Many hotels are using technology to make your stay more comfortable, but offering a human touch remains important.
Around 25 years ago, Abid Butt was staying in a hotel in Thailand and called downstairs for an adaptor. “Ten or 15 minutes later, all of a sudden there were security officers standing outside my door with a first-aid box because they thought I had asked for a doctor and were worried something was wrong,” says Dream Hotel Group’s CEO of Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa.
Butt believes these classic cases of misunderstanding could soon be relegated to history. His company’s Dream Downtown hotel in Manhattan, New York City, has introduced Google Assistant Interpreter Mode to its reception area. Guests can speak in their native language to the device and have their requests translated to hotel staff.
“People are very happy that they’re not struggling trying to express what they need, so it immediately relaxes them,” he says, adding that the most commonly translated languages are Mandarin, Spanish and French.
He adds: “In the early 90s when Japanese travellers were contributing hordes of numbers around the globe, we would look for the language proficiency in the staff to be able to do that. Now, technology is facilitating that 24 hours a day, and at a much better cost efficiency.”
Across the Pacific at the Orchard Hotel Singapore, guests looking to get their morning protein fix may be surprised to find a robot asking them how they’d like their eggs. The “Autonomous Service Chef Associate” can cook eggs either as omelettes or sunny side up during breakfast at the hotel’s Orchard Café. There is also a front-of-house “Autonomous Service Delivery Robot”, which can deliver room amenities such as towels and bottled water.
This story is from the May - June 2019 edition of Business Traveller Middle East.
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This story is from the May - June 2019 edition of Business Traveller Middle East.
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