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hvonhollen

Hotel Internet Services Supports Enhanced Guest Safety Initiatives by Providing Hotelie... - 0 views

  • , HIS has long possessed unrivaled experience in providing guests with the ability to interact with a hotel’s amenities
  • make requests for services without having to come into direct contact with hotel staff
  • Provide guests with the ability to make in-room dining requests or find out menu options. Offer details on concierge recommendations. Instantly furnish details on opening and closing hours for onsite amenities such as restaurants, fitness centers and laundry services. Serve as a hotel-to-guest messaging system to provide both instant and remote communication between guests and staff or departments. Allow guests to check-out without having to visit the front desk and risk potential exposure to germs by coming into close contact with staff and other guests.
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  • providing full voice-activated and hands-free control over a range of in-room devices such as thermostats, lights, televisions, drapes, televisions, etc.
  • content casting abilities via its BeyondTV and BeyondTV GuestCast solutions, HIS will further assist hotels in meeting new cleanliness standards by providing each customer with sanitized television remote control coverings.
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    This article talks about BeyondTV platform virtual in room guest services solution can reduce surface contact risks and ensure social distancing is being practiced. This system has voice activated abilities "providing full voice-activated and hands-free control over a range of in-room devices such as thermostats, lights, televisions, drapes, televisions, etc."
laurenperdomo

RFID Hotel, LAS Hospitality Supply Introduce Antimicrobial Key Card Tech - 2 views

  • RFID Hotel and LAS Hospitality Supply, has announced that it has acquired the exclusive right and license to manufacture and distribute a patented and proprietary antimicrobial plastic key card to hotels and resorts in the United States.
  • These key cards contain New Antimicrobial Layer (NAML) technology to inhibit the growth and transmission of germs, viruses and dangerous pathogens that thrive on the surfaces of intensely circulated products such as hotel key cards.
  • Antimicrobial agents are added during manufacture of the hotel key card to inhibit up to 99.99% of germ, virus and bacteria regeneration. The effect is long-lasting with no adverse reactions to anyone interacting with the antimicrobial surface.
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    Now more than ever, introduction of products that help preserve the health of staff and guests are an imperative for hotels and resorts. This article introduces this patented antimicrobial hotel key card technology to the hospitality industry.
anonymous

Hilton Doubles Down on Contactless Check-In and Disinfection Technologies as Part of Ne... - 0 views

  • Contactless check-in technologies: Hilton will double-down on its digital key technology for guests who desire to have a contactless arrival experience.
  • Advanced disinfection technologies: Hilton is exploring the addition of new technologies, like electrostatic sprayers – which use an electrostatically charged disinfecting mist – and ultraviolet light to sanitize surfaces and objects.
  • Contactless check-in technologies: Hilton will double-down on its digital key technology for guests who desire to have a contactless arrival experience. Guests can check-in, choose their room, access their room with a digital room key and check-out using their mobile devices through the Hilton Honors mobile app at participating hotels. Hilton will continue to expand its digital key capabilities to common doors and access points throughout the hotels.
sabrinajalane

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19368623.2020.1788231 - 2 views

-The hospitality industry is slowly recovering, as the reopening process has slowly begun and authorities started to ease restrictions. -Hospitality businesses are still expected to make drastic ch...

technology hospitality hotel

started by sabrinajalane on 30 Aug 20 no follow-up yet
nbakir

Reopened restaurants reveal dining's 'new normal': Masked waiters, e-menus and booth di... - 0 views

