by
Rich Siegel
6.21.2024

Siegel Sez 6/21/24

Siegel Sez 6/21/24

Definitely Doug 6/21/24: What’s That Smell?

CORPORATE NEWS

PEOPLE ON THE MOVE

GUEST MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

EXPERIENCE AND ANCILLARY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

RESERVATIONS & DISTRIBUTION

REVENUE MANAGEMENT & ANALYTICS

GUEST FACING TECHNOLOGY

MARKETING

SALES & CATERING, GROUPS & MEETINGS

BACK OFFICE

FOOD & BEVERAGE

HUMAN RESOURCES

SECURITY

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND INTEGRATION

HOSPITALITY EVENTS AND ASSOCIATION NEWS

Those of us who have been traveling a long time remember when smoking was allowed on airplanes. Always made me laugh when you were in the last seat of nonsmoking and the smoking section started the row behind you. Then that went away. I can’t remember when it was and I didn’t look it up, but I believe it was Starwood Hotels who boldly announced that there would be no more smoking allowed in any of their hotel rooms. Today, if you dare smoke in a hotel room you will be hit with a hefty cleaning fee. But how often do the hotels actually collect the fees when they get chargebacks from the credit card companies? Now with cannabis becoming legal in more states, the problem with smoking in the rooms is growing. People are on vacation, at a resort, music and pot can go together. The smoke and noise can go hand in hand. Can technology solve this problem? In his Definitely Doug column that follows Doug Rice believes it can. A very interesting read, what could be better than hotels using technology to drive revenues that otherwise might not be realized? I do wonder how many people smoke in their rooms and are never caught. 

This is the last Siegel Sez before HITEC next week in Charlotte. The buzz building for this year’s event continues to amaze me. Registration numbers are as good as they have ever been, the party list is amazing and of course the various solutions in the packed exhibit hall includes every technology you can imagine. Believe it or not, not every booth will be discussing the impact of AI. I am honored to be moderating the Monday morning session for the first-time attendees and others who want to maximize their HITEC experience. I did this last year and not only was it informative, it was also fun. Hope lightning strikes twice.  For more information on all the educational sessions next week click here. For some reason I believe this is going to be a HITEC to remember! 
 
Here now is Definitely Doug and his look at catching the noise makers and the smokers in hotel rooms. I will see you at the end with this week’s attempt at you-know-what. Remember the words, Renew the Blue. Hopefully you will know why in early May next year! If you will be at HITEC, please come by booth #4047 to say hi to all of us!  

Rich
rich@hospitalityupgrade.com

If you read almost any ranking of common hotel complaints, you are likely to find two issues near the top of the list: cleanliness and noise. Within the cleanliness category, smoking odors are one of the biggest sources, so much so that they are often listed as a category of their own.


Smoking and noise complaints have always been issues for hotels. But it might surprise you to learn that while noise problems are generally stable, smoking has grown rapidly in recent years, due to growth in marijuana use and vaping.


According to the most recent data I could find, Gallup reports that only 11% of Americans smoked cigarettes in the past week, while 16% smoke marijuana regularly, and 8% vape (other substances, such as meth and fentanyl, were not surveyed). And while cigarette smoking has been in a long-term decline, marijuana smoking and vaping are increasing. A decade ago, only a few states permitted marijuana use. But by the time those Gallup polls were conducted in 2022, 19 states had legalized recreational marijuana. Today that total is 24 states, and likely to continue growing. As it does, the number of people who smoke it will surely continue to increase.


This week I will explore technology solutions that have recently come on to the market to address these issues for hotels. These are sensors that detect, report, and document anomalies, such as smoking and noise, that can lead to guest complaints. The products also provide documentation that can be used to fight chargebacks related to smoking fees that many hotels assess when they detect guest-room smoking.


I am as always indebted to those who generously shared their expertise on best practices, specifically senior executives from Alertify, FreshAir Smoking Sensors, Rest, and WYND. Rest was formerly known as NoiseAware, with a recent rebranding reflecting its change in focus from noise detection (primarily for short-term rentals) to smoking and noise detection for any type of lodging establishment. All these solutions address smoking, while some address noise, air quality, and other issues. All are specifically designed to meet the needs of hotels. Two other companies that sell similar solutions to hotels did not respond to requests for an interview.


I should note that there are various residential-grade devices that may sound similar. Some of them may meet the needs of casual accommodation providers such as bed and breakfasts and short-term rentals. But they typically lack the network monitoring and other features that hotels need, and they should be avoided unless (a) the only objective is deterrence, and (b) the units have audible alarms that can deliver that deterrence.


How Common is Guest-Room Smoking, and What Does It Cost?


Smoking incidents are much more common than most hotels think; what can be caught without detectors is just the tip of the iceberg. Many of the vendors collect historical data from hotels from before installation, so that they can compare the frequency of incidents detected before and after. One estimated that only about one in eight smoking incidents is detected and reported by housekeeping in the absence of detectors. And unless guests carelessly leave smoking materials visible to housekeepers and hotel security is called to obtain photographic evidence, it can be very difficult to prove that a particular guest was responsible – and hard to win credit card chargebacks of smoking fees.


While statistics vary by type of hotel, several of the vendors provided estimates that translated to smoking incidents in around 0.6% to 1% of occupied room nights, with some types of hotels as high as 2%. Even at the lower figure, that’s about one incident per day in a 200-room hotel.


Smoking in guest rooms is costly. FreshAir Sensor provided me with a copy of a very detailed study that tried to address the total costs per incident, including damage to property, cleanup costs, lost direct revenue, and lost business due to bad reviews (the biggest factor). Total costs per smoking incident were around $1,157, offset by an average of $145 collected in cleaning fees (by hotels that assessed one and were successful at collecting it). Luxury hotels’ costs were highest ($1,570), but their cleaning fees were also much higher ($594).


Others had less-formal estimates that were a bit lower, but they were primarily based on cleaning costs and lost revenue from having to take rooms out of service (no reputational impact). However it was measured, there was broad agreement that smoking incidents cost hotels a minimum of a few hundred dollars each, and often much more.


While smoking detection is generally the high-ROI application in hotels (because many hotels assess cleaning fees and these devices both increase the number of chargeable incidents and make it harder for guests to successfully challenge them), some of the products also address other issues related to guest satisfaction:


• Some can detect excessive noise from loud guests, nightclubs operating past hours, or even gunshots. Some hotels may find this useful, while others may worry that guests will be fearful their conversations are being recorded (although none of these solutions do this; rather they simply measure and record the decibel noise level).


• Some can detect air quality metrics, including the components of the Air Quality Index. Historically this has not been a priority for hotels due to a low perceived ROI, but this is starting to change as more and more travel management companies, meeting planners, and online travel agencies are now incorporating environmental and sustainability metrics in their listings and hotel ranking algorithms.


• Some can detect temperature, humidity, and mold (or mold risk). These can help to highlight issues with heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems before they cause guest complaints or damage to the room.


Considerations for Evaluating Solutions


Every one of these solutions is probably a good choice for some hotels, but suboptimal for others. While my regular readers know that I try not to favor any specific product in these columns, in most cases my research nevertheless leaves me with biases that would apply if I were buying for my own hotel. That is not the case with this category. Which product I would favor would depend on the specifics of the hotel, including its clientele, size, management style, operational practices and even the design of the rooms.


Here are some of the key things to consider.


What are your goals? Discussions with the vendors highlighted products that were targeted at different objectives hotels may have. Some hotels just want to prevent smoking, while others are more focused on collecting incremental revenue from smoking fees. Most hotels would agree with the objective of reducing guest complaints. And while most hotels look at smoking detection as most valuable, some can also benefit from noise detection and other metrics. Finally, do you need a solution that can manage multiple properties from one dashboard?


