Tag Archives: tech

Create a Win-Back Email Campaign and Make $36 for Every $1 You Spend

Finding a new customer can be five to seven times more expensive than retaining an existing one. Win-back email campaigns aren’t typical email newsletters. They’re specifically targeted towards past guests and should be as personalized as possible. These campaigns allow hotels to reignite a connection and remind guests of the positive experiences they've already had, potentially encouraging them to come again. By targeting previous guests, you can tap into a pre-existing relationship, which is m...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

4 Ways to Create a Better Digital Customer Experience

Today’s customers expect a variety of digital communication options to get answers to their questions and resolve issues without having to wait on hold for a customer service rep. “During this digital-first era, many businesses have seen a massive spike in customer communication through digital channels such as contact forms, live chat, social media, and video,” says customer service platform Acquire. “To improve the overall customer experience with your brand, your company or organization must ...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

Online hotel accommodation booking website provide modish reservation system . Travel technology concept .

How Hotels are Managing Ghost Reservations From Bot Attacks

When a hotel’s occupancy looks strong for an upcoming weekend but half the bookings vanish by check-in, it’s often chalked up to cancellations or credit card issues. But in a growing number of cases, the real culprit isn’t a flaky guest – it’s a bot. Across the industry, hotels are quietly facing a rise in ghost reservations created by automated scripts. These bot-driven bookings can clog up reservation systems, distort revenue management strategies, and make it harder for legitimate guests to f...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

The driver of the electric car inserts the electrical connector to charge the batteries.

The Guest Experience Challenge of EV Road Trips

It used to be that road trip travelers pulled off the highway for one reason: rest. Gas, food, and maybe a quick overnight stay were all that mattered. But the rise of electric vehicles is reshaping those pit stops—and with them, the expectations EV drivers bring to hotels, restaurants, and roadside venues. Charging an EV takes longer than pumping gas. That creates a window of time when guests are stuck in place, and their needs extend far beyond kilowatts. They want fast Wi-Fi to catch up on wo...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

Man recording podcast in modern office setting with headphones, microphone, and smartphone. Professional setup for audio and video content creation. Engaging in remote communication, social media.

The Social Media Whisperer: How to Quietly Impress Influencers Without Pandering

The guest didn’t tag your location, didn’t follow you on Instagram, and didn’t post a selfie in front of your mural. But they did feature your restaurant in a video that’s racking up views – and their caption says it all: “This place just gets it.” In the age of curated feeds and viral reels, many hospitality brands are chasing likes with flashy gimmicks. But the most influential social media content often doesn’t look like a sponsored shoot – it feels real. That’s why the smartest hotels and re...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

3d illustration spherical 360 degrees, seamless panorama of living room and kitchen interior design..

How Virtual Reality Is Changing the Way Hotels Engage Guests

Before ever stepping into the lobby, today’s guests can walk through their hotel room, scope out the view, and even preview the spa — all from a smartphone or VR headset. Once they arrive, augmented reality tools guide them to the pool, recommend nearby restaurants, and overlay personalized offers onto their surroundings. Virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) are no longer novelties in the hospitality industry. They’re becoming standard tools for engagement, especially for tech-savvy g...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

Laughing, happy couple and on a boat for retirement travel, summer freedom and holiday in Bali. Smile, love and a senior man and woman on a yacht for vacation adventure, luxury and a cruise date.

How Emotional Intelligence Is Shaping the Future of Luxury Travel

When a luxury travel company offers you the chance to train with special forces in Iceland or follow centenarians through a remote Italian village, it’s not just selling an escape. It’s selling a feeling. A growing number of affluent travelers are opting for transformative experiences over traditional indulgences — luxury is increasingly defined by personal growth and memorable moments, not just material comfort. According to a 2025 survey by Preferred Hotels & Resorts, more than 80% of high...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

Young woman with baggage using smartphone while waiting to check in the tropical resort, Travel lifestyle concept.

What Guests Actually Want From Hotel Apps Now

It’s no longer a question of whether hotels should invest in guest-facing technology. The real question is what features guests will actually use. Hotel Tech Report’s 2025 State of Hotel Guest Technology Report makes one thing clear: guests value simplicity, speed, and control. The most commonly used hotel app features are those that help guests move through their stay more efficiently. That means mobile check-in, check-out, and digital room keys — not in-app games or augmented reality guides. D...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

A smiling businesswoman sits in a modern hotel lobby, checking her phone while holding onto her suitcase. She appears relaxed and ready for her trip, surrounded by a comfortable lounge area.

Is Your Digital Check-in Making Guests Feel Unwelcome?

For many hotels, digital check-in has become a staple of modern service, streamlining the arrival process, reducing front desk wait times, and giving guests more control over their experience. But when the tech does all the talking, something human can get lost in the process. Hospitality leaders are now asking a new question: Is convenience coming at the cost of connection? Digital check-in has become a standard feature in hotels, with nearly half of guests preferring to check out using their s...