  •  
    Heil and Carman (2020) begin by highlighting the current changes in the restaurant business, where social distancing, protective gear, and reduced capacity are the norm as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. The resulting effect is the limited interaction with customers, eliminating the warm, welcoming customer service nature of waiters and waitresses. The focus of the paper, in this case, is on Georgia, Alaska, and Tennessee, which allowed the reopening of restaurants and other eateries. Some of the provisions instituted include limiting the restaurant capacity to 25%, such as in the case of Alaska. Resultantly, with expected low revenues, only approximately 5% of restaurants in Alaska have opened. However, in Georgia and Tennessee, restaurant owners provide that they may not be able to implement safety guidelines among their employees, given the surprising nature of the reopening provisions. However, some businesses are prepared, instituting internal measures to couple the governmental regulations (Heil and Carman, 2020). However, those reopening are faced with logistic challenges, as issues such as storage space for extra furniture are required. Other costs, such as air scrubbers, which are expensive, may also be required in addition to the mandatory sanitizers, increasing the costs of operations. With regard to technological focuses by the restaurants, some have developed disposable menus, while others have generated QR codes for customers to get access to digital menus. On the other hand, restaurants have had to pay above minimum wages, as they seek to attract employees back to work despite the coronavirus pandemic. The creation of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) is highlighted as the underlying survival of businesses during the pandemic period. However, while the pandemic appears as having resulted in a need for high adaptability, Heil and Carman (2020) provide that "opening at limited capacity means (ability to operate) at full force once normalcy
Lymaris Collazo

EventTow Online service booking for Event Management Wedding Planning - Everything Expe... - 0 views

  • Event Tow, the one-stop Android application and website for event management & wedding planning, announced its launch today. With a sharp vision of solving age-old problems of event planning through AI, the company is targeting to change the way people plan their events & weddings. Using the EventTow app, customers can easily book all their events and wedding needs online. The EventTow app is the first attempt to provide customers seamless booking experience through transparent availability for venues/artists/DJs/makeup artists/salon services/birthdays/caterers, etc. at the best prices. Now, from the comfort of their homes, users can book vendors for different events as easily as they buy products online. For vendors, Event Tow offers year-round opportunities and a superior reach to millennials for events in all categories‐ from big fat weddings to corporate parties.
  • Event Tow also provides concierge services and helps the customers and corporates to make their events and wedding planning hassle-free and smooth. The app has bridged the gap between consumers and businesses by collaborating with large salon chains and hotel chains and offering their services directly to the clients.
  • To ensure safety and hygiene during the pandemic, Event Tow requires its vendors to maintain social distancing norms and other best practices such as wearing masks and sanitization. The app enables customers to organize their events safely without taking the risk of going out.
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    Another Article about how Covid-19 has affected the industry. In this one in particular, is about an application that can be accessed by Android phone or website called Event Tow. With this new app that was inspired in millennial technology and Covid-19 pandemic, the customers can book events from the comfort of their homes and/or office. I believe this could be another example like the Smart-bar
nbrac002

Transforming Disruption Into Opportunity: Post COVID-19 Hotel Customer Experience | Hos... - 1 views

  • With airline travel down by a staggering 90+ percent between mid-March and now (compared to last year), and hotel occupancy rates hovering in the low-single digits, global travel industry experts forecast a $2.1 trillion dollar loss for 2020, and a slow recovery that could take years.
  • oday’s new “norm” for user experience is the singular result of a worldwide health crisis that has already driven each and every travel and hospitality company into swift and decisive action,
  • and will require thoughtful and meaningful investments in digital technologies to improve the customer experience.
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  • Hotels are looking for innovative ways to communicate with customers, meet unprecedented demand on call centers, or have contact center staff work from home.
  • Going forward, all guests – not just loyalty reward members – will likely use a mobile device for reservations, check in and get room keys, bypassing the front desk altogether.
  • Hotel entrances may include thermal scanning at the entrance, and guest rooms and conference facilities will be sanitized between uses. Connected room technologies would allow guests to control the lights, temperature, curtains, television, entertainment and more in the room with their own smart device or contactless gesture control.
  • A profusion of devices and wearables, equipped with geographic mobility technologies, that track and provide data anytime, on any device.
  • More pervasive use of digital labor to augment human staff or automation
  • interpret and execute more than just transactional, process-driven actions.
  • Predictive analytics
  • monetize big data
  • Enabling technology support will be critical for these operational changes. Hotels will need to constantly track customer feedback and social media response and manage inevitable setbacks and negative reviews with tweaks to their customer experience strategy.
  • personal safety as well as customer data
  • Travel and hospitality companies that manage the impacts of this crisis unambiguously and compassionately will generate increased value for their organizations and ultimately emerge even stronger than before.
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    With the impact that COVID-19 has had on the travel and hospitality industry, companies have had to turn to digital innovations to improve customer experience and regain trust. Innovations such as digital temperature checkpoints, connected room technologies, and digital labor can increase safety and allow hotels to operate during a crisis in a way that still provides the upmost customer experience. Those who capitalize on these innovations in a timely manner, and who manage the impact of COVID- 19 compassionately, may increase both their customer confidence and their value as an organization.
dlevine4195

