All Hail Hotel QR Codes
Larry Mogelonsky, P. Eng.
Advisor to Luxury Hotel Developers and Owners | Hotel Asset Manager | Ambassador to Canada for Luxury Hotels
It’s clear that one trend firmly embedded in the hospitality landscape for the next few years is the QR (quick response) code. Riding on the back of guests demanding everything contactless from the pandemic, software developers have now come back with quite a few functional and lucrative applications for this trendy tech.
Before expanding on some use cases, it’s important to reflect on both the pre-COVID-19 applications of QR codes and, critically, their overall perception. Pre-Covid, most people thought of these matrix barcodes as nothing more than a fad or even an obstruction from otherwise accepted and routine mediums of commerce. Think paper menus as a quick and convenient way of conveying what’s on offer at a restaurant (if it ain’t broke, right?).
Just as few accurately predicted the pandemic, few could have foreseen just how central this technology would become. The overarching lesson here is that while you are allowed (dare we say, encouraged) to have strong opinions on a subject, you must be open to change in the face of new information – ‘strong opinions, loosely held’ as they say in the investing world. The virus represented that new information which pushed QR codes into the limelight, so much so that heading into 2023 they are a de facto part of our phone-centric society.
Ruminating on this shift, ask yourself what other trends are you reluctant to embrace even as the social fabric evolves around you? For the more cerebral hotelier to consider, there may also be a morsel of ‘technological determinism’ at play here, with the new functionality, feature, platform or device influencing the grand direction of civilization and relegating the non-adapters to the scrapheap of history. It’s worth an evening scotch to ponder how this may play out over the decade ahead.
Basic QR Advantages
While QR codes are already ubiquitous, it’s important to run through the fundamentals for why they have persisted even as the worst of the pandemic has (hopefully) ended. These matrix barcodes are:
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Given these four advantages, QR codes will continue to find new uses for hotels. With any new feature or proposed application for this tech, you should always evaluate it from the guest’s perspective according to these fundamentals to better predict if it will work as intended.
Taking QR to the Next Level
These use cases require a bit more explanation for how these work, but the end goal throughout is always one of heightened convenience, personalization or optimizing revenue per guest. (The following three use cases are ones that are currently deployed and we’ll be happy to point you in the right direction of some prospective vendors who can help you out.)
While we are always game for a fireside chat about the applications of NFTs or another futurist technology for hotels, from the above three use cases it should be apparent that QR codes are far more fitting for the harried hotelier amidst this current travel recovery phase. This technology can speed up service, help reduce a lot of the busywork and grow guest revenues across a variety of profit centers. This isn’t necessarily anything new; when you make something more convenient – like the shift from cash to credit cards – people are bound to spend more liberally.
To end with a caveat emptor, always evaluate your deployment of this technology from the four core abovementioned utilities because there are some instances where old school remains in vogue. For instance, while the two of us have embraced what QR codes can do, one area where we’re still holding out is the physical food and drink menus at high-end dining establishments. There’s something about caressing a heavy cardstock and glancing over the grooves of embossed, expertly typeset branded text that delights the senses and adds to the overall meal experience. Prove us wrong!
Magazzn (Magazines, Reports, Newsletters), ConciergePro (Guest Experience), ManualPro (Product User Guidelines)
2 年This is spot on. Make sure your guest app can include Menu's (and I take your point about finer dining, probably want to keep something tangible there), local / on property info, registration, messaging, added value content etc. Apart from providing the guests with an enhanced stay experience the opportunity is there to create a 'Direct to Guest' D2G channel (without the need to scrape an email address). Perhaps more importantly, the opportunity to re book direct (by including and incentivising the book direct link) in app. What's not to love?
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2 年As an ADDITIONAL means to communicate, fine. But if you FORCE me to jump through hoops rather than look at a straightforward paper menu then sorry the sale is lost.