Mounting location. The guest-room sensors need power, and depending on the model may be mountable on top of an outlet (dedicated or shared, depending on design) or may have a power cord. You need to locate them somewhere with good air circulation (don’t hide them in a cabinet) and accessible to an outlet that the guest is unlikely to find or to want to use. Depending on your objectives and the design of the device and its tamper-proofing properties, you may want the device itself to be mounted in an inconspicuous location such as the back of the television, or you may prefer a visible unit to discourage guests from smoking.


Tamper-proofing. Every solution I reviewed had features to frustrate tampering by guests, but some approaches may work better for you. One approach has LED lights that are normally on, but which turn off if the guest disconnects it from power to avoid detection. A battery backup keeps the unit active for at least several hours, however, alerting the hotel if the guest proceeds to smoke. Some solutions used a secure mount with a special key that makes the sensors impossible to remove from an outlet short of breaking them. Others rely on mounting in an obscure location, for example attaching to the back of a television, so that they are likely to remain undetected. Solutions need to report if a unit loses power; this might be via an alert to hotel management (useful if you want to catch a guest in the act), or only visible on a dashboard that would need to be checked regularly by hotel staff.


Accuracy. There are two common approaches to detecting smoke. One (pollutant density) basically measures pollutants in the air, and if they exceed a certain threshold, will trigger an alert, or further analysis that may result in one. Typically, these systems detect patterns of pollutant intensity (commonly particulates and volatile organic compounds) over time. They use the captured data to differentiate sources (tobacco, marijuana, vape, etc.) because each has characteristic signature elements (peaks, speed of dissipation, etc.). The sensors in this type of unit cannot distinguish tobacco from marijuana or vape; that comes from the analytics (in some cases AI-enhanced and self-adapting) of the density patterns over time.


The other approach is based on chemical detection of specific molecules found in tobacco, marijuana, vape, or other pollutants. This technology can distinguish one type of smoke from another. It is potentially less likely to generate false positives from permitted activities such as cooking, use of aerosol cleaners, incense burning, or even wildfire smoke, because the target molecules are present only in one source (for example, nicotine for tobacco). Sensors on these devices will need to be replaced periodically, although good ones should last at least a year and not be materially affected by the number of alerts triggered.


False positives matter, as one New York hotel found out when it was called out on the local news recently. And while my understanding of the underlying technologies could enable me to guess how different products might rank in terms of generating false positives, the truth is that there is no good data. The vendors all claim to have low rates of false positives, but one admitted that the only way to really know which is lowest would be to do side-by-side tests (put competing units in a room and then try out activities that might trigger them). Short of that, I would at least be sure to speak to several hotels using any product and explore both the metrics (number of smoking fees assessed and chargeback success rates). I would also analyze those hotels’ online reviews for insights (are too many guests complaining about fees charged when they say they did not smoke?).


Also be aware that some common housekeeping aerosol cleaners (notably ones with ammonia), and even some personal beauty products, can trigger some types of sensors. And while you cannot test every type of hair spray a guest might bring, you can and should at least test the housekeeping cleaners your hotel uses.


Vape detection is a special case. Because vape dissipates faster and generally leaves less of a lingering smell, it can be harder to identify. At the same time, it generally leaves less odor, causes less damage, and is less likely to generate complaints from subsequent guests, so many hotels are less concerned about it. Chemical detection looks for specific molecules commonly found in vape that are not present in tobacco or marijuana; it may be more reliable if vaping detection is important.


Customization. Be sure the product offers a dashboard and the ability to customize the sensitivity and available features of each sensor. This may include sensitivity levels (particularly for noise) or hours of operation (for example, when detecting noise levels in rooms near a nightclub, or to avoid cleaning aerosols from setting off a detector during housecleaning). For cost reasons, you may also choose to activate features like noise detection or humidity alerts only for certain rooms where they are needed.


Incident Reports. Be sure to closely evaluate the vendor’s incident reports. The first question is who is notified at the hotel when an incident is detected, and how. Different products support one or more of SMS, email, and popups on the front desk system, and may limit notifications to one person or allow multiple destinations. Immediate incident reports give the hotel the ability to (for example) send security to the room and collect photographic or other evidence while it is still available. Some hotels also choose to notify the guest by email or SMS, if only to remind them that a smoking fee has now been added to their bill.


But a bigger difference among systems is in the content of incident reports that can be used to dispute credit-card chargebacks of smoking fees. These can be notoriously difficult for hotels to win unless they can provide strong evidence of the infraction, and in most cases the incident report is what fills that role. It should include enough information so as to be difficult for the credit card company to refute: it should identify the room, the guest name, the date, the time, and the specific evidence (pollutant graphs, molecules detected, etc.). Some also include a good scientific explanation of why the evidence should be considered conclusive. Be sure to review various incident reports from any products you are considering, and to ask if they have been tested in any court cases.


Noise Detection.
For most hotels, noise will be a secondary issue, or one they do not think is worth addressing. But where it is important, critical considerations include the ability to set both noise thresholds and monitoring hours by sensor. Placement of the unit can matter as well: if it is too close to the television speaker, then the noise threshold for an alert might need to be set too high to catch other noise sources.


Operational Issues. While the idea of adding smoking detectors sounds simple, there are quite a few operational considerations that need to be thought through. The best solution to some of them may depend on the product selected. These include:


• Who should receive incident alerts, and how should they handle each type of incident?


• How will incident reports be reviewed and guests charged for violations? This may be a manual process, an automated process through a Property Management System (PMS) interface, or a hybrid (e.g. management reviews a list and decides who to charge).


• Should some or all guests be automatically charged when a violation is detected? If so, you will need a PMS interface. Some systems also allow the hotel to exempt certain high-value guests (casino high-rollers, top corporate accounts, etc.) if desired.


• Does the system report when a device is offline? How are the appropriate staff notified and how can management track resolution of the issue?


• If you will be charging a fee for violations, how much, and how will you disclose this? Will it vary by room type (e.g., higher for suites)? Should you put signage in guest rooms to warn guests?
• Are your credit-card authorization holds consistent with the smoking fees?


• How should front-desk agents be trained to deal with irate guests challenging a smoking fee?


• Should housekeeping checklists be updated to check the status of detectors? This can be particularly important if there is any likelihood of guests unplugging them and the hotel not detecting that from alerts or reports.


• When smoking is detected in a room, what is your threshold for remediation? A few puffs on a cigarette while leaning out a window may not merit deep cleaning, whereas an all-evening bong party with several potheads almost certainly will. You might rely on intensity and duration data from the incident report, or identify a few staff members with particularly sensitive noses to serve as your “canary in the coal mine” to detect smells that similarly sensitive future guests might notice.


A final consideration with respect to these operational issues is the extent to which the vendor helps you identify and address them (and whether you want or need that help). Vendors should also monitor your use of the system and alert you if you are not using it as effectively as possible – something that can easily happen through staff turnover.


Installation. Some vendors provide complete turnkey installation, while other systems are self-installed with varying levels of vendor support. For self-installation, look for a vendor that preconfigures each device to connect to your Wi-Fi, and labels them by room number. Look carefully at the electrical requirements and connection options, as well as form factors. Validate the preferred installation location for each room layout (see considerations above for accuracy and tamper-proofing).


Maintenance. Make sure that devices can auto-reconnect to Wi-Fi after a power or network outage. Understand whether and when any components need to be replaced periodically, and the cost of both the components and labor. Some products (although none of the ones mentioned here) reportedly require cartridge replacements as often as every three months or when triggered; this could represent a major cost, especially in a union hotel.


Pricing Models. Most of the vendors offered some flexibility, reflecting the relative newness of these products in the market. While customary device and software-as-a-service (SaaS) fees are common, some vendors offer the option to pay only a percentage of collected smoking fee revenues, and this may be useful especially if a hotel is uncertain how many smoking incidents it may experience. And of course, in considering the total cost of ownership, be sure to include installation and maintenance cost (whether from the vendor or internal) as well as warranty periods.