Has COVID-19 Made Hotels More Sustainable? | The Manual - 0 views

  • These changes have largely been in the form of eliminating that most universal embodiment of hotel amenities, single-use plastic bottles for things like shampoo and soap, and reducing water usage.
  • hotels are also being savvier with energy usage, like using LED light bulbs and taking steps to gain environmental certifications like the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification from the US Green Building Council.
  • But the pandemic boosted the necessity of being able to do things while having limited contact with other people, and many hotels implemented remote, contactless check-in, room entry, and even food or amenities access.
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  • Among its benefits, touchless tech is more energy-efficient and can eliminate the need for paper or the increased usage of non-ecofriendly cleaners. 
  • due to the lack of guests, there was a decline in the use of chemicals from cleaners and a reduction in carbon emissions.
  • This included a “dramatic increase in the use of disposable utensils, packaging, etc.”, that some sustainability initiatives were canceled or put on hold, and that “stronger, more toxic” chemicals were being used for cleaning and sanitizing.
  • Some hotels, though, took the pandemic as an opportunity to switch to more eco-friendly cleaning options
  • 2018, Hilton announced a whole host of environmental and social responsibility goals as part of its Travel with Purpose 2030 Goals
  • setting carbon reduction goals in line with the Paris Climate Accord, reducing water use by half, sending no leftover soap to landfills, and overall cutting its environmental impact in half by 2030.
  • However, that lack of guests allowed Hilton to start implementing other parts of their impact reduction plan, like having some of their hotels switch to using renewable energy. 
  • heir guests. Sustainability and eco-friendliness are more important for travelers and hotel guests than ever.
  • global travelers want to “travel more sustainably in the future,” and their 2019 Sustainable Travel Report highlighted that 70% of travelers are more likely to choose and book accommodations that are eco-friendly. 
  • Although current practices like using non-eco-friendly cleaning products and getting rid of unwanted waste may be cost-effective and save hotels money now, these and other findings show that travelers are willing to pay for hotels that go the extra mile for the planet, which will earn hotels loyalty.
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    This article discusses how the pandemic has strongly impacted many hospitality companies to be more "green" for the future.. From contactless key options, to minimizing food waste, to using technology to reduce unwanted waste like paper, it is helping set new green goals for the our planet and future of the industry.
fischerc014

Hotels using robots for delivery, cleaning amid COVID-19 pandemic - 0 views

  • One surefire way to ensure you can socially distance during your stay is to have a robot deliver items to your room.
  • Rosé can bring you anything, either in-house or via a complimentary shopping service
  • The robot is sanitized after each delivery.
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  • For guests who prefer contactless deliveries
  • You may be wondering if Rosé replaces staff members who might otherwise be delivering items. That's not the case: The robot can't carry luggage, make beds or take reservations.
  • Each hotel at the properties had a robot available before the pandemic, though now they are much more popular
  • They can assist with hotels' intense cleaning regimens, given new guest and industry expectations for cleanliness.
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    Before, the 2020 pandemic, some hotels have already had robots incorporated into their hotel but it was more for entertaining purposes. Now they have become popular due to the pandemic. They help with social distancing by delivering guests their towels, pillows, foods, etc. They also assist with cleaning by using a super sterilizing blast. It is an expensive investment but worth it since it will become the new norm.
jsmiranda22

How COVID-19 has accelerated tech adoption in the hotel industry | Hotel Management - 0 views

