In Brief: Mike Pavicich provides a guide for hotel sales leaders on how to navigate the process when their operational systems are being phased out.
-
Your System Is Being Sunsetted. Now what? A Playbook for Hotel Sales Leaders – Image Credit SalesAndCatering.com
The email usually arrives with little warning.
A long-used sales and catering system is being retired. A transition is required. Timelines are defined. Next steps are outlined. On the surface, it reads like a standard product update.
Inside the hotel or management company, it lands very differently.
At SalesAndCatering.com, this moment is familiar. While others may default to sunsetting and replacing, our approach has always been to continuously build, evolve, and invest in the systems our customers rely on. Because of that, we often step into these moments not as the cause of disruption, but as the partner helping teams navigate it.
Sales leaders start asking questions they haven’t had to consider in years. How will this impact response times? What happens to historical data? How much disruption will teams absorb? Does pricing change? And perhaps most importantly, is the replacement actually better—or simply newer?
The tension doesn’t come from the announcement, but the impacts from it: unexpected migration costs, uncertainty around future pricing, and frustration from customers who felt the outgoing system had seen little investment or support long before it was retired.
This is not an isolated scenario. It is part of a broader pattern reshaping hospitality technology.
The Hidden Impacts of “Technology Updates”
When systems are sunset, the impact is more complex than just an upgrade or change to the system.
Sales systems sit at the center of revenue generation. They power inquiry management, proposal creation, contract workflows, and pipeline visibility. When they are disrupted, even temporarily, the effects ripple quickly.
Across industries, the cost of disruption is well documented. More than half of organizations report that system downtime has a direct impact on revenue, while large enterprises can lose thousands to millions of dollars per hour during significant outages. Global studies estimate that large organizations collectively lose hundreds of billions annually due to downtime-related impacts.
Hospitality operates on tighter timelines and thinner margins than most industries.
When systems slow down, sales teams slow down. When data becomes unreliable, decision-making suffers. When workflows break, response times slip. And when response times slip, opportunities are lost.
Speed is not a feature. It is the business model.
What Actually Happens When a System is Sunset
-
Pricing Changes
What starts as a “transition” often introduces new pricing structures, added modules, or increased total cost of ownership. -
Migration Complexity
Data transfer is rarely seamless. Historical records, reporting structures, and workflows may not carry over cleanly, creating gaps or manual workarounds. -
Training Gaps
Teams must learn a new system under pressure, often without sufficient onboarding, leading to slower adoption and inconsistent usage. -
Operational Disruption
Inquiry handling, proposal turnaround, and contract workflows can slow down during the transition period, directly impacting revenue opportunities. -
Planning Burden Shifts to the Customer
The responsibility for timelines, coordination, and internal alignment often falls on the hotel or management company, not the vendor. -
Uncertainty Around Support and Investment
If the previous system saw limited innovation before sunset, teams naturally question how committed the provider will be moving forward.
Don’t Risk Speed and Revenue by Defaulting to the Status Quo
When faced with a forced transition, many hotel organizations take the path of least resistance. They stay.
They follow the vendor’s recommended path. They migrate to the successor platform. It feels like the safest move.
Staying by default assumes that the original system was still aligned with how teams operate today. It assumes that the limitations, workarounds, and frustrations that existed before the sunset are acceptable to carry forward.
Evaluate your current business model and bottlenecks. Will they resolve with the new system? Or is there another system that aligns better with your sales and catering goals, and at a better price point?
Ask the Hard Questions
Most organizations approach a sunset by asking: How do we transition?
The more strategic organizations ask something else first:
If we were making this decision today, would we choose the same system?
That question reframes the entire process.
It shifts the conversation from migration to modernization.
It forces leaders to evaluate not just features, but outcomes:
-
Are sales teams able to respond at the pace the market demands?
-
How much time is lost to manual processes and duplicated work?
-
Do portfolio leaders have real-time visibility into performance?
-
Are systems intuitive enough to drive full adoption?
-
Will this platform support the next five years of performance?
In many cases, the answers reveal a gap between what teams have and what they actually need.
