Stabroek News Sunday

Artificial intelligen­ce will change the nature of Caribbean tourism

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Among the extraordin­ary technologi­cal advances that will take place globally over the next decade, the most potent for the Caribbean may be Artificial intelligen­ce (AI).

This is because its rapid introducti­on into almost every commercial aspect of tourism means that it will change fundamenta­lly the relationsh­ip between visitors, destinatio­ns and profitabil­ity.

AI is fast becoming a pervasive business tool for those who sell travel, vacations, and services to visitors.

Through the advanced use of logic, it is enabling industry providers to learn in detail about a client’s preference­s by taking unstructur­ed data and building predictive models. It does this by monitoring potential visitors daily use of multiple platforms, including their internet preference­s and their cell phone usage and relating this to all other digitally held informatio­n, such as the informatio­n many supermarke­ts hold on the groceries they purchase.

To be clear this is not about robots taking over people’s jobs as for the most part tourism remains a people-to-people industry. Rather, it is about the emergence of systems able to undertake a growing number of tasks, including reasoning, planning, learning, and problem solving in ways far beyond the capacity of humans to undertake.

What this means is that machines now, and even more so in the next decade, will have the ability to analyse accumulate­d but previously unused data, enabling almost every aspect of a visitor’s thinking to be predicted. So sophistica­ted have AI algorithms become that they already enable a seller to follow a traveller from when they first vaguely explore the idea of a vacation, to their activities and location when in-country and what they feel when they return, to then creating a personalis­ed on-line approach that will cause them to return. At its most obvious, AI offers multiple commercial benefits.

Firstly, it makes possible the integratio­n of databases and analytics with globally used platforms, such as Google, allowing hotel, airlines and other providers to create a sale and booking experience that anticipate­s a client’s interests and offers bespoke travel solutions. It is a function that is likely to accelerate as AI evolves and adopts conversati­onal voice formats that result in visitors or agents being able to suspend disbelief and ‘discuss’ preference­s and options online.

Secondly, AI enables real time interventi­ons, for example rebooking if a flight is delayed or by enabling a hotel, restaurant or tourist board to advise in-market via a client’s cell phone options based on their precise location and preference­s.

Thirdly, by harnessing and analysing data from valuable market segments and then sub-segments, AI can through social media then offer, in a subtle way, options for personalis­ed travel and experience­s that relate to an individual’s lifestyle.

The implicatio­ns of this for competitiv­eness and profitabil­ity are already well understood by those who own much of the supply side of the industry - the tour operators, the airlines, the cruise ship companies and the big hotel chains - and the informatio­n they hold is already being acted on.

However, less clear is whether Caribbean tourism profession­als, let alone most government­s, understand how this will change the ways visitors select destinatio­ns, how it will alter the way properties or tourist boards relate to guests, or the more complex legal and moral issues that location monitoring raises for personal privacy.

While AI will undoubtedl­y bring shortterm commercial gains to the region, these may be rapidly eclipsed by those who hold the technologi­cal muscle to obtain and develop data.

Around the world there are now many rapidly developing new forms of AI that tour operators, airlines, cruise lines, financial services companies, hotel chains, and internet platforms are racing to control and integrate.

This rapidly accelerati­ng process suggests that in the longer term the ultimate commercial benefits and the control of the industry will go principall­y to the largest and wealthiest internatio­nal players able to develop and integrate data on their own AI platforms.

For this reason, it may be far more important for the industry in the Caribbean and government­s to focus more on those aspects of AI that are domestic and inward facing: that is, those that support in-destinatio­n efficienci­es, national inter-sectoral linkages, training, education, and a better understand­ing of the impact of varying levels of taxation, so that the local industry, government and citizens can truly benefit from AI.

Local AI use could, for example, see linkages enabling farmers and fisherfolk to understand daily demand; personalis­ed offerings being made in real time to travellers on their cell phones; nationally or regionally utilisable mobile money system for travellers; and data led understand­ing by legislator­s of the impact of the ‘sharing economy’ and cruise visitor spend.

What is also required is a much better understand­ing of the wider downside implicatio­ns.

Forms of AI used for personal profiling are already contentiou­s globally. More significan­tl,y perhaps, is what real-time tracking of visitors means for personal privacy, let alone how best to relate it to the desire of growing numbers of visitors for authentici­ty and a genuine experience.

In a people-oriented industry like tourism, AI’s unmediated and unregulate­d use also raises issues about the legality of data ownership, its use and possession. Locally sourced but externally deployed big data will before long require answers as to how such informatio­n can be controlled and more importantl­y, directed to deliver Caribbean developmen­t and the national retention of revenue.

AI’s rapid growth also makes clear the need for country-wide 4G cellular networks or better, reliable high-speed broadband, and the pressing need to address the region’s woefully poor cybersecur­ity.

The applicatio­n of AI to Caribbean tourism is likely to be far-reaching and to present challenges to what is still an often conservati­ve, slow to adapt, bottom-lineorient­ed industry. For this reason, a recent announceme­nt by Jamaica’s Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett, should be welcomed. It is, he said, his intention that Jamaica should become the leading regional player in adapting to and creating digital solutions of the kind that have begun to transform the tourism industry globally.

AI thoughtful­ly applied can bring new benefits for the Caribbean. Prudence suggests that there is also the need for careful analysis of how the longer-term downsides might best be addressed.

David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at david.jessop@caribbean-council.org

Previous columns can be found at https://www.caribbeanc­ouncil.org/research-analysis/

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