  • exponential technology.
  • refers to both the rapid improvements in cost and performance
  • Smart capacities and services that were previously considered add-ons to the guest experience will quickly become requirements in the post-pandemic hospitality space.
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  • Investing in integrated online booking platforms that help to supplement staff efforts and create a seamless, personalized experience is the best way to ensure the guest has a positive brand experience
  • Hoteliers are using app platforms to track spaces used by guests and ensure a thorough sanitation before their next use
  • Integrated app platforms can help guests order room service or a morning coffee, reserve a spot out on the pool deck or communicate virtually with a staff member for instant assistance
  • Reward programs are meant to incentivize returning business without alienating first-time customers, or overemphasizing the different levels of guest perks.
  • A personalized guest app can offer different levels of accommodation.
  • Their choices and preferences could be logged as data and shared with the staff to help personalize their next stay.
  • Wearable technology has gained in popularity as a way to monitor guest activity, manage contact tracing, and help control the spread of the virus
  • also offers valuable feedback for consumer analysis
  • The more that guests are able to be tracked and recognized, the more they deserve to know their data is safe.
  • App platforms should have a section detailing which guest operations remain completely private, the rules and regulations regarding the use or sale of customer data, and the consequences that apply if any rules are breached.
  • Accelerated adoption of technology will transform the hotel sector at a rate even more extreme than once predicted
  • Smart tech will offer benefits to customers and staff alike, elevating the guest experience and making new levels of personalized hospitality possible.
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    *The hotel industry has incorporated exponential technology for its improvements in cost and performance -an implementation that evolved rapidly during the pandemic that hasn't been seen before. *Smart technology has offered benefits to customers and staff while elevating the guest experience on a personalized hospitality way.
bbalthaser

Robots are disinfecting hotels during the pandemic. It's the tip of a hospitality revol... - 0 views

  • germ-zapping Roomba — becoming, in the process, one of the first ultraviolet bots to arrive in a United States hotel.
  • "Cleanliness is now the new luxury,"
  • Until recently, only health-care workers would frequently interact with disinfecting bots,
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  • cost upward of $125,000 each.
  • projects the market for UV disinfecting bots will grow to more than $5.5 billion by 2027
  • stands out from such predecessors, both because of the bots' wider adoption and the more practical jobs they fill.
  • And Japan's famous Henn na Hotel has claimed to be the first hotel staffed by robots, though in 2019, the hotel fired about half of its 243 bots for underperforming (and, alarmingly, potentially exposing guests to hackers and peepers).
  • "cobots," a portmanteau of "collaboration" and "robots," because they're intended to work alongside people rather than replace them.
  • more than 60 percent of jobs in hospitality-dominated cities like Las Vegas could be automatable by 2035 — job losses that would exacerbate income inequality and disproportionately harm women of color.
  • Elected officials continue to underestimate the economic threats of automation in sectors like hospitality and tourism
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    Robots became very relevant and significant with the rise of Covid-19. There was an increased demand outside of the hospital sector and in industries such as hospitality. While many are "germ-zapping Roombas" others offer things like concierge services. Covid-19 made "cleanliness a luxury". However, the cost has always been a factor and can be "upwards of $125,000" for one disinfecting robot. The market is looking to grow by more than "$5.5 billion by 2027 for UV disinfecting robots" alone. While some countries like Japan have used Robots for a while, it hasn't always been successful, but it is now becoming a norm in the industry to obtain them for service. Some makers say that robots are meant to "work beside people rather than replace them." Some researchers say that large cities like Vegas are at risk of jobs being automated at more than 60% in the Hospitality sector. This could wreak havoc on employment and harm those that are most vulnerable those living in poverty or just above and women of color. Those in official positions with the government do not take the threat of automation as seriously as they should when it comes to sectors that rely heavily on employing many people but are turning toward automation. I definitely viewed an uptick in the use of a variety of technologies to he;p clean and sanitize buildings. While I never came across a robot, I know that there was an emphasis on various low-tech devices to help clean. I think while there are certainly positive outcomes of using robots in service-oriented positions within the hospitality sector, I dare say we should be concerned if we start using them more than people. And while the Pandemic certainly helped push us towards accepting technology in day-to-day and in work, it shouldn't be the end all. I would like to further read as to why Henna Na Hotel in Japan had such a disappointing result from their all-robot hotel. I think it could shed some light on the do's and don'ts of robot usage.
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    I really enjoyed reading this article. It gave lots of insight for the future of AI. I actually came across a website called chai.ml which is an online chatbot. You can talk to literally any kind of chatbot. From ones that make itineraries for you for wherever you go, to ones who want to experience a breakup situation. Its pretty neat but also really weird. I can for-see jobs being lost after playing around with that website.
mguzm071