Enter your email below to access this content:

Already a subscriber? Please login

Oracle Sets the Stage for Hotels, Placing a Spotlight on Technology

Oracle Hospitality connects property management, point of sale, and analytics so hotels can make the most out of guest services. Luis Weir, head of strategy and Application Programming Interface integrations at Oracle Hospitality, takes great pride in his company’s achievements.

He’s even more excited about their future potential.

In a recent article, GEM Journal Today explores the use of APIs in the hotel industry, and how companies like PolyAPI are enhancing guest management. When applications talk to each other with the power of artificial intelligence, the streamlining and customization possibilities are endless.

Weir spoke with us about Oracle’s place in the technology race and where he sees the industry heading in the face of advancing technology.

How does Oracle Hospitality streamline operations?

When it comes to getting everything in one place, hotels can count on Oracle Hospitality.

“We offer a unified platform that is fully integrated and capable of supporting every hotel function from office, reservations, call center distribution, connectivity, point of sales, event management and integration, you name it, our suite offers all these capabilities – and within a single platform,” Weir says.

They help organize and deliver data so staff stays connected and informed.

Normally, in order to pull off all of this service management in one place, you’d have to “cherry pick” and then struggle to keep programs communicating with each other smoothly. Now with Oracle, every software and application can work together seamlessly, making life easier for employees and guests.

Weir explains that “because we have it all integrated out of the box, that makes our proposition very, very unique. And very, very comprehensive.”

How widely is Oracle Hospitality used in the hotel industry?

Oracle Hospitality works with a wide range of properties, ranging from budget hotels to casinos to luxury resorts. What is that in numbers? Well, they manage more than 4.8 million hotel rooms. That’s a lot of fresh towels.

And a good portion of those are heading towards the Cloud.

“We manage currently some 40,000 hotels worldwide, out of which over 5,000 of those hotels are already in the cloud offering,” Weir says. “And we have a pipeline of about 10,000 more going to the cloud system very soon. Cloud adoption is really rocketing.”

Generative AI models take an already fast and secure cloud system to another level.

Weir points out that a lot of major technological advancements are happening in the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI). With artificial intelligence becoming more prominent in many industries, Weir confirms that OCI can “empower [hotels] to take advantage of the latest and greatest advancements.”

What is the most important benefit technology can provide employees and guests?

Functioning a lean staff is nothing new to the hotel industry. Hopefully, technology can help.

A survey from the American Hotel & Lodging Association – an industry trade group comprising thousands of hospitality companies – reveals that 8 in 10 hotels “experience staffing shortages.” With rising quit rates in an industry that can’t retain their workforce, technology like the services Oracle provides can keep operations running smoothly.

Weir is aware of the problem, and he says it’s a big one.

“Hotels are having to do more with less. So any technology that enables their staff to do more with less, is going to be very, very valuable for the hotel,” he says. “There has to be an investment in technology. The hotels are looking for technology that can actually deliver automation. API has become a crucial play here. Because if you have API’s to automate stuff, then that gives you the opportunity to look at your processes and optimize.”

Weir refers to the technology guests access from their phones and computers, and oftentimes this guest-facing technology is more streamlined than what employees have access to. He also observes that AI-powered plugins are becoming the new search engine, and hotels need to keep up with the speed their guests expect.

Weir says to “offer experiences that are integrated with the technology.”

He also places importance on integrating new API advancements and advanced generative AI – like that found in OCI – with cell phone applications in order to keep up with the technological Joneses: “It’s super important [with] mobile phones. It’s a no brainer, right?”

Absolutely right. Cell phones are an essential part of the searching, booking, and overall experience during a guest’s stay, especially since the COVID-19 pandemic. They must be considered in every part of a hotel’s technological advancement.

Where does hospitality go from here?

AI has taken the world by storm. That goes the same for hotels.

“In the cloud world, generative AI is a revolution,” Weir states. “It can fundamentally change everything.”

Companies like PolyAPI (offered in the Oracle Cloud Marketplace) give hotels the ability to create AI plugins of their own. Aside from providing a personalized experience like no other, one day hotels may no longer have to rely on third-party booking companies, meaning no more referral fees.

Weir confirms this theory: “You can see that KAYAK and Expedia are amongst the most popular plugins… So that means that people are using this type of technology for travel. This matters a lot.”

APIs are changing the game, allowing programs to talk to each other and boost not only existing User Interfaces but also behind-the-scenes flow. Employees get the specific information they need, guests get the services they want, and data is shared in a safe and fast way that blows the old system out of the water.

People like Weir are on top of their game, and he says Oracle is more than keeping up with the fast-paced times.

“In this space that is moving so fast, we are taking serious steps to not be left behind,” he promises. “We are going ahead in order to power a revolution, not to play catch up.”

Oracle Hospitality will surely continue to embrace the technological revolution, and other companies should follow suit.