Conclusion


If your hotel is currently charging a smoking fee or is considering one, smoking sensors can provide a strong ROI, by identifying and documenting the significant number of smoking incidents that are likely undetected today. If you are unsure if you will have enough such incidents, most of the vendors can help you quantify it with minimal financial risk. And if you have noise issues, the noise detection capabilities can also be useful, even if deployed only to select rooms.

Canary Technologies Raises $50M to Accelerate AI Guest Technology in Hospitality
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Puzzle Partner Names Ivana Johnston as CEO
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VENZA Adds Sarmishtha Mukherjee as Software Development Manager
VENZA, a leading provider of data protection and regulatory compliance solutions for the hospitality industry, today announced the hiring of Sarmishtha Mukherjee as Software Development Manager.
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Experiential Technology Pioneer UrVenue Is Primed for Growth with New Leadership Hires
Fortified team was carefully curated to drive the hospitality industry's adoption of UrVenue solutions.
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Jonas Hospitality Debuting Unified Platform at HITEC 2024
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Ringhotels expands its PMS selection with Mews to optimize guest experience

Mews, the industry-leading hospitality cloud and winner of Best Hotel PMS at the HotelTechAwards 2024, was chosen by Ringhotels as an official PMS provider as part of their efforts to drive digital transformation in the German hotel industry.
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Agilysys Golf, Used by 13 of the Top 20 Resort Courses in the U.S., to Be Demonstrated at HITEC 2024 June 24 -27
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P3 Hotel Software Introduces P3 Ancillary to Streamline Integrated Booking Services for Hotels and Resorts
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SiteMinder and Cloudbeds Partner to Create New Distribution and Revenue Opportunities for Hotels

This collaboration will provide Cloudbeds customers with direct access to SiteMinder’s powerful revenue platform, while SiteMinder customers can explore the industry-leading PMS platform offered by Cloudbeds.
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IDeaS Now Available on the Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform (OHIP)
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Enseo to Showcase Latest Hotel TV Customization Tools at HITEC Charlotte
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Sojern Now Available on Oracle Cloud Marketplace
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Knowland Announces an Automated Prospecting Tool, Knowland Select for Hotels with Limited Meeting Space
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SalesAndCatering.com and LodgIQ™ Announce Partnership to Deliver Market-Leading AI Revenue Management for Group Sales
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PAS, Professional Advantage and LLP Group Announce Alliance to Deliver the PA Streams Operational Intelligence & Integration Solution, Services and Help Desk Globally to the Hospitality Sector
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Aptech to Unveil NEW Enterprise Accounting Dashboard at HITEC Charlotte
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Virgin Hotels & Resorts Applauds Trio of Financial Management Solutions Supporting its Growth
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Mews Adds Point-of-sale to its Embedded Payments Experience, Bringing Time Savings to Staff and Guests
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Shiji Announces Summer Update for F&B Tech, Infrasys Cloud POS and Digital Dine
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IRIS Showcases Latest Mobile Ordering & Upselling Capabilities at HITEC 24
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Unifocus Integrates with Nonius in a Tech Partnership that Connects Hotel Operations and Guest Experience
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Vingcard Introduces Google Wallet Compatibility for Mobile Access Hotel Guest Keys
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Paragraph Freedom Square, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Combines Heightened Security and Attractive Design with the Adoption of Vingcard Allure Door Locks

Vingcard, an ASSA ABLOY company and provider of advanced technologies for the hospitality industry, has announced the successful adoption of its Vingcard Allure door locks by the recently constructed Paragraph Freedom Square Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, in Tbilisi, Georgia.
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Visual Matrix Expands Data Centralization Capabilities for Hapi
Property level data from Visual Matrix PMS is now accessible through the Hapi Integration Platform, and Sonesta International Hotels is already capitalizing by delivering real-time data into their Customer Data Platform.
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CallTek Introduces Technology as a Service at HITEC in Charlotte, NC

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AHLA, Questex Announce New Speakers, Programming for The Hospitality Show
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Hotel Internet Services Showcases What's Next in Guest WiFi and Online Connectivity at HITEC 2024
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Agilysys To Speak on “Revenue Beyond the Room” at HITEC 2024 and on “The Agilysys Turnaround Story: 2017 – 2024” at HITEC IC 2024
Agilysys SVP Frank Pitsikalis will present Tuesday, June 25th and CEO Ramesh Srinivasan will present Thursday, June 27th.
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HFTP Announces Hospitality Code of Digital Responsibility
Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals (HFTP®), the global spokes group for the industry’s hospitality technology segment and producers of the HITEC® brand, announced today a new project that will develop a code of digital responsibility for hospitality.
www.hftp.org

Those of us who have been traveling a long time remember when smoking was allowed on airplanes. Always made me laugh when you were in the last seat of nonsmoking and the smoking section started the row behind you. Then that went away. I can’t remember when it was and I didn’t look it up, but I believe it was Starwood Hotels who boldly announced that there would be no more smoking allowed in any of their hotel rooms. Today, if you dare smoke in a hotel room you will be hit with a hefty cleaning fee. But how often do the hotels actually collect the fees when they get chargebacks from the credit card companies? Now with cannabis becoming legal in more states, the problem with smoking in the rooms is growing. People are on vacation, at a resort, music and pot can go together. The smoke and noise can go hand in hand. Can technology solve this problem? In his Definitely Doug column that follows Doug Rice believes it can. A very interesting read, what could be better than hotels using technology to drive revenues that otherwise might not be realized? I do wonder how many people smoke in their rooms and are never caught. 

This is the last Siegel Sez before HITEC next week in Charlotte. The buzz building for this year’s event continues to amaze me. Registration numbers are as good as they have ever been, the party list is amazing and of course the various solutions in the packed exhibit hall includes every technology you can imagine. Believe it or not, not every booth will be discussing the impact of AI. I am honored to be moderating the Monday morning session for the first-time attendees and others who want to maximize their HITEC experience. I did this last year and not only was it informative, it was also fun. Hope lightning strikes twice.  For more information on all the educational sessions next week click here. For some reason I believe this is going to be a HITEC to remember! 
 
Here now is Definitely Doug and his look at catching the noise makers and the smokers in hotel rooms. I will see you at the end with this week’s attempt at you-know-what. Remember the words, Renew the Blue. Hopefully you will know why in early May next year! If you will be at HITEC, please come by booth #4047 to say hi to all of us!  

Rich
rich@hospitalityupgrade.com

Definitely Doug 6/21/24: What’s That Smell?

If you read almost any ranking of common hotel complaints, you are likely to find two issues near the top of the list: cleanliness and noise. Within the cleanliness category, smoking odors are one of the biggest sources, so much so that they are often listed as a category of their own.


Smoking and noise complaints have always been issues for hotels. But it might surprise you to learn that while noise problems are generally stable, smoking has grown rapidly in recent years, due to growth in marijuana use and vaping.


According to the most recent data I could find, Gallup reports that only 11% of Americans smoked cigarettes in the past week, while 16% smoke marijuana regularly, and 8% vape (other substances, such as meth and fentanyl, were not surveyed). And while cigarette smoking has been in a long-term decline, marijuana smoking and vaping are increasing. A decade ago, only a few states permitted marijuana use. But by the time those Gallup polls were conducted in 2022, 19 states had legalized recreational marijuana. Today that total is 24 states, and likely to continue growing. As it does, the number of people who smoke it will surely continue to increase.


This week I will explore technology solutions that have recently come on to the market to address these issues for hotels. These are sensors that detect, report, and document anomalies, such as smoking and noise, that can lead to guest complaints. The products also provide documentation that can be used to fight chargebacks related to smoking fees that many hotels assess when they detect guest-room smoking.