2022 Top Hospitality Industry Trends - 1 views

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    "Major technology firms will replace most hotel brands, because they can offer technology solutions and create markets to attract customers. The traditional hospitality industry will evolve into niche markets..." -> This quote from this article is able to summarize where this industry is headed in just a few sentences, but the article as a whole was able to pinpoint the top trends that this industry will have faced in 2022 due to the rapid changes that had to be made due to the COVID-19 pandemic which we still face today. Such as sanitation and other safety protocol that is still enforced. Companies have had to adapt because of this to make up for their lack of revenue. For example, "This means that hospitality venues are being used as make-shift offices for bleisure travelers, as well as locals seeking a change of work environment. This is a great opportunity for hotels and F&B venues to capitalize on the trend and adapt their offering to meet the needs and wants of this emerging segment; ample plug sockets, free high-speed WIFI and great coffee are good starting points." The author of this article stated that the number of guest book long term trips have decreased, but when it comes to reserving hotel conference rooms as office space, staycations have increased with this transition. "Videos providing 360-degree views of restaurant ambiance, café terraces enveloped in greenery or hotel beachfront locations, for instance, are just the ticket to make an establishment stand out this year. As ever, keeping the access threshold low is key to reaching as broad an audience as possible with virtual reality material: making content accessible on a variety of devices, without the need for a VR headset." Another point made in this article mentions how virtual reality is now being used to enhance the customer experience. As a personal observation this has also helped with the transition post Covid-19. The changes that have been made and implemented and have opened the door fo
djohn304

Disruption Drives the Hospitality Industry to Innovation - 0 views

  • disruption has sparked massive innovation across every component of the industry from offerings to marketing tactics.
  • From robot concierges to new marketing strategies, hotel owners are changing the norm to address social distancing measures and lingering travel concerns.
  • branded apps are a one-stop portal for everything from reservations to room service.
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  • robot ambassador, ”Rosé,” who can bring guests pillows, towels and groceries.
  • Some hotels are incorporating fitness equipment into each room in place of a gym, sending personalized breakfast deliveries as an alternative to the traditional continental breakfast and others are completely redesigning rooms to have kitchenettes.
    • akopp008
       
      Example of how hotels have innovated and changed because of the situation.
  • forcing change and innovative new thinking to adapt and entice guests back as travel resumes. And based on the past few months, the industry is rising to the challenge.
    • akopp008
       
      the industry managed to adapt, it had to make it quickly but it was of benefit for everyone.
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    Innovative ways on how the hospitality industry had to quickly adapt to technological changes because of the pandemic. They had to perform differently their operations from night to day in a matter of 24 hrs. The changes they have made have impacted their day to day operations until know and have changed the way consumers see hotels. From having housekeeping staff clean rooms to implementing robots to sanitize rooms and deliver amenities, to doing entirely online checkins without front desk staff. The hotels have adapted to disruption a lot the last two years and has helped the industry realized how operations can work in a different way.
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    Reflecting on the term "disruption", there are likely fewer recent events that come to mind than the COVID 19 pandemic. It ceased life as we know it and forced industries across the globe to adapt, create, and innovate like we haven't seen before. This article discusses how the once taboo term "automation" has had to become the hospitality industries close ally as we progress into post-COVID life. The hospitality industry traditionally being "human-centric" has had to accept innovation in every way due to proximity being a cause for caution in recent times. However, the innovation born of necessity has amounted in fundamental changes in the industry that have disrupted hospitality and tourism as we know it. As disruption holds a negative connotation, in this instance it represents significant and lasting change in the industry that now ironically serves the consumer better than it may ever have. Travel demands are high, and the industry is indeed rising to the challenge.
asanc036

