TravTalk - Middle East

Digital first for hospitalit­y recovery

- TT Bureau

As hospitalit­y’s doors Ànally reopen, the sector is Tuickly getting a sense of the evolved ¶digital Àrst’ world in which it’s now operating. Now, the whole sector must Tuickly accelerate its digital transforma­tion to fuel long term recovery, or risk customer abandonmen­t and falling further behind.

The past year has seen a significan­t change in the adoption of technology and digital services, but while some hospitalit­y businesses were able to welcome online models, huge swathes of the industry were forced to remain dormant, leaving many digital advancemen­ts relatively untested or stagnating.

According to research by Aruba, a HPE company, as of last year the hospitalit­y sector was in a healthy – but not leading – place in its adoption of advanced technologi­es and moving computing to the Edge. Over half of hospitalit­y IT leaders had started to implement trials or applicatio­ns in areas such as artificial intelligen­ce (55%), Internet of Things (70%) and machine learning (57%). However, that compares to figures of up to 75% for AI in the financial services industry, or 77% for IoT in retail, distributi­on, and transport.

But it was also already struggling significan­tly with the data these new technologi­es produce. A quarter (25%) of IT leaders in hospitalit­y said there was too much data for their systems to handle, and that they could not process the data they collected quickly enough to act (25%). With data levels increasing exponentia­lly over the past year, thanks to the COVID-induced rise of smart technologi­es, IoT sensors, and connected devices, the depth of data sprawl will only be greater. To get a handle on all this data and deliver the type of differenti­ated customer experience­s to guarantee hospitalit­y’s recovery, a new eBook by Aruba, ’Serving Hospitalit­y at the Edge’, lays out three key areas of focus for organisati­ons in the sector – providing a clear roadmap to setting up the right network for future success.

Morten Illum, VP EMEA of Aruba, concludes, “The pandemic presented endless challenges to the hospitalit­y sector and while there have been pockets of digital innovation and success, many businesses have been unable to test and trial digital advancemen­ts, putting them at a disadvanta­ge. Now, they find themselves playing catch up in a new digital-first world. Consumer behaviours, expectatio­ns and demands have shifted exponentia­lly, and hospitalit­y organisati­ons must demonstrat­e that they can respond quickly to these new requiremen­ts to tempt them back through their doors.

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 ?? VP EMEA Aruba ?? Morten Illum
VP EMEA Aruba Morten Illum
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