leading academic and research institutions, including the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, the University of St. Gallen, HES-SO Valais-Wallis, EHL Hospitality Business School, the University of Applied Sciences of the Grisons, and iCare Research. After three seasons dedicated to digital transformation, data, and the ongoing tension between high-tech and high-touch, the fourth and final season turns its gaze toward the future of travel, tourism, and hospitality. A Question About the Future of Hospitality Among the guests featured in this closing chapter is Simone Puorto , hospitality futurist, technophilosopher, strategic consultant, and Head of Innovation at Hospitality Net, who joined the podcast to reflect on one of the most delicate questions facing the industry today: what kind of future is hospitality building as technology becomes increasingly pervasive? AI as UI Throughout the conversation, Puorto offered a provocative perspective, avoiding easy enthusiasm and instead focusing on the deeper structural shifts already reshaping the sector. One of the central ideas he explored was the notion that AI is not simply a new tool, but is increasingly becoming a new interface. In his view, the real transformation lies less in the intelligence itself than in the way people will interact with systems. Rather than navigating fragmented software environments, for example, future hospitality professionals may simply converse with technology, asking questions in natural language and receiving actionable insights without needing to move through layers of dashboards, menus, and static reports. A “post-keyboard” industry, in the words of Puorto. From Interfaces to Industry Transformation This transition, he argued, has implications well beyond operational efficiency. It points to a broader reconfiguration of how hotels work, how staff engage with digital tools, and how guests will search, compare, and book travel experiences. If AI becomes the new user interface, then hospitality may gradually move from a browser-centric logic to an AI-centric one, both on the demand side and on the operational side. Humans as a Form of Scarcity One of the most compelling sections of the episode concerned a concept that has become closely associated with Puorto’s thinking: Humans-as-Luxury. In a world increasingly populated by automation, synthetic relationships, and frictionless interactions, the presence of real human beings may itself become a premium feature. The issue, as Puorto framed it, is not whether hotels will automate, because they will, but what the residual value of the human will become once efficiency is no longer scarce. His answer suggests that human imperfection, attention, empathy, and even relational friction may come to be perceived as forms of rarity, and therefore as forms of luxury. The Reverse Uncanny Valley Within this framework, Puorto also introduced what he defines as a “reverse uncanny valley.” While the traditional uncanny valley describes the discomfort generated by robots that
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