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Rhode Island Roads
The online magazine of travel, life, dining, and entertainment for people who love Rhode Island |
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How Technology Will Change Your Trips By Paul Pence Six hundred experts in customer support, quality, organizational development, and business systems brainstormed a response to the question "What innovation would most positively affect the customer's experience at a business hotel?"
They see this as universal. From the instant a customer
makes a reservation, or even calls for a reservation,
the use of modern computer systems will make the
experience as though he's visiting old friends who
already know his every whim. Caller ID, linked to the
customer database means that the phone will be
answered, "Hello, Mr. Pence." If I travel to England
every spring and tend to make my reservations in
January, the computer screen in front of the
reservationist would show that. "Will you be traveling
to Yorkshire again this April? I have your favorite
room available." It will be the same kind of experience
I have with Wendy, my local travel agent, who knows
me when I come in the door and has all of my
preferences, not only on file in her computer, but
instantly on hand in her fabulously retentive brain.
You'll start to see this in the very near future while booking travel on the internet, where
programmers continue to make the booking engines for Expedia and others more and more intuitive,
learning from your previous bookings.
Computer systems will talk to each other. The hotel, in
computer contact with the car rental company, will
know my license plate number. When I drive up, the
parking attendants will address me by name, probably
with a catchy phrase, like "Hello, Mr. Pence, welcome
home to the Hyatt."
My frequent stayer card will open the elevator. A TV
screen will light up. "Hello, Mr. Pence. Your room
number is 621, the corner room to your right.
Everything is ready for you. Welcome home," it might
say as it lifted me to the sixth floor. A light in front of
the room may blink, showing me the way. My frequent
stayer card would also serve as the door key. If I'm
traveling with others, extra keys will be waiting for me
in the room.
The TV set would already be on a website-type
interface, where they have answers to every question
that I'm likely to know. "Hello, Mr. Pence," the screen
would say. "I know you like restaurants with extensive
wine lists - here are a few that I think you might
consider for dinner tonight." Or maybe, "Since you're
arriving so far behind schedule, and the flying weather
has been so bad, we have placed a snack in the
refrigerator for you." Of course the snack would be
some kind of comfort food - just the sort of thing
grandma would think of to help you cope with a bad
flight and confusing driving directions.
Would this kind of service come cheap? Depends on
your definition of cheap. It would certainly be cheap
compared to this kind of service twenty years ago.
Before computers, the only way to do this would be
for someone to know your tastes and arrange for
everything in advance. Human beings would have to
recognize you by your face or your entourage, and
convey this information in person. People are
expensive. Computer automation is expensive to
implement the first time, but spread over thousands or
millions of hotel guests, the expense is reasonable.
Even bargain chains that specialize in clean,
comfortable, places to sleep with a minimum of frills
will have some measure of this automation. The clerk
would get information about your room location
preference in his database when he types in your
credit card number. He won't be able to switch out the
pillows on such short notice, but he can put you close
to the ice machine if that's on your list of preferences.
Probably more importantly, he'll have information like
my love of live music, how long it's been since I've
been to his town, and what time I'm likely to want to
wake up. "Hi, Mr. Pence. Welcome back to Oak Hill.
It's always nice to have you here every spring for the
art auction. Will you like to have an 8AM wakeup set
as usual?"
Convenience does come at a cost other than money. It
comes with a loss of privacy. In the past, if I always
have a brandy sent to my room after dinner, no one
kept track of that other than the single hotel's billing
department. But with this system, the hotel computers
will know how many towels I use. They'd know what
I read. They'll know how much trash I throw out.
Everything I do would go into the database so that
they can better anticipate my desires. But I may not
want to have every hotel employee to know my habits.
I especially don't want thieves to know my habits.
If the system isn't implemented carefully, my wife may
be the first one into the room and presented with an
interactive TV screen saying, "Welcome, back, Mr.
Pence, and I see you have your mistress with you
again. Here's a rundown on this city's various red-light
districts and places to purchase illegal drugs." There
are some things that some travelers would rather their
wives not know.
But with proper security, including the ability to travel
incognito, and with properly thought-out execution, the
system will make traveling to strange cities feel just like
coming home.
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