I am as always indebted to those who generously shared their expertise on best practices, specifically senior executives from Alertify, FreshAir Smoking Sensors, Rest, and WYND. Rest was formerly known as NoiseAware, with a recent rebranding reflecting its change in focus from noise detection (primarily for short-term rentals) to smoking and noise detection for any type of lodging establishment. All these solutions address smoking, while some address noise, air quality, and other issues. All are specifically designed to meet the needs of hotels. Two other companies that sell similar solutions to hotels did not respond to requests for an interview.


I should note that there are various residential-grade devices that may sound similar. Some of them may meet the needs of casual accommodation providers such as bed and breakfasts and short-term rentals. But they typically lack the network monitoring and other features that hotels need, and they should be avoided unless (a) the only objective is deterrence, and (b) the units have audible alarms that can deliver that deterrence.

If you read almost any ranking of common hotel complaints, you are likely to find two issues near the top of the list: cleanliness and noise. Within the cleanliness category, smoking odors are one of the biggest sources, so much so that they are often listed as a category of their own.


Smoking and noise complaints have always been issues for hotels. But it might surprise you to learn that while noise problems are generally stable, smoking has grown rapidly in recent years, due to growth in marijuana use and vaping.


According to the most recent data I could find, Gallup reports that only 11% of Americans smoked cigarettes in the past week, while 16% smoke marijuana regularly, and 8% vape (other substances, such as meth and fentanyl, were not surveyed). And while cigarette smoking has been in a long-term decline, marijuana smoking and vaping are increasing. A decade ago, only a few states permitted marijuana use. But by the time those Gallup polls were conducted in 2022, 19 states had legalized recreational marijuana. Today that total is 24 states, and likely to continue growing. As it does, the number of people who smoke it will surely continue to increase.


This week I will explore technology solutions that have recently come on to the market to address these issues for hotels. These are sensors that detect, report, and document anomalies, such as smoking and noise, that can lead to guest complaints. The products also provide documentation that can be used to fight chargebacks related to smoking fees that many hotels assess when they detect guest-room smoking.


I am as always indebted to those who generously shared their expertise on best practices, specifically senior executives from Alertify, FreshAir Smoking Sensors, Rest, and WYND. Rest was formerly known as NoiseAware, with a recent rebranding reflecting its change in focus from noise detection (primarily for short-term rentals) to smoking and noise detection for any type of lodging establishment. All these solutions address smoking, while some address noise, air quality, and other issues. All are specifically designed to meet the needs of hotels. Two other companies that sell similar solutions to hotels did not respond to requests for an interview.


I should note that there are various residential-grade devices that may sound similar. Some of them may meet the needs of casual accommodation providers such as bed and breakfasts and short-term rentals. But they typically lack the network monitoring and other features that hotels need, and they should be avoided unless (a) the only objective is deterrence, and (b) the units have audible alarms that can deliver that deterrence.


How Common is Guest-Room Smoking, and What Does It Cost?


Smoking incidents are much more common than most hotels think; what can be caught without detectors is just the tip of the iceberg. Many of the vendors collect historical data from hotels from before installation, so that they can compare the frequency of incidents detected before and after. One estimated that only about one in eight smoking incidents is detected and reported by housekeeping in the absence of detectors. And unless guests carelessly leave smoking materials visible to housekeepers and hotel security is called to obtain photographic evidence, it can be very difficult to prove that a particular guest was responsible – and hard to win credit card chargebacks of smoking fees.


While statistics vary by type of hotel, several of the vendors provided estimates that translated to smoking incidents in around 0.6% to 1% of occupied room nights, with some types of hotels as high as 2%. Even at the lower figure, that’s about one incident per day in a 200-room hotel.


Smoking in guest rooms is costly. FreshAir Sensor provided me with a copy of a very detailed study that tried to address the total costs per incident, including damage to property, cleanup costs, lost direct revenue, and lost business due to bad reviews (the biggest factor). Total costs per smoking incident were around $1,157, offset by an average of $145 collected in cleaning fees (by hotels that assessed one and were successful at collecting it). Luxury hotels’ costs were highest ($1,570), but their cleaning fees were also much higher ($594).


Others had less-formal estimates that were a bit lower, but they were primarily based on cleaning costs and lost revenue from having to take rooms out of service (no reputational impact). However it was measured, there was broad agreement that smoking incidents cost hotels a minimum of a few hundred dollars each, and often much more.


While smoking detection is generally the high-ROI application in hotels (because many hotels assess cleaning fees and these devices both increase the number of chargeable incidents and make it harder for guests to successfully challenge them), some of the products also address other issues related to guest satisfaction:


• Some can detect excessive noise from loud guests, nightclubs operating past hours, or even gunshots. Some hotels may find this useful, while others may worry that guests will be fearful their conversations are being recorded (although none of these solutions do this; rather they simply measure and record the decibel noise level).


• Some can detect air quality metrics, including the components of the Air Quality Index. Historically this has not been a priority for hotels due to a low perceived ROI, but this is starting to change as more and more travel management companies, meeting planners, and online travel agencies are now incorporating environmental and sustainability metrics in their listings and hotel ranking algorithms.


• Some can detect temperature, humidity, and mold (or mold risk). These can help to highlight issues with heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems before they cause guest complaints or damage to the room.


Considerations for Evaluating Solutions


Every one of these solutions is probably a good choice for some hotels, but suboptimal for others. While my regular readers know that I try not to favor any specific product in these columns, in most cases my research nevertheless leaves me with biases that would apply if I were buying for my own hotel. That is not the case with this category. Which product I would favor would depend on the specifics of the hotel, including its clientele, size, management style, operational practices and even the design of the rooms.


Here are some of the key things to consider.


What are your goals? Discussions with the vendors highlighted products that were targeted at different objectives hotels may have. Some hotels just want to prevent smoking, while others are more focused on collecting incremental revenue from smoking fees. Most hotels would agree with the objective of reducing guest complaints. And while most hotels look at smoking detection as most valuable, some can also benefit from noise detection and other metrics. Finally, do you need a solution that can manage multiple properties from one dashboard?


Mounting location. The guest-room sensors need power, and depending on the model may be mountable on top of an outlet (dedicated or shared, depending on design) or may have a power cord. You need to locate them somewhere with good air circulation (don’t hide them in a cabinet) and accessible to an outlet that the guest is unlikely to find or to want to use. Depending on your objectives and the design of the device and its tamper-proofing properties, you may want the device itself to be mounted in an inconspicuous location such as the back of the television, or you may prefer a visible unit to discourage guests from smoking.


Tamper-proofing. Every solution I reviewed had features to frustrate tampering by guests, but some approaches may work better for you. One approach has LED lights that are normally on, but which turn off if the guest disconnects it from power to avoid detection. A battery backup keeps the unit active for at least several hours, however, alerting the hotel if the guest proceeds to smoke. Some solutions used a secure mount with a special key that makes the sensors impossible to remove from an outlet short of breaking them. Others rely on mounting in an obscure location, for example attaching to the back of a television, so that they are likely to remain undetected. Solutions need to report if a unit loses power; this might be via an alert to hotel management (useful if you want to catch a guest in the act), or only visible on a dashboard that would need to be checked regularly by hotel staff.


Accuracy. There are two common approaches to detecting smoke. One (pollutant density) basically measures pollutants in the air, and if they exceed a certain threshold, will trigger an alert, or further analysis that may result in one. Typically, these systems detect patterns of pollutant intensity (commonly particulates and volatile organic compounds) over time. They use the captured data to differentiate sources (tobacco, marijuana, vape, etc.) because each has characteristic signature elements (peaks, speed of dissipation, etc.). The sensors in this type of unit cannot distinguish tobacco from marijuana or vape; that comes from the analytics (in some cases AI-enhanced and self-adapting) of the density patterns over time.


