Lessons from Behind the Wheel: How Real-time Visibility Drives Hotel Performance

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Connected infrastructure is hospitality’s most powerful operating system

By Colin Barnett, VP Business Development - Hospitality, Nomadix

If you've driven a new car in the last few years, you've likely noticed it delivers a steady stream of performance data.

From engine health, remaining oil life and fuel economy to tire pressure and safety systems, real-time insight is at your fingertips. If something needs attention or it’s time for maintenance, the vehicle sends an alert to your phone or dashboard display.

Behind the scenes, hotels operate like equally complex machines: hundreds of rooms, thousands of daily transactions and multiple systems that must work together seamlessly to deliver an outstanding guest experience. While the hospitality industry has historically lagged behind other sectors in technology adoption, the shift toward full digitization is accelerating.

While we're not quite on par with the auto industry yet, the digitization of services and workflows, proliferation of cloud data storage, and growing ecosystem of connected devices are opening new possibilities for hoteliers.

Rising pressures require an integrated approach

In an industry where margins are already thin, visibility is critical.

Labor remains one of the top challenges for hotel operators. Visits from both domestic and U.S. travelers are climbing sharply, but the available workforce is not keeping pace: the Canadian hospitality workforce remains about 20% smaller than in 2019.

Energy is the single fastest-growing cost in the lodging industry, with the average hotel spending about $2,200 per room per year on energy alone.

Considering these costs, even marginal improvements in energy efficiency and staff optimization can have an outsized impact on profitability.

As PropTech solutions mature, hoteliers can now use a single pane of glass at the management layer to integrate data feeds from energy, staffing, occupancy, revenue and engineering to gain insight into the health of the operation. AI can take that clarity a step further, providing data-driven recommendations to optimize performance and manage costs.

Real-time visibility drives operational excellence

With the property management system (PMS) serving as the base operating system, connecting energy management, access control, equipment monitoring, maintenance ticketing and housekeeping workflows creates a fully integrated ecosystem to share operational data.

Instead of operating in independent silos, integrating these systems creates a single dashboard for property performance that allows operators to answer critical questions in real time, such as:

• Are certain housekeeping tasks taking longer than expected?
• Which maintenance issues require immediate attention? Which can wait?
• Are certain PTAC systems consuming more energy than others?
• Are security events occurring in specific areas of the property?

Just as a driver uses real-time vehicle data to monitor performance and optimize vehicle health, integrated hospitality systems give operators the same capability to optimize the health of the entire property.

Just-in-time preventive maintenance

Modern vehicles rely on sensors to monitor wear items like oil quality and brake pad life, allowing drivers to conduct maintenance at the right time—not too late or too soon.

With real-time visibility, hotels can apply this same strategy to shift from reactive to just-in-time preventative maintenance.

Sensors in HVAC systems, elevators, and thermostats can continuously monitor performance. If something begins to drift outside normal operating parameters, staff receive an alert and take action before a failure occurs.

This shift from reactive repairs to predictive maintenance has been shown to reduce repair costs by 25%, equipment breakdowns by up to 75% and cut downtime by up to 50%, while also extending the lifespan of critical infrastructure. Instead of scrambling to fix major equipment failures during peak occupancy, hoteliers can address issues before they become more expensive.

Maximizing energy efficiency

In modern cars, fuel efficiency is a rapidly developing science. The drivers' data and even their driving style provide analytics to help boost fuel economy, lower consumption and cost.

Likewise, in the hotel world, reducing energy consumption and cost are top priorities for hoteliers.

Integrated Energy Management Systems allow hoteliers to manage energy consumption intelligently. When connected to the PMS, EMS platforms can automatically adjust heating or cooling based on occupancy, reducing consumption in empty rooms without sacrificing guest comfort.

Smart systems can account for seasonal changes and daylight exposure. For example, in colder months, operators can prioritize guest placement on the sun-facing side of the building during winter to capture passive solar heat and reduce energy demand cost. In summer, placing guests on the shade side can reduce cooling loads.

EMS can also show comparisons across rooms or properties. For example, if one room is suddenly using more energy, it could indicate a maintenance issue, like a clogged PTAC filter or malfunctioning equipment.

Beyond improving efficiency, EMS systems generate measurable data that demonstrates the financial impact of energy optimization—savings that can be reinvested into additional optimization technologies.

Monitoring safety

Connected infrastructure can also enhance guest safety. Much like modern cars can warn drivers when they drift out of their lane or approach another vehicle too quickly, connected hotels can monitor security events in real time.

Smart locks and mobile access systems create a digital record of when and how doors are opened and which credential was used. Mobile keys prevent the loss of physical keys that can be used for unauthorized access. Combined with CCTV monitoring in common areas, this provides solid security to keep guests safe, including mitigating the risk of human trafficking.

Connected systems also strengthen cybersecurity. By operating everything on a single network infrastructure with network-level security monitoring, operators can reduce points of entry and detect and respond to suspicious activity faster than with disparate systems running on separate networks.

The road ahead for hospitality

Much like the digital systems inside a modern car, the more connected the operational components in a hotel become—from thermostats and televisions to door locks and minibar sensors—the more intelligently the entire system can operate.

The goal isn’t simply to add more technology, but to build an integrated ecosystem where systems communicate and share actionable data, allowing operators to see the health of the entire property in real time.

As hotels continue to face rising costs and growing guest expectations, this capability will become essential for success. Just like a car, when operