Corporate traveling: a commune or a commute

It might be possible that the hospitality industry might be on it’s way to completely revolutionizing itself, as can be seen by the new things that have been trending in hotels in the past year. There has been a shift from focus on factors like luxury, comfort and indulgence to factors like social spaces, high-tech facilitated services, and modern renewable energy driven buildings.

 

What young corporate travellers today while on business trips or work-related trips look for in a hotel is two things: firstly a smooth and easy stay process and secondly to use the hotel as a platform to socialize, meet people and start building a network. Consequently, hotels have been choosing to capitalize on possible social settings. For example, there has been a concept of ‘living room like lobbies’, which are basically huge lobbies with a lot of communal furniture to promote mingling and socializing. This was started by the Citizen M chain of hotels in Amsterdam, which offers not so luxurious and small rooms but these ‘living room like lobbies’. Shared spaces are not only limited to lobbies. Even restaurants and bars can be made to have communal tables and settings rather than the traditional way. Lounges can provide a kind of shared entertainment experience and even waiting areas like hallways and elevators could be somehow utilized as collective spaces. A hotel in Frankfurt that opened in March by the Lindenberg brand of hotels has shared leisure places like a communal kitchen that hosts cooking classes, and a jogging club in the garden. There are many innovative ideas being circulated within the industry, which could all culminate into a growing trend.

 

Also, with evolving and fast-changing technology, the younger corporate travellers are used to being associated with user friendly and tech savvy services. For example, many airlines are not just switching to online check in but also e boarding, which lets you proceed directly to security check: which is a part of making the travel experience smooth and error free. Lesser human involvement in this process implies a more systematic method. The same concept has been extending to the hotel industry: some hotels are now coming up with ideas of e-check in, by which they get their room key cards through an auto-mated system after scanning their identification. This process is both faster and ensures that customers are served in a timely manner or is been informed of an accurate wait time through a computer rather than an estimate by a customer service associate.

 

Lastly, there has been a growing concern for the depletion of resources on our planet and towards issues like global warming and melting of glaciers. This concern will be more and more reinforced every year, and renewable energy is starting to be seen as the future. Young corporate travellers who are usually recent college graduates are very informed about environmental issues and since they will be the ones to actually live through an energy crisis if it were ever to happen, they are very attracted to businesses that are renewable energy driven. Though not many hotels have had a goal to achieve this, it might be something they might consider in the future.

 

These trends could be a potential growing and strong threat to traditional hotels, and on important example of this is Airbnb. Airbnb is a new online platform for people who want to rent their property and people who are looking for properties to lease for a short period of time. Essentially, it acts as an online marketplace for people looking to rent a house and those looking to sublet their place for a few days and it lets people email each other through the website. Also, if these renters and sub letter end up finalizing a deal, they might even meet at the apartment or the house. So Airbnb reinforces two main things: an opportunity to meet people by staying in their homes, and it eliminates a mediating third party to connect the owner and renter of the property by using technology. Hence, Airbnb is could also be considered a potential threat to traditional hotels.

 

The use and influence of technology in the hospitality industry is evident, because as of now, about 57 million people made hotel bookings online last year, which is a 27% increase in bookings from last year and out of these 57 million bookings, 36 million bookings were made through websites like Expedia and hotels.com. Airbnb too has ben making a remarkable presence in many cities in the US. For example, in an interview with Vijay Dandapani, the president of Apple Core Hotels in New York, he mentioned that “I see a direct correlation between our revenues going down and [Airbnb’s] going up,” Also, financially, Airbnb has been valued more than most hotel groups except the top 4 largest international hotel groups, which shows that investors are also attracted.

 

It would be intriguing to see if all these changes in the hospitality industry have a large scale revolutionizing impact.

 

http://www.economist.com/news/business/21601259-there-are-signs-sharing-site-starting-threaten-budget-hotels-room-all?zid=293&ah=e50f636873b42369614615ba3c16df4a

 

http://www.cnbc.com/2015/07/01/online-travel-industry-is-booming-report.html

 

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