The other approach is based on chemical detection of specific molecules found in tobacco, marijuana, vape, or other pollutants. This technology can distinguish one type of smoke from another. It is potentially less likely to generate false positives from permitted activities such as cooking, use of aerosol cleaners, incense burning, or even wildfire smoke, because the target molecules are present only in one source (for example, nicotine for tobacco). Sensors on these devices will need to be replaced periodically, although good ones should last at least a year and not be materially affected by the number of alerts triggered.


False positives matter, as one New York hotel found out when it was called out on the local news recently. And while my understanding of the underlying technologies could enable me to guess how different products might rank in terms of generating false positives, the truth is that there is no good data. The vendors all claim to have low rates of false positives, but one admitted that the only way to really know which is lowest would be to do side-by-side tests (put competing units in a room and then try out activities that might trigger them). Short of that, I would at least be sure to speak to several hotels using any product and explore both the metrics (number of smoking fees assessed and chargeback success rates). I would also analyze those hotels’ online reviews for insights (are too many guests complaining about fees charged when they say they did not smoke?).


Also be aware that some common housekeeping aerosol cleaners (notably ones with ammonia), and even some personal beauty products, can trigger some types of sensors. And while you cannot test every type of hair spray a guest might bring, you can and should at least test the housekeeping cleaners your hotel uses.


Vape detection is a special case. Because vape dissipates faster and generally leaves less of a lingering smell, it can be harder to identify. At the same time, it generally leaves less odor, causes less damage, and is less likely to generate complaints from subsequent guests, so many hotels are less concerned about it. Chemical detection looks for specific molecules commonly found in vape that are not present in tobacco or marijuana; it may be more reliable if vaping detection is important.


Customization. Be sure the product offers a dashboard and the ability to customize the sensitivity and available features of each sensor. This may include sensitivity levels (particularly for noise) or hours of operation (for example, when detecting noise levels in rooms near a nightclub, or to avoid cleaning aerosols from setting off a detector during housecleaning). For cost reasons, you may also choose to activate features like noise detection or humidity alerts only for certain rooms where they are needed.


Incident Reports. Be sure to closely evaluate the vendor’s incident reports. The first question is who is notified at the hotel when an incident is detected, and how. Different products support one or more of SMS, email, and popups on the front desk system, and may limit notifications to one person or allow multiple destinations. Immediate incident reports give the hotel the ability to (for example) send security to the room and collect photographic or other evidence while it is still available. Some hotels also choose to notify the guest by email or SMS, if only to remind them that a smoking fee has now been added to their bill.


But a bigger difference among systems is in the content of incident reports that can be used to dispute credit-card chargebacks of smoking fees. These can be notoriously difficult for hotels to win unless they can provide strong evidence of the infraction, and in most cases the incident report is what fills that role. It should include enough information so as to be difficult for the credit card company to refute: it should identify the room, the guest name, the date, the time, and the specific evidence (pollutant graphs, molecules detected, etc.). Some also include a good scientific explanation of why the evidence should be considered conclusive. Be sure to review various incident reports from any products you are considering, and to ask if they have been tested in any court cases.


Noise Detection.
For most hotels, noise will be a secondary issue, or one they do not think is worth addressing. But where it is important, critical considerations include the ability to set both noise thresholds and monitoring hours by sensor. Placement of the unit can matter as well: if it is too close to the television speaker, then the noise threshold for an alert might need to be set too high to catch other noise sources.


Operational Issues. While the idea of adding smoking detectors sounds simple, there are quite a few operational considerations that need to be thought through. The best solution to some of them may depend on the product selected. These include:


• Who should receive incident alerts, and how should they handle each type of incident?


• How will incident reports be reviewed and guests charged for violations? This may be a manual process, an automated process through a Property Management System (PMS) interface, or a hybrid (e.g. management reviews a list and decides who to charge).


• Should some or all guests be automatically charged when a violation is detected? If so, you will need a PMS interface. Some systems also allow the hotel to exempt certain high-value guests (casino high-rollers, top corporate accounts, etc.) if desired.


• Does the system report when a device is offline? How are the appropriate staff notified and how can management track resolution of the issue?


• If you will be charging a fee for violations, how much, and how will you disclose this? Will it vary by room type (e.g., higher for suites)? Should you put signage in guest rooms to warn guests?
• Are your credit-card authorization holds consistent with the smoking fees?


• How should front-desk agents be trained to deal with irate guests challenging a smoking fee?


• Should housekeeping checklists be updated to check the status of detectors? This can be particularly important if there is any likelihood of guests unplugging them and the hotel not detecting that from alerts or reports.


• When smoking is detected in a room, what is your threshold for remediation? A few puffs on a cigarette while leaning out a window may not merit deep cleaning, whereas an all-evening bong party with several potheads almost certainly will. You might rely on intensity and duration data from the incident report, or identify a few staff members with particularly sensitive noses to serve as your “canary in the coal mine” to detect smells that similarly sensitive future guests might notice.


A final consideration with respect to these operational issues is the extent to which the vendor helps you identify and address them (and whether you want or need that help). Vendors should also monitor your use of the system and alert you if you are not using it as effectively as possible – something that can easily happen through staff turnover.


Installation. Some vendors provide complete turnkey installation, while other systems are self-installed with varying levels of vendor support. For self-installation, look for a vendor that preconfigures each device to connect to your Wi-Fi, and labels them by room number. Look carefully at the electrical requirements and connection options, as well as form factors. Validate the preferred installation location for each room layout (see considerations above for accuracy and tamper-proofing).


Maintenance. Make sure that devices can auto-reconnect to Wi-Fi after a power or network outage. Understand whether and when any components need to be replaced periodically, and the cost of both the components and labor. Some products (although none of the ones mentioned here) reportedly require cartridge replacements as often as every three months or when triggered; this could represent a major cost, especially in a union hotel.


Pricing Models. Most of the vendors offered some flexibility, reflecting the relative newness of these products in the market. While customary device and software-as-a-service (SaaS) fees are common, some vendors offer the option to pay only a percentage of collected smoking fee revenues, and this may be useful especially if a hotel is uncertain how many smoking incidents it may experience. And of course, in considering the total cost of ownership, be sure to include installation and maintenance cost (whether from the vendor or internal) as well as warranty periods.


Conclusion


If your hotel is currently charging a smoking fee or is considering one, smoking sensors can provide a strong ROI, by identifying and documenting the significant number of smoking incidents that are likely undetected today. If you are unsure if you will have enough such incidents, most of the vendors can help you quantify it with minimal financial risk. And if you have noise issues, the noise detection capabilities can also be useful, even if deployed only to select rooms.

CORPORATE NEWS

Canary Technologies Raises $50M to Accelerate AI Guest Technology in Hospitality
Canary Technologies, a global leader in hotel guest management technology, announced today that it has closed a $50 million Series C funding round. The round was led by global software investor Insight Partners, who also led the company's Series B, with participation from existing investors F-Prime Capital, Thayer Ventures, Y-Combinator, and Commerce Ventures.
www.canarytechnologies.com

PEOPLE ON THE MOVE

Puzzle Partner Names Ivana Johnston as CEO
The current co-founder and chief marketing officer at the industry’s most trusted marketing consulting firm transitions to chief executive officer.
puzzlepartner.co
 
VENZA Adds Sarmishtha Mukherjee as Software Development Manager
VENZA, a leading provider of data protection and regulatory compliance solutions for the hospitality industry, today announced the hiring of Sarmishtha Mukherjee as Software Development Manager.
www.venzagroup.com
 
Experiential Technology Pioneer UrVenue Is Primed for Growth with New Leadership Hires
Fortified team was carefully curated to drive the hospitality industry's adoption of UrVenue solutions.
www.urvenue.com

