In Brief: Kirsten Mosco analyzes the key takeaways from the HSMAI and HITEC conferences, highlighting the evolving strategies and execution plans that are set to redefine the hospitality industry.
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From Strategy to Execution: What HSMAI and HITEC Revealed About Hospitality’s Next Chapter – By Kirsten Mosco – Image Credit Newport Hospitality Group
Why the future of lodging will belong to organizations that connect technology, commercial strategy, and human experience
Last week in San Antonio, I had the opportunity to attend both HSMAI (Hospitality Sales and Marketing International) and HITEC (Hospitality Industry Technology Exposition & Conference), two events that approach hospitality from different angles but ultimately pointed to the same conclusion: the lines separating sales, marketing, revenue strategy, operations, communications, and technology are disappearing.
HSMAI focused on commercial strategy. HITEC showcased the technology shaping the future of hotel operations and guest engagement. Together, they offered a valuable view of where our industry is headed and what hotel leaders should be paying attention to now.
My goal at both events was simple: separate what is real from what is noise.
Artificial intelligence dominated conversations throughout the week, but what interested me most was not the technology itself. It was how differently organizations are approaching it. Some companies have established governance frameworks, clear use cases, and disciplined adoption strategies. Others are still experimenting and learning where AI creates value or possibly risk. Most are somewhere in between.
That spectrum revealed something important. You can learn a great deal about an organization by how it approaches change. Is it curious or cautious? Strategic or reactive? Focused on solving real problems or chasing the latest trend? The strongest organizations seem to share one characteristic: they are approaching AI with both curiosity and discipline.
If I had to summarize my biggest takeaway from the week in a single sentence, it would be this: AI is not changing what makes hotels successful; it is accelerating how quickly travelers, teams, and owners can see who is doing the fundamentals well.
Trust still matters. Reputation still matters. Communication still matters. Guest experience still matters. What is changing is visibility.
Bringing AI to HSMAI
At HSMAI, many conversations focused on how AI is reshaping discovery. For years, hotels optimized for search engines. Today, travelers increasingly use AI-powered tools to compare options, summarize reviews, research destinations, and narrow choices before they ever visit a hotel website. As a result, website content, reviews, public relations, local storytelling, structured information, and digital reputation are becoming part of the same ecosystem. Hotels that communicate clearly and consistently will have an advantage because AI systems rely on those signals when evaluating and recommending properties.
Clarity is becoming a competitive advantage.
One of the most important themes at HSMAI was the shift away from siloed thinking. Revenue management, sales, marketing, public relations, and communications can no longer operate as separate functions. Guests do not experience a hotel in departmental categories, and increasingly, neither do the technologies influencing their decisions.
A traveler may begin with an AI prompt, compare reviews, visit a website, browse social media, evaluate rates, and book through a channel the hotel does not directly control. No single department owns that journey. The strongest commercial organizations will be those that treat these disciplines as part of one connected ecosystem, sharing intelligence and aligning around common goals.
AI can support that process by helping teams analyze information faster, prepare more effectively, and identify opportunities more quickly. But technology does not replace judgment. It enhances it. The future is not automation for its own sake. It is better preparation, better timing, better storytelling, and better decision-making.
HITEC & High Intelligence
While HSMAI explored strategy, HITEC demonstrated how technology providers are translating those ideas into practical solutions. Walking the expo floor, I was struck by the sheer volume of innovation. Nearly every category, from guest communications and operations to revenue management and reporting, now includes some form of AI-enhanced capability.
The most significant trend was not a single technology. It was the emergence of intelligence as a layer across nearly every platform hotels already use. AI is becoming less of a standalone product and more of an expected feature embedded within existing systems. That creates enormous opportunity, but it also creates complexity.
The number of tools entering the market continues to grow rapidly, which makes discernment more important than ever. Hotel operators need to understand not only what a solution does, but what problem it solves, how it integrates with existing workflows, and what governance and security measures support it. The companies that impressed me most were not necessarily the loudest. They were the ones demonstrating practical applications, measurable outcomes, and a clear understanding of the challenges they were addressing.
Another theme that emerged repeatedly was the growing role of AI agents and workflow automation. The most promising use cases are not broad, generalized applications. They are purpose-built solutions designed around specific business needs. Whether it is summarizing RFPs, preparing revenue meeting materials, conducting sales research, analyzing guest feedback, or monitoring competitive activity, the greatest value comes from reducing repetitive work and giving people more time to focus on what humans do best.
Hospitality remains a people business. Technology should help teams spend more time building relationships, solving problems, coaching employees, and caring for guests. The guest experience should feel more personal, not more automated.
The combined lessons from HSMAI and HITEC point toward a hospitality industry that is becoming faster, more integrated, and more transparent. Hotels will need stronger digital foundations, cleaner information, better reputation management, and tighter alignment between commercial and operational teams. As AI-powered discovery grows, even basic elements such as content accuracy, review quality, and local relevance become increasingly important because they influence how properties are represented to potential guests.
For hotel owners and operators, the path forward is not to adopt every new technology that appears. It is to start with real business problems, establish clear goals, create thoughtful guardrails, test carefully, measure results, and most importantly, remain curious.
The technology will continue to evolve. The tools will change. But the organizations that thrive will be the ones that combine innovation with stewardship, technology with humanity, and curiosity with discipline. Those fundamentals are not changing anytime soon.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kirsten Mosco is Vice President of Media & Communications at Newport Hospitality Group. Her career has centered on helping hospitality companies define their position, sharpen their message, and connect more effectively with their markets. Before joining Newport, she worked across hotel marketing and agency leadership, partnering with owners, operators, and management companies on branding, communications, and growth initiatives. Kirsten earned a degree in Finance from Florida International University and is a Certified Hospitality Digital Marketer (CHDM).












