The hospitality industry has good reason to cheer in 2024. The experience economy continues to bounce back, with hotels and restaurants welcoming more guests. U.S. restaurants, for example, will top $1 trillion in sales this year for the first time, according to the National Restaurant Association. And the industry’s overall growth should outpace the U.S. economy in 2024.
“Customers want to go out and socialize—they want experiences,” said Keith Pickens, global managing director, retail industry, at Workday Rising last year. But a growing number of consumers are looking for more than a one-size-fits-all service offering, he added. “People want—expect, really—personalized, customized experiences.”
To meet changing consumer demands amid staffing crunches, look for hospitality organizations to make bold moves in 2024. The goals: enhance customer experiences, boost productivity, and bring workers up to speed on valuable tech capabilities, including AI.
Technology will be the key ingredient that powers change across these areas, fueling the agility and innovation that businesses have long sought out through digital transformation.
Here’s a look at four big trends shaping the hospitality industry in 2024 and beyond.
1. Technology Powers Productivity Gains
Many hospitality organizations are accepting a new normal: keeping headcount at ideal levels is a very tall order. Staffing can feel like playing a game of Whac-A-Mole—one vacancy gets filled, only to have a new one pop up soon after.
Tired of the game, organizations are becoming lean operators, tapping digital solutions to bridge labor gaps. While staffing levels are on the rebound, more than half of hotel leaders (53%), for example, say their workforces are anywhere from 25% to 74% smaller than in 2019, according to a 2023 Deloitte survey. Half of these organizations are filling gaps through technologies, the survey found.
Leaders know that in order to keep their smaller workforces happy while still meeting rising consumer expectations, they need to make changes. Their first priorities are improving workforce efficiency and productivity (40%) and improving the frontline worker experience (33%), a recent global IDC survey found.
New technology, including tools with integrated AI capabilities, can improve both frontline worker and customer experiences. In fact, many hospitality companies have already made great gains by leaning on tech to give workers more time to spend on customer-facing issues.
Panera Bread, which operates more than 1,000 bakery-cafés, recently automated its audit reports and data validation processes to “run our payrolls faster, run the books faster, and easily validate info like journal entries,” said Barb Muellerleile, senior director of finance and payroll, at Workday Rising.
Panera’s finance leaders can now access more timely data and reports themselves rather than requesting that information from IT, leaving IT teams more time to spend on the company’s mobile and iPad customer apps. “They have more bandwidth to focus on growing the business,” Muellerleile said.