Luxury Hoteliers Magazine 2nd Quarter 2016 | Page 53

according to what I hear from certain hotels in Province. They have to be able to ask the right questions because digital technology will impose new stakes in terms of the level of experience that the client lives out during his stay. Is it necessary to create reception desks the way they were 100 years ago, or should we completely revise our way of welcoming clients? Once the client reaches her room, should she still be encouraged to take her time to understand the way the hotel works by reading the hotel guide, or might it be better to develop a completely customizable app so that the client can take possession of her room even before her arrival and convey her specific desires for its method of preparation? Should she still use the telephone on her nightstand to communicate with the hotel staff, or wouldn’t it be better for her to communicate via an application on her smartphone in real time, so that she can share an easier exchange with the hotel’s services? The smartphone is a tool that can allow hotels to develop the client experience and prolong this experience beyond the walls of the hotel. There, too, everything is up to the hotel because that is where the technique exists and functions. In my opinion, there will probably be a caesura in the luxury hotel industry that will turn out to be a positive force at the end of the day. It will allow clients to be able to differentiate between their experiences at various hotels. This is what the clients say, at least; it’s becoming increasingly important for them to know what experience they will be able to benefit from when visiting such and such hotel. The more differences there are, the more clients will be able to better choose the hotel that best corresponds to them. There will thus be digitized hotels and there will be those hotels that stay stuck in the past. These latter hotels may be able to keep their clientele in the first years, but they will have trouble over the course of the years in renewing their clientele. About the author Laurent Delporte, expert of French luxury hotels and the art of welcoming. He runs the site “Decoding the Luxury Hotel Industry” (www.laurentdelporte. com/en), which he designed to share his views and experiences with high-end (4-star) and luxury (5-star and Palace) hotels around the world. The site serves as a laboratory of ideas, expertise, and inspirations. It acts as a “hub” netwo