GUEST MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

Jonas Hospitality Debuting Unified Platform at HITEC 2024
The Jonas Hospitality Unified Platform is a comprehensive technology suite that empowers independent hotels, resorts, hotel brands, chains, and management companies; streamlining your operations, revenue management, distribution, and marketing.
jonashospitality.com
 
Ringhotels expands its PMS selection with Mews to optimize guest experience

Mews, the industry-leading hospitality cloud and winner of Best Hotel PMS at the HotelTechAwards 2024, was chosen by Ringhotels as an official PMS provider as part of their efforts to drive digital transformation in the German hotel industry.
www.mews.com

EXPERIENCE AND ANCILLARY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

Agilysys Golf, Used by 13 of the Top 20 Resort Courses in the U.S., to Be Demonstrated at HITEC 2024 June 24 -27
The Agilysys Golf platform is a modern, enterprise-grade, browser-based cloud solution for managing golf operations, optimizing pro shop revenue and staff efficiency, and for providing better service to club members, resort guests and public players through personalized, brand immersive experiences.
www.agilysys.com

RESERVATIONS & DISTRIBUTION

P3 Hotel Software Introduces P3 Ancillary to Streamline Integrated Booking Services for Hotels and Resorts
This cutting-edge add-on for P3 Essential and Custom booking engines is designed to transform the guest booking experience by seamlessly integrating ancillary services into one unified reservation system.
www.P3hotels.com
 
SiteMinder and Cloudbeds Partner to Create New Distribution and Revenue Opportunities for Hotels

This collaboration will provide Cloudbeds customers with direct access to SiteMinder’s powerful revenue platform, while SiteMinder customers can explore the industry-leading PMS platform offered by Cloudbeds.
siteminder.com

REVENUE MANAGEMENT & ANALYTICS

IDeaS Now Available on the Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform (OHIP)
IDeaS, a SAS company and leading provider of hospitality revenue management software and services, today announced that it has reached the milestone of nearly 2,000 properties live on the Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform (OHIP).
ideas.com

GUEST FACING TECHNOLOGY

Enseo to Showcase Latest Hotel TV Customization Tools at HITEC Charlotte
Enseo has elevated the TV experience yet again, crafting a merging of technology and personalization that enables hotels to offer not just a stay, but an event tailored to every guest’s desires.
enseo.com

MARKETING

Sojern Now Available on Oracle Cloud Marketplace
Enhance real-time guest engagement and streamline marketing efforts using Sojern’s Guest Experience Solutions with Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform.
www.sojern.com

SALES & CATERING, GROUPS & MEETINGS

Knowland Announces an Automated Prospecting Tool, Knowland Select for Hotels with Limited Meeting Space
Streamlines prospecting to improve sales productivity and help smaller properties build agile, proactive sales strategies to accelerate group business growth.
www.knowland.com
 
SalesAndCatering.com and LodgIQ™ Announce Partnership to Deliver Market-Leading AI Revenue Management for Group Sales
Seamless integration delivers powerful group commercial optimization capabilities, empowering hotels to make data-driven decisions that accelerate revenue growth and sales performance.
salesandcatering.com

BACK OFFICE

PAS, Professional Advantage and LLP Group Announce Alliance to Deliver the PA Streams Operational Intelligence & Integration Solution, Services and Help Desk Globally to the Hospitality Sector
This strategic partnership brings together the collective expertise of all three organisations to deliver a comprehensive solution that seamlessly integrates with existing systems, across different platform environments whilst also providing visibility over key data.
www.profact.com
 

Aptech to Unveil NEW Enterprise Accounting Dashboard at HITEC Charlotte
Developed at the request of its customers, the tool provides a quick view of the status of a hotel’s financials from the previous night and more. All data is updated in the system in real time, enhancing the ability for hotel operators to make more informed decisions, improve efficiency, and achieve strategic goals.
www.aptech-inc.com
 
BirchStreet Systems Launches Operational Insights to Help Hospitality Customers Attain Operational Goals
BirchStreet Systems, a leading global provider of enterprise procure-to-pay -solutions to the hospitality sector, today announced the launch of Operational Insights, an interactive reporting and analytics solution designed to help customers achieve operational goals for Purchasing and Accounts Payable processes and yield substantial cost savings.
www.birchstreetsystems.com
 
Virgin Hotels & Resorts Applauds Trio of Financial Management Solutions Supporting its Growth
Virgin Hotels Chief Financial Officer Harris White said Aptech’s PVNG enterprise accounting, Execuvue business intelligence, Targetvue budgeting and forecasting, and automated invoice processing has been the financial systems support the company needed to weather the pandemic and prepare for future growth. 
www.aptech-inc.com

FOOD & BEVERAGE

Mews Adds Point-of-sale to its Embedded Payments Experience, Bringing Time Savings to Staff and Guests
With Mews POS now fully embedded with Mews Payments, it means digital ordering of food and beverage (F&B) transactions can use the same payment processing platform as all other transactions within the guest journey, including upgrades and bill settlement.
www.mews.com
 

Shiji Announces Summer Update for F&B Tech, Infrasys Cloud POS and Digital Dine
In preparation for the busy summer, Shiji Infrasys Cloud POS and Shiji Digital Dine launch new features and integrations to improve staff mobility, guest payments, business intelligence.
shijigroup.com
 

IRIS Showcases Latest Mobile Ordering & Upselling Capabilities at HITEC 24
The global provider of digital F&B and guest experience platforms shares latest updates ahead of attendance at HITEC Charlotte 2024.
iris.net

HUMAN RESOURCES

Unifocus Integrates with Nonius in a Tech Partnership that Connects Hotel Operations and Guest Experience
Under the agreement, Nonius’ cutting-edge platform integrates with the renowned Unifocus operations management system, enabling a holistic, guest-first approach to enhancing guest experiences, driving operational efficiencies and revenue uplift.
www.unifocus.com     www.nonius.com

SECURITY

Vingcard Introduces Google Wallet Compatibility for Mobile Access Hotel Guest Keys
The latest offering for Mobile Access maintains a priority on security while making room entry fast, easy and always enjoyable.
vingcard.com
 
Paragraph Freedom Square, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Combines Heightened Security and Attractive Design with the Adoption of Vingcard Allure Door Locks

Vingcard, an ASSA ABLOY company and provider of advanced technologies for the hospitality industry, has announced the successful adoption of its Vingcard Allure door locks by the recently constructed Paragraph Freedom Square Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, in Tbilisi, Georgia.
vingcard.com

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND INTEGRATION

Visual Matrix Expands Data Centralization Capabilities for Hapi
Property level data from Visual Matrix PMS is now accessible through the Hapi Integration Platform, and Sonesta International Hotels is already capitalizing by delivering real-time data into their Customer Data Platform.
www.hapicloud.io
 
CallTek Introduces Technology as a Service at HITEC in Charlotte, NC

Innovative offering delivers a comprehensive technology solution, including third-party financing for on-site implementation, 24/7 remote support, and essential professional services.
calltekinc.com

HOSPITALITY EVENTS AND ASSOCIATION NEWS

AHLA, Questex Announce New Speakers, Programming for The Hospitality Show
The American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA) and Questex have announced an updated slate of speakers and events for The Hospitality Show (The Show), the world’s premier hospitality operations and technology event, which will be held Oct. 28-30 in San Antonio, Texas. Early bird pricing is available through June 28.
www.ahla.com
 
Hotel Internet Services Showcases What's Next in Guest WiFi and Online Connectivity at HITEC 2024
Attendees set to discover which technologies are empowering hoteliers with the tools to deliver faster, safer and more personalized internet-driven experiences.
www.hotelwifi.com
 
Agilysys To Speak on “Revenue Beyond the Room” at HITEC 2024 and on “The Agilysys Turnaround Story: 2017 – 2024” at HITEC IC 2024
Agilysys SVP Frank Pitsikalis will present Tuesday, June 25th and CEO Ramesh Srinivasan will present Thursday, June 27th.
www.agilysys.com
 

