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Meeting the Now Mandatory Guest Expectation for Mobile Apps and Keys | By Larry and Adam Mogelonsky – Hospitality Net

Coming out of the pandemic, there are some changes that will slowly subside and others that we are quickly realizing will become permanent fixtures of hotel operations. Per the title, we’re focused on one such change: whereas before the pandemic guests considered the ability to get into their rooms and communicate with hotel brands via their phones as a value-add, now such capabilities are seen as mandatory. Worse, guests may actually frown upon those properties that don’t confirm with this new modus operandi.
Flexibility is key for 2022 and beyond. The expectation is that hotels offer guests the option of checking in and out without having to physically go to the front desk, as well as the convenience of having all requests or other communications through an app. Further, the preference for mobile keys is rapidly on the rise, necessitating many properties to upgrade their door locks.
To clarify this shift in traveler behavior and the best practices for on-prem upgrades, we sat down with Robert Stevenson, CEO at INTELITY, to discuss the company’s mobile app solution and what hotels should be aware of when shifting to a mobile-first hospitality experience.
“Some of us have been reluctant to allow travelers to do it all from their mobile devices – check-in, out, room keys, concierge, service requests and so on – because the sentiment is that it’s removing the human element from the service equation,” noted Stevenson. “At INTELITY, we see it as the exact opposite. By offering a fast, seamless mobile app you’re giving guests what they want right now. Then with full support from GEMS (our proprietary Guest Experience Management System), service delivery improves dramatically from all the enhanced back-of-house connections.”
Not to digress too far, but it’s important to first step back and look at where this aspect of the post-pandemic demands emerged. The easy answer is to pin it squarely on the safety-driven compulsion for contactless everything in the wake of COVID-19 and the need for limiting viral spread by removing physical touchpoints. While that’s definitely a big contributor, the elephant in the guestroom is how large an influence home sharing platforms now have on the overall direction of the hotel industry.
Whether it’s Airbnb, HomeAway (part of Expedia), onefinestay (part of Accor) or any other platform, the growth of the short-term rental market has already crossed a tipping point in terms of total market share of accommodations booked. As more and more travelers from all demographics come to accept the experiences offered by these alternate lodging providers as the norm, the more all travelers will come to expect the same service offerings from traditional hotels.
Notably, one central difference is that all the procedural aspects of the home sharing experience are completed via the guest’s phone. Communications are handled entirely through the app including the check-in, keyless (or another form of) entry instructions and special requests. More often than not, the guest never even meets the host in the flesh! And seldom does a short-term rental customer ever complain about the lack of a formal check-in at the front desk; mobile-first is their preference.
Guests have largely welcomed this paradigm shift because no front desk means no waiting in line to check-in, more anonymity and more convenience overall. This is absolutely critical for you to remember: acceptance of a new practice with superior benefits to the customer by a market niche will inevitably make that practice the expectation for every other competitive business.
“As we’ve seen from our latest onboarding of the CIVILIAN Hotel in New York, leading brands are embracing how a mobile-first hotel can boost the guest experience because, amongst other reasons, staff are freed from lots of minute tasks, making service delivery faster and more accurate. The assumption that the personal connection gets lost with all this digital expediency is flawed,” continued Stevenson. “We aren’t eliminating the rapport-building aspect, but only the ‘transactional conversations’ – this term recently popularized to describe the types of in-person interactions not wanted by guests.”
The distinction between the ‘transactional’ aspects of service and the rapport-building or ‘human’ elements becomes wholly evident when you see the results. You can quantify the inconvenience for the guest and the inefficiency for the business of these transactional conversations by comparing satisfaction scores, brand loyalty, costs of associate turnover and ancillary revenue capture whereby guests spend more with the property due to the frictionless nature of a branded app.
Particularly for the current labor crisis in hospitality, consider these three other benefits:
With the above hopefully dispelling the worry of losing the personal touch, the next big consternation is that all these upgrades will soon be out of fashion in favor of the next big thing in hospitality. Closing out the conversation with Stevenson, we talked about what hoteliers should do to ‘future proof’ their properties – to build a tech stack that meets current needs and is pliable for upcoming ones, too.
Here are some features and functions to consider when upgrading your systems:
Larry Mogelonsky
Hotel Mogel Consulting Limited
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