In Brief: The hotel industry’s main challenge with new booking platforms like TikTok GO is not the platforms themselves, but whether hotels have the technical infrastructure—specifically, machine-readable inventory and knowledge systems—needed to participate in the evolving AI-driven distribution landscape.
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Beyond TikTok GO: Hotels Lag in Machine-Readable Inventory Needed for Future Distribution – Image Credit Unsplash
The Real Issue Behind TikTok GO and Hotel Distribution
The launch of TikTok GO in May 2025, with partners including Booking.com, Expedia, Trip.com, and others, has generated significant discussion in the hotel industry. Notably absent from the list was Airbnb, sparking debate about platform strategies. However, the more pressing issue for hotels is not which platforms to join, but whether their inventory and operational data are structured to enable participation in these new distribution channels. For many hotels, the answer is no, and this gap is becoming increasingly consequential.
Booking.com’s Strategic Advantage: Infrastructure Readiness
Booking.com’s early involvement with TikTok GO was not accidental. The company began testing hotel sales within TikTok months before the official launch, focusing on validating their inventory pipeline rather than optimizing conversions. This approach reflects Booking.com’s long-standing strategy: ensuring that their inventory is always machine-readable and accessible through any interface. This readiness allows them to quickly adapt to new distribution channels, such as metasearch, voice assistants, and now in-app social commerce. The company’s data architecture prioritizes interoperability, enabling swift integration with emerging platforms.
Airbnb’s Different Approach: Building Alternative Interfaces
Airbnb’s absence from TikTok GO was a deliberate choice. CEO Brian Chesky has publicly stated that chat-based interfaces are not well-suited for travel bookings due to their limitations in handling complex, multi-person reservations and comparison shopping. Instead, Airbnb is investing in developing alternative interfaces, with former Meta AI executive Ahmad Al-Dahle now serving as CTO. The company’s strategy is to create a superior booking experience rather than joining competitors’ distribution channels, which they view as potentially becoming obsolete.
The Underlying Problem for Most Hotels: Lack of Machine-Readable Inventory
While major players have clear strategies, many hotels are unprepared for the shift toward AI-driven distribution. The core issue is that much of the industry’s inventory is not structured for machine readability. This limits hotels’ ability to participate in new channels like TikTok GO or to be discoverable by AI-powered search and booking systems.
A historical example from France illustrates a related challenge. After regulators removed Booking.com’s price parity clauses in 2014, hotels could offer better rates on their own websites. However, a 2022 European Commission study found that most hotels did not differentiate prices, and the expected shift toward direct bookings did not occur. The main reason guests continued to use online travel agencies (OTAs) was not price but the seamless, familiar booking experience enabled by superior data architecture.
Technical Solutions: JSON-LD, MCP, and Internal Knowledge Infrastructure
Two technical concepts are becoming operational priorities for hotels:
JSON-LD (JavaScript Object Notation for Linked Data): This structured data format enables search engines, AI assistants, and platforms like TikTok GO to understand hotel offerings, pricing, and availability. Hotels without proper JSON-LD implementation are effectively invisible to these systems, as their inventory cannot be read or indexed.
Model Context Protocol (MCP): MCP allows AI agents to connect directly to a hotel’s inventory system for real-time data retrieval and even booking, bypassing the need for a traditional website visit. Companies like HomeToGo have already launched MCP servers and integrations with AI platforms such as ChatGPT, preparing for a future where AI-driven bookings become mainstream.
Beyond external distribution, hotels also face challenges with internal knowledge infrastructure. Operational documents—such as standard procedures, rate plans, and property specifications—often exist as scattered files or institutional memory. Vector databases that index and make this information queryable by AI agents can help hotels operationalize AI tools, reducing reliance on staff to manually locate information.
Industry Trends: Increasing OTA Dependence and the Widening Infrastructure Gap
Recent data shows that independent hotels’ reliance on OTAs increased in 2025, with OTA share rising to 63.4% of bookings from 61.3% in 2024. This trend highlights the growing gap between hotels’ current capabilities and the requirements of modern distribution channels. While some companies are investing in infrastructure ahead of demand, most hotels are falling further behind, just as these decisions become critical to future competitiveness.
Conclusion: Preparing for the Next Wave of Distribution
The hotel industry’s main challenge is not adjusting rates or joining the latest platform, but ensuring that their inventory and operational data are machine-readable and accessible to AI-driven systems. The French experience with the removal of price parity demonstrated that architecture and user experience, not price alone, drive booking behavior. As platforms like TikTok GO and AI-powered agents become more prominent, hotels that fail to update their infrastructure risk being left out of future distribution opportunities. The key question is not whether TikTok GO itself matters, but whether hotels are ready for whatever comes next in travel technology.
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