Housekeeping Didn't Come

AI Didn't Replace Your Job, Boring Did.

Rob Powell Season 2 Episode 3

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0:00 | 7:18

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We challenge the fear that AI will replace hospitality by arguing that technology raises the value of what only people can deliver. We share why a flawless, high-tech stay can be totally forgettable, while imperfect places win by creating stories, connection, and memories. 
• the long pattern of new tech sparking job panic 
• the real leadership question: what becomes more valuable as AI handles routine work 
• a “perfect” hotel that delivers efficiency but no lasting story 
• why hospitality is an experience business, not an information business 
• the shift toward experience-based consumption and why guests buy stories 
• practical areas where AI helps operators: forecasting, scheduling, marketing, service, training, decisions 
• doubling down on empathy, judgment, creativity, relationships, and storytelling 
• the true risk for brands: boring, average, and forgettable 


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When New Tech Sparks Job Fears

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There was a time when people thought the ATM would eliminate bank tellers. Then people thought online travel agencies would eliminate travel advisors. Then self-checkout was supposed to eliminate cashiers. Then the internet was going to eliminate bookstores. And now apparently AI is going to eliminate everybody.

The Better Question About AI

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Welcome back to Housekeeping Didn't Come, the podcast about leadership operations in those moments when the plan was solid but reality had other ideas. I'm Rob Powell, hospitality lecturer at the University of Arkansas Hospitality Management Program. If you've listened to the news, attended a conference, opened LinkedIn, or accidentally stood within 20 feet of a technology consultant lately, you've probably heard some of the some version of the same conversation. AI is changing everything. And to be fair, it is. But I think we're asking the wrong question. The question isn't whether AI will change hospitality. It already is. The real question is what becomes more valuable when AI can do many of the routine things humans used to do. To answer that, I find it useful to look backward before looking forward. I spent my career watching technology reshape

A Perfect Hotel With No Story

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industries. When I started at Disney, many things were still remarkably manual. Then came more sophisticated reservation systems, customer databases, revenue management systems, online booking, mobile applications, digital marketing, social media, cloud computing, remote learning, and now AI. Every generation seems convinced that the newest technology will fundamentally replace people. Yet something interesting keeps happening. The organizations that thrive aren't the ones that simply adopt technology. They're the ones that figure out how to use technology while becoming even better at being human. A few years ago, Paula and I stayed at a hotel that was absolutely beautiful. The rooms were impressive, the technology was impressive, the mobile check-in worked flawlessly. The app worked perfectly. The elevators practically knew where we wanted to go before we did. Everything was efficient, everything was polished, everything worked. And you know what I remember about that stake? Almost nothing. It was pleasant, comfortable, professional, and completely forgettable. Not because they did anything wrong, but because they never gave me a story. Now compare that with some of the boutique lodges, adventure properties, independent inns, and quirky hospitality experiences I've encountered over the years. Many of them had imperfections. Some were downright eccentric. But I remember them. I remember the guide who taught us something unexpected, the front desk manager who solved a problem creatively, the server who made everyone at the table laugh. The lodge owner who sat down and told stories about the area. I remember people. And that's where I think the future conversation around AI gets interesting.

Experiences Beat Information Every Time

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Technology is becoming extraordinarily good at information, but hospitality has never been an information business. It's an experience business. Guests don't travel halfway around the world because they desperately want access to information. They travel because they want memories, stories, connection, discovery, adventure, and meaning. All those things remain stubbornly human. I often tell my students that hospitality isn't really about hotels or restaurants or casinos or resorts. Those are simply the stages where human experiences take place. The real product is the experience itself. And experience is becoming more valuable, not less. In fact, I would argue we're living through one of the largest shifts towards experience-based consumption in modern history. Look at what's happened around us. People spend thousands of dollars to climb mountains. I know that pretty well. They travel to remote destinations, they book expedition cruises, they attend immersive events, they seek authentic local experiences. They're purchasing stories they'll tell later, not products, stories. That's a very important distinction. Because AI can help create efficiency and it can help create convenience. It can also help create personalization, but it cannot replace the feelings of standing somewhere extraordinarily with people you care about. It cannot replace genuine hospitality. It cannot replace authentic human connection. And frankly, if it ever does, I suspect most of us won't want a vacation there anyway.

Use AI To Free Up Humanity

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Now, don't misunderstand me. I'm not anti-technology at all. Far from it. I use AI almost daily. I teach about AI. I think smart operators should absolutely be exploring how it can improve forecasting, scheduling, marketing, customer service, training, and operational decision making. Ignoring technology has never been a winning strategy. Just ask Blockbuster or Kodak or anyone who once believed the internet was a passing fad. But embracing technology doesn't mean surrendering what makes hospitality special. In fact, it shows it should allow us to focus more energy on the things machines cannot easily replicate. Empathy, creativity, leadership, judgment, storytelling, relationships. Those skills are becoming more important, not less. The irony is that AI may force hospitality organizations to rediscover what hospitality was supposed to be all along. Not transactions, experiences, not efficiency alone, connection, not automation for its own sake. Memories worth creating. When I think about students entering our industry today, I'm actually very optimistic. The future belongs to people who know how to combine technology with humanity. People who leverage powerful tools while still making guests feel seen. People who can automate processes without automating personality. People who understand that the software may impress a guest for five minutes, but a remarkable experience can stay with them for decades.

The Real Enemy Is Forgettable

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That's the opportunity. And that's why I don't think AI is the biggest threat facing hospitality. Boring is. Average is. Forgettable is, because guests may not remember your software platform. They may not remember your reservation system. They may not remember your forecasting model, but they'll always remember how you made them feel. And that's a future I think hospitality is uniquely positioned to win. I'm Rob Powell, Hospitality Lecturer at the University of Arkansas Hospitality Management Program. And this is Housekeeping Didn't Come.