HFTP Announces Hospitality Code of Digital Responsibility
Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals (HFTP®), the global spokes group for the industry’s hospitality technology segment and producers of the HITEC® brand, announced today a new project that will develop a code of digital responsibility for hospitality.
www.hftp.org

Those of us who have been traveling a long time remember when smoking was allowed on airplanes. Always made me laugh when you were in the last seat of nonsmoking and the smoking section started the row behind you. Then that went away. I can’t remember when it was and I didn’t look it up, but I believe it was Starwood Hotels who boldly announced that there would be no more smoking allowed in any of their hotel rooms. Today, if you dare smoke in a hotel room you will be hit with a hefty cleaning fee. But how often do the hotels actually collect the fees when they get chargebacks from the credit card companies? Now with cannabis becoming legal in more states, the problem with smoking in the rooms is growing. People are on vacation, at a resort, music and pot can go together. The smoke and noise can go hand in hand. Can technology solve this problem? In his Definitely Doug column that follows Doug Rice believes it can. A very interesting read, what could be better than hotels using technology to drive revenues that otherwise might not be realized? I do wonder how many people smoke in their rooms and are never caught. 

This is the last Siegel Sez before HITEC next week in Charlotte. The buzz building for this year’s event continues to amaze me. Registration numbers are as good as they have ever been, the party list is amazing and of course the various solutions in the packed exhibit hall includes every technology you can imagine. Believe it or not, not every booth will be discussing the impact of AI. I am honored to be moderating the Monday morning session for the first-time attendees and others who want to maximize their HITEC experience. I did this last year and not only was it informative, it was also fun. Hope lightning strikes twice.  For more information on all the educational sessions next week click here. For some reason I believe this is going to be a HITEC to remember! 
 
Here now is Definitely Doug and his look at catching the noise makers and the smokers in hotel rooms. I will see you at the end with this week’s attempt at you-know-what. Remember the words, Renew the Blue. Hopefully you will know why in early May next year! If you will be at HITEC, please come by booth #4047 to say hi to all of us!  

Rich
rich@hospitalityupgrade.com

Siegel Sez 6/21/24

Those of us who have been traveling a long time remember when smoking was allowed on airplanes. Always made me laugh when you were in the last seat of nonsmoking and the smoking section started the row behind you. Then that went away. I can’t remember when it was and I didn’t look it up, but I believe it was Starwood Hotels who boldly announced that there would be no more smoking allowed in any of their hotel rooms. Today, if you dare smoke in a hotel room you will be hit with a hefty cleaning fee. But how often do the hotels actually collect the fees when they get chargebacks from the credit card companies? Now with cannabis becoming legal in more states, the problem with smoking in the rooms is growing. People are on vacation, at a resort, music and pot can go together. The smoke and noise can go hand in hand. Can technology solve this problem? In his Definitely Doug column that follows Doug Rice believes it can. A very interesting read, what could be better than hotels using technology to drive revenues that otherwise might not be realized? I do wonder how many people smoke in their rooms and are never caught. 

This is the last Siegel Sez before HITEC next week in Charlotte. The buzz building for this year’s event continues to amaze me. Registration numbers are as good as they have ever been, the party list is amazing and of course the various solutions in the packed exhibit hall includes every technology you can imagine. Believe it or not, not every booth will be discussing the impact of AI. I am honored to be moderating the Monday morning session for the first-time attendees and others who want to maximize their HITEC experience. I did this last year and not only was it informative, it was also fun. Hope lightning strikes twice.  For more information on all the educational sessions next week click here. For some reason I believe this is going to be a HITEC to remember! 
 
Here now is Definitely Doug and his look at catching the noise makers and the smokers in hotel rooms. I will see you at the end with this week’s attempt at you-know-what. Remember the words, Renew the Blue. Hopefully you will know why in early May next year! If you will be at HITEC, please come by booth #4047 to say hi to all of us!  

Rich
rich@hospitalityupgrade.com

Definitely Doug 6/21/24: What’s That Smell?

If you read almost any ranking of common hotel complaints, you are likely to find two issues near the top of the list: cleanliness and noise. Within the cleanliness category, smoking odors are one of the biggest sources, so much so that they are often listed as a category of their own.


Smoking and noise complaints have always been issues for hotels. But it might surprise you to learn that while noise problems are generally stable, smoking has grown rapidly in recent years, due to growth in marijuana use and vaping.


According to the most recent data I could find, Gallup reports that only 11% of Americans smoked cigarettes in the past week, while 16% smoke marijuana regularly, and 8% vape (other substances, such as meth and fentanyl, were not surveyed). And while cigarette smoking has been in a long-term decline, marijuana smoking and vaping are increasing. A decade ago, only a few states permitted marijuana use. But by the time those Gallup polls were conducted in 2022, 19 states had legalized recreational marijuana. Today that total is 24 states, and likely to continue growing. As it does, the number of people who smoke it will surely continue to increase.


This week I will explore technology solutions that have recently come on to the market to address these issues for hotels. These are sensors that detect, report, and document anomalies, such as smoking and noise, that can lead to guest complaints. The products also provide documentation that can be used to fight chargebacks related to smoking fees that many hotels assess when they detect guest-room smoking.


I am as always indebted to those who generously shared their expertise on best practices, specifically senior executives from Alertify, FreshAir Smoking Sensors, Rest, and WYND. Rest was formerly known as NoiseAware, with a recent rebranding reflecting its change in focus from noise detection (primarily for short-term rentals) to smoking and noise detection for any type of lodging establishment. All these solutions address smoking, while some address noise, air quality, and other issues. All are specifically designed to meet the needs of hotels. Two other companies that sell similar solutions to hotels did not respond to requests for an interview.


I should note that there are various residential-grade devices that may sound similar. Some of them may meet the needs of casual accommodation providers such as bed and breakfasts and short-term rentals. But they typically lack the network monitoring and other features that hotels need, and they should be avoided unless (a) the only objective is deterrence, and (b) the units have audible alarms that can deliver that deterrence.

CORPORATE NEWS

Canary Technologies Raises $50M to Accelerate AI Guest Technology in Hospitality
Canary Technologies, a global leader in hotel guest management technology, announced today that it has closed a $50 million Series C funding round. The round was led by global software investor Insight Partners, who also led the company's Series B, with participation from existing investors F-Prime Capital, Thayer Ventures, Y-Combinator, and Commerce Ventures.
www.canarytechnologies.com

PEOPLE ON THE MOVE

Puzzle Partner Names Ivana Johnston as CEO
The current co-founder and chief marketing officer at the industry’s most trusted marketing consulting firm transitions to chief executive officer.
puzzlepartner.co
 
VENZA Adds Sarmishtha Mukherjee as Software Development Manager
VENZA, a leading provider of data protection and regulatory compliance solutions for the hospitality industry, today announced the hiring of Sarmishtha Mukherjee as Software Development Manager.
www.venzagroup.com
 
Experiential Technology Pioneer UrVenue Is Primed for Growth with New Leadership Hires
Fortified team was carefully curated to drive the hospitality industry's adoption of UrVenue solutions.
www.urvenue.com

GUEST MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

Jonas Hospitality Debuting Unified Platform at HITEC 2024
The Jonas Hospitality Unified Platform is a comprehensive technology suite that empowers independent hotels, resorts, hotel brands, chains, and management companies; streamlining your operations, revenue management, distribution, and marketing.
jonashospitality.com
 
Ringhotels expands its PMS selection with Mews to optimize guest experience

Mews, the industry-leading hospitality cloud and winner of Best Hotel PMS at the HotelTechAwards 2024, was chosen by Ringhotels as an official PMS provider as part of their efforts to drive digital transformation in the German hotel industry.
www.mews.com

