Showing posts with label Too much hotel technology?. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Too much hotel technology?. Show all posts

Sunday, March 2, 2008

In the article, “Too much hotel technology,” Bradley Schmidt talks about how new technology in hotels is becoming too hard to understand for many consumers. Guests are faced with the dilemma of not knowing how to use hotel room lights, or preprogrammed Ipods. Guests are saying that they need program manuals on how to use amenities in their hotel room, this shouldn’t be necessary. Schmidt talks about specific hotels such as Hilton and Marriott and the types of technology they offer. The Hiltons in Chicago and San Francisco offer Sight and Sound pilots. The Marriott in Illinois offers fogless bathroom mirrors with 13-inch flat screen TVs in them. He says the problem is “not the need to worry about technology, but the customer service that supports it.” The author comes up with a possible cure for new technology in hotels. He believes that “hotels need to make sure that a technology is working.” Hotels need to focus more on customer service, not the technology it offers to guests. Employees need to be able to help a guest when they are having trouble with a certain technology in their hotel room. To conclude the article, Schmidt says that hotels need to “offer choices for those that feel comfortable with a technology and want to use it, and choices for those that don't feel comfortable and don't want to use it or don't have the knowledge.”


I found this article to be pretty interesting because you never really think about the fact that some people have issues in hotel rooms just because they don’t know how to use a technology in the room. I agree with what Bradley Schmidt says in his article about the fact that hotels need to focus more on the customer service rather than technology. The employees should know how everything in the hotel rooms work so that when a confused guest calls down, the employee can help them. I understand that many hotels are trying to keep up to date with the current technology trends but they really need to consider the type of guests they will most likely be having and decide whether or not to offer choices for guests where they can chose to have the technology or not. I know that I have been faced with fact of not knowing how to work a technology in my hotel room. I was staying in Marriott’s Renaissance hotel in Hong Kong and pretty much everything in the hotel was controlled by a panel by the bed. At first I was so confused as to how to turn certain lights on and how to set the alarm clock. Eventually I figured it out by pressing almost every button on the panel, but it would have been much easier if there were directions offered with it. I completely agree with the author that guests should be able to choose whether or not they want a room with all these technologies or not; it’s just another way that hotels can appeal to people’s personal preference.

Schmidt, Bradley. (2007, July 1). Too much hotel technology? Hospitlaity Technology. http://www.htmagazine.com/ME2/dirmod.asp?sid=8D86DF469BD74C098382D9532C904D8E&nm=Additional&type=MultiPublishing&mod=PublishingTitles&mid=3E19674330734FF1BBDA3D67B50C82F1&tier=4&id=D531C7E58BC94F36AB009DDC3EC55D2F