7 restaurant technology trends to watch in 2022 - 2 views

  • Many restaurants have turned to tech in the last couple of years, even if reluctantly, to adapt to a new reality.
  • 1. Online ordering systems and delivery apps
  • he food delivery market is now worth more than $150 billion globally, which has more than tripled since 2017 largely attributed to the pandemic, according to statistics from McKinsey.
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  • 2. Contactless payment
  • It’s estimated that contactless payments will triple from $2 trillion to $6 trillion worldwide by 2024, and having such options are reportedly extremely important for 34% of customers.
  • 3. Online table reservation system
  • initiative Experiences
  • OpenTable is offering
  • unique culinary events and dining experiences
  • Ramen Nights in celebrity chef Hugh Acheson’s dining room, a ‘side-dish’ of line dancing lessons or a fixed-price tasting menu,
  • 4. Digital kitchen ‘boards’
  • Kitchen Display Systems (KDS) are a digital menu board for kitchen staff
  • Directly linked to the restaurant’s point-of-sale (POS) system, the screen displays orders automatically according to priority and flagging any special dietary requests.
  • racking meal delivery times and monitoring inventory to signal when a product is out of stock,
  • 5. Automated inventory management software
  • tracking food and beverage stocks, anticipating quantities and even scheduling reorders
  • implementation of such software
  • reduce food wastage, which is reportedly costing the hospitality industry $100 billion annually.
  • (AI) technology, companies like Kitro
  • cut food waste and costs
  • platforms like Too Good to Go also save restaurants from wasting their food surplus
  • 6. QR codes
  • QR codes
  • allows customers to access online menus, order and pay – without contact –
  • 7. Air purification technology
  • bipolar ionization
  • purifies the air and surfaces in indoor spaces by neutralizing contaminants
  • systems which make use of ultraviolet light
  • f both air and surface sanitization
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    "Technology and innovation are what have helped, even saved, restaurants as they transform how they operate to not just survive, but thrive, in this new connected and contactless era" "Third-party food delivery apps like UberEats, Foodpanda, or Door Dash will continue to be an important solution for those not able to offer in-house ordering and delivery services" "Contactless technology is going mainstream, and it's not just about placing an order online, but also about paying with a smartphone, smartwatch or smartcard via an app or touchless device" "technology-enabled reservation systems, restaurants can manage seating, waitlists, customer loyalty and dining preferences as well as collect vital client data be it for contact tracing or market insights" "Kitchen Display Systems (KDS) are a digital menu board for kitchen staff helping restaurants streamline back-of-house operations" "companies like Winnow are helping restaurant owners and managers cut food waste and costs and run their businesses more efficiently and sustainably" "auto-scanning barcodes with smartphone cameras on posters, tables, coasters, doors or websites allows customers to access online menus, order and pay - without contact" "air purification technologies to promote 'clean air'" https://diigo.com/0lmspn
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    Some of these technologies such as food delivery services, and conctactless payments I have grown used to as a consumer. However, technology like KDS to improve the back of house operations or air purification technologies are more behind the scenes type of technologies that I have not given much thought so I found this article interesting.
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    Many restaurants are adapting to a new reality. Some of the digital trends to watch in 2022 are as follows: 1. Online ordering systems and delivery apps - Food delivery market worth more than $150 billion globally. 2. Contactless payment estimated to triple from $2 trillion to $6 trillion by 2024. 3. Online table reservation system such as Open table Experiences initiative offering unique culinary events and dinner experiences. 4. Digital kitchen boards such as KDS, a digital menu board for kitchen staff linked to the restaurant's POI which displays orders automatically and efficiently. 5. Automated inventory management software tracking food and beverage stocks, anticipating quantities and scheduling reorders. 6. QR codes that allow customers to access menus online, order and pay. 7. Air purification technology like bipolar ionization and ultraviolet light.
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