The Stakes are High for Management Companies
Hospitality management companies are responsible for driving performance across multiple properties while maintaining consistency in reporting, process, and execution. They must demonstrate results not only to internal stakeholders but to ownership groups who expect transparency and accountability.
A system sunset forces a portfolio-wide decision.
Handled reactively, it can create fragmentation. Different properties adapting in different ways, inconsistencies in reporting, and uneven adoption across teams.
Handled strategically, it becomes an opportunity to standardize, simplify, and strengthen the commercial foundation of the organization.
Lessons Learned from Past Transitions
Hospitality has been here before.
Every wave of technology change has created two distinct paths.
Some organizations move quickly, minimize disruption, and accept the vendor’s direction. The transition is smooth, but the underlying challenges often remain.
Others take a step back. They evaluate alternatives. They align technology with how their teams actually work.
Those organizations tend to see more than a system upgrade.
They see measurable gains:
-
Faster response times
-
Higher conversion rates
-
Improved visibility across the pipeline
-
Stronger alignment between sales, revenue, and operations
The difference is not the technology alone. It is the decision to use the moment differently.
A Rare Opportunity to Reset
Sunsetting is rarely convenient.
It disrupts plans. It forces timelines. It creates pressure.
But it also removes inertia.
It gives hotel leaders a reason to revisit decisions that might otherwise remain untouched for years. It creates permission to ask harder questions about usability, performance, and value.
For organizations willing to take that pause, the upside is significant.
Because the goal is not simply to replace a system.
It is to ensure that the systems in place actually support how modern hotel sales teams need to operate.
Final Thought
When a system is sunset, it can feel like control has been taken away.
In reality, it creates a moment of choice.
At SalesAndCatering.com, we often see that the hardest part is not the technology change itself, but the internal coordination and transition that comes with it. The right partner can make that process significantly easier, with structured migration support, clear onboarding, and a platform that is built to evolve rather than be replaced.
Hotel leaders can treat a sunset as a forced upgrade. OR they can treat it as an opportunity to move forward with more confidence, less friction, and a stronger foundation for the future.
In an industry where speed, precision, and visibility define success, that choice matters more than ever.
About Mike Pavicich
Mike Pavicich is the Global Sales Vice President at SalesAndCatering.com, where he leverages over 20 years of rich experience in the hospitality industry. His professional trajectory is marked by a series of leadership roles across prestigious hotel brands, demonstrating a consistent ability to drive sales performance and revenue enhancement. Mike’s roots in the industry trace back to fundamental roles in sales and operations at distinguished establishments such as Hyatt Hotels, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, and Station Casinos.
Mike’s career trajectory shifted when he began exploring the synergistic blend of technology and hospitality. His contributions have been pivotal in advancing growth-driven solutions at leading technology firms, including Orbitz (now part of Expedia), Rainmaker (later acquired by Cendyn), and Sabre. In a recent role, he played a key part in managing the gaming markets for Priceline-Agoda. As a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, class of 1999, Mike combines a profound understanding of the hospitality sector with a keen insight into technological innovations.
Outside the professional sphere, this industry veteran is a dedicated family man residing in Las Vegas. When not working, he relishes quality time with his wife and two teenage sons, passionately supports the UNLV Running Rebels basketball team, and contributes to the community as a volunteer youth lacrosse coach.
Connect with Mike on Linkedin
About SalesAndCatering.com
SalesAndCatering.com provides the most affordable full-featured Sales and Catering systems for hospitality. Its STS Cloud Sales and Catering system is widely installed and engineered to give property sales teams the sales tools that help them achieve their goals. SalesAndCatering.com’s systems are developed and supported by the company’s US-based offices. It is a trusted full-service sales and catering partner that delivers solutions via a software-as-a-service model that ensures greater client communication to streamline the sales process and maximize staff productivity. SalesAndCatering.com’s systems help hotel companies meet revenue goals through anytime-anywhere data access and integration with multiple PMS systems. STS Cloud delivers unparalleled performance to help you thrive in today’s competitive sales environment.
For more information, please visit salesandcatering.com.