EXPERIENCE AND ANCILLARY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

Agilysys Golf, Used by 13 of the Top 20 Resort Courses in the U.S., to Be Demonstrated at HITEC 2024 June 24 -27
The Agilysys Golf platform is a modern, enterprise-grade, browser-based cloud solution for managing golf operations, optimizing pro shop revenue and staff efficiency, and for providing better service to club members, resort guests and public players through personalized, brand immersive experiences.
www.agilysys.com

RESERVATIONS & DISTRIBUTION

P3 Hotel Software Introduces P3 Ancillary to Streamline Integrated Booking Services for Hotels and Resorts
This cutting-edge add-on for P3 Essential and Custom booking engines is designed to transform the guest booking experience by seamlessly integrating ancillary services into one unified reservation system.
www.P3hotels.com
 
SiteMinder and Cloudbeds Partner to Create New Distribution and Revenue Opportunities for Hotels

This collaboration will provide Cloudbeds customers with direct access to SiteMinder’s powerful revenue platform, while SiteMinder customers can explore the industry-leading PMS platform offered by Cloudbeds.
siteminder.com

REVENUE MANAGEMENT & ANALYTICS

IDeaS Now Available on the Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform (OHIP)
IDeaS, a SAS company and leading provider of hospitality revenue management software and services, today announced that it has reached the milestone of nearly 2,000 properties live on the Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform (OHIP).
ideas.com

GUEST FACING TECHNOLOGY

Enseo to Showcase Latest Hotel TV Customization Tools at HITEC Charlotte
Enseo has elevated the TV experience yet again, crafting a merging of technology and personalization that enables hotels to offer not just a stay, but an event tailored to every guest’s desires.
enseo.com

MARKETING

Sojern Now Available on Oracle Cloud Marketplace
Enhance real-time guest engagement and streamline marketing efforts using Sojern’s Guest Experience Solutions with Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform.
www.sojern.com

SALES & CATERING, GROUPS & MEETINGS

Knowland Announces an Automated Prospecting Tool, Knowland Select for Hotels with Limited Meeting Space
Streamlines prospecting to improve sales productivity and help smaller properties build agile, proactive sales strategies to accelerate group business growth.
www.knowland.com
 
SalesAndCatering.com and LodgIQ™ Announce Partnership to Deliver Market-Leading AI Revenue Management for Group Sales
Seamless integration delivers powerful group commercial optimization capabilities, empowering hotels to make data-driven decisions that accelerate revenue growth and sales performance.
salesandcatering.com

BACK OFFICE

PAS, Professional Advantage and LLP Group Announce Alliance to Deliver the PA Streams Operational Intelligence & Integration Solution, Services and Help Desk Globally to the Hospitality Sector
This strategic partnership brings together the collective expertise of all three organisations to deliver a comprehensive solution that seamlessly integrates with existing systems, across different platform environments whilst also providing visibility over key data.
www.profact.com
 

Aptech to Unveil NEW Enterprise Accounting Dashboard at HITEC Charlotte
Developed at the request of its customers, the tool provides a quick view of the status of a hotel’s financials from the previous night and more. All data is updated in the system in real time, enhancing the ability for hotel operators to make more informed decisions, improve efficiency, and achieve strategic goals.
www.aptech-inc.com
 
BirchStreet Systems Launches Operational Insights to Help Hospitality Customers Attain Operational Goals
BirchStreet Systems, a leading global provider of enterprise procure-to-pay -solutions to the hospitality sector, today announced the launch of Operational Insights, an interactive reporting and analytics solution designed to help customers achieve operational goals for Purchasing and Accounts Payable processes and yield substantial cost savings.
www.birchstreetsystems.com
 
Virgin Hotels & Resorts Applauds Trio of Financial Management Solutions Supporting its Growth
Virgin Hotels Chief Financial Officer Harris White said Aptech’s PVNG enterprise accounting, Execuvue business intelligence, Targetvue budgeting and forecasting, and automated invoice processing has been the financial systems support the company needed to weather the pandemic and prepare for future growth. 
www.aptech-inc.com

FOOD & BEVERAGE

Mews Adds Point-of-sale to its Embedded Payments Experience, Bringing Time Savings to Staff and Guests
With Mews POS now fully embedded with Mews Payments, it means digital ordering of food and beverage (F&B) transactions can use the same payment processing platform as all other transactions within the guest journey, including upgrades and bill settlement.
www.mews.com
 

Shiji Announces Summer Update for F&B Tech, Infrasys Cloud POS and Digital Dine
In preparation for the busy summer, Shiji Infrasys Cloud POS and Shiji Digital Dine launch new features and integrations to improve staff mobility, guest payments, business intelligence.
shijigroup.com
 

IRIS Showcases Latest Mobile Ordering & Upselling Capabilities at HITEC 24
The global provider of digital F&B and guest experience platforms shares latest updates ahead of attendance at HITEC Charlotte 2024.
iris.net

HUMAN RESOURCES

Unifocus Integrates with Nonius in a Tech Partnership that Connects Hotel Operations and Guest Experience
Under the agreement, Nonius’ cutting-edge platform integrates with the renowned Unifocus operations management system, enabling a holistic, guest-first approach to enhancing guest experiences, driving operational efficiencies and revenue uplift.
www.unifocus.com     www.nonius.com

SECURITY

Vingcard Introduces Google Wallet Compatibility for Mobile Access Hotel Guest Keys
The latest offering for Mobile Access maintains a priority on security while making room entry fast, easy and always enjoyable.
vingcard.com
 
Paragraph Freedom Square, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Combines Heightened Security and Attractive Design with the Adoption of Vingcard Allure Door Locks

Vingcard, an ASSA ABLOY company and provider of advanced technologies for the hospitality industry, has announced the successful adoption of its Vingcard Allure door locks by the recently constructed Paragraph Freedom Square Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, in Tbilisi, Georgia.
vingcard.com

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND INTEGRATION

Visual Matrix Expands Data Centralization Capabilities for Hapi
Property level data from Visual Matrix PMS is now accessible through the Hapi Integration Platform, and Sonesta International Hotels is already capitalizing by delivering real-time data into their Customer Data Platform.
www.hapicloud.io
 
CallTek Introduces Technology as a Service at HITEC in Charlotte, NC

Innovative offering delivers a comprehensive technology solution, including third-party financing for on-site implementation, 24/7 remote support, and essential professional services.
calltekinc.com

HOSPITALITY EVENTS AND ASSOCIATION NEWS

AHLA, Questex Announce New Speakers, Programming for The Hospitality Show
The American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA) and Questex have announced an updated slate of speakers and events for The Hospitality Show (The Show), the world’s premier hospitality operations and technology event, which will be held Oct. 28-30 in San Antonio, Texas. Early bird pricing is available through June 28.
www.ahla.com
 
Hotel Internet Services Showcases What's Next in Guest WiFi and Online Connectivity at HITEC 2024
Attendees set to discover which technologies are empowering hoteliers with the tools to deliver faster, safer and more personalized internet-driven experiences.
www.hotelwifi.com
 
Agilysys To Speak on “Revenue Beyond the Room” at HITEC 2024 and on “The Agilysys Turnaround Story: 2017 – 2024” at HITEC IC 2024
Agilysys SVP Frank Pitsikalis will present Tuesday, June 25th and CEO Ramesh Srinivasan will present Thursday, June 27th.
www.agilysys.com
 

HFTP Announces Hospitality Code of Digital Responsibility
Hospitality Financial and Technology Professionals (HFTP®), the global spokes group for the industry’s hospitality technology segment and producers of the HITEC® brand, announced today a new project that will develop a code of digital responsibility for hospitality.
www.hftp.org

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Three ecosystems — Hospitality & Leisure, Food & Beverage, and Inventory & Procurement — operate independently and together depending on your needs.

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7 Questions to Ask Before You Invest in a Hotel Mobile App

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