by
Brian Hicks
Jun 6, 0202

Getting Serious About the Guest, the Math and the Machine

This issue reflects a recent reality we find ourselves in our collective journey to commercial excellence. We have tools, data and ambition, but need to continue to build connective tissue. Summer 2026 is reckoning with the gaps between intention and execution.

Getting Serious About the Guest, the Math and the Machine

by
Brian Hicks
Jun 6, 0202
PARTNERSHIP SECTION

This issue reflects a recent reality we find ourselves in our collective journey to commercial excellence. We have tools, data and ambition, but need to continue to build connective tissue. Summer 2026 is reckoning with the gaps between intention and execution.

The articles in this section address the same problem: fractured data, misaligned incentives and technology outpacing the operating model. Taken together, they show why personalization, profitability and AI progress has been uneven and offer practical frameworks to close the gap.

In The Golden Guest Record, the authors Mark Haley and Mark Hoare lay out why hospitality still struggles to recognize repeat guests despite decades of CRM, PMS and CDP investment. The data exists, but identity does not. Systems were built to manage rooms, not relationships, leaving hotels with multiple versions of the same guest and no reliable source of truth.

Jan Jaap Van Roon in The True Cost of Fragmented Guest Data extends that argument beyond experience into commercial impact. When guest profiles are incomplete, segmentation weakens, personalization becomes performative, and marketing dollars drift away from real value. As the article notes, “The true cost of fragmented guest data is therefore not technical but strategic.”

In The AI Productivity Trap, Kelly McGuire and Matt Guglielmetti shift the focus to revenue teams and the unintended consequences of individual experimentation. Personal AI tools may make one person faster, but they do little for the organization. “This is the AI productivity trap: investing significant energy in tools that scale to exactly one person.” Without shared data, governance and operating models, AI risks amplifying inconsistency rather than advantage.

Finally, Cindy E. Green in The Profit First Playbook grounds the conversation in financial reality. With inflation and rising interest rates contributing to expense growth, traditional performance metrics no longer serve owners or operators well. The article makes the case for re-centering commercial strategy around profitable revenue, disciplined acquisition costs and tighter alignment between demand and spending.

Together, these pieces make a clear case: commercial success now depends on getting the fundamentals right: unified guest identity, scalable technology, profit-first metrics and cross-team alignment instead of siloed optimization.

Read this section as a system, not a set of standalone ideas, and let it spark sharper internal

conversations this summer.

We look forward to continuing the conversation with the industry this year and turning insight into action.

Brian Hicks is the President and CEO at HSMAI.

Brian Hicks is president and CEO of Hospitality Sales & Marketing Association International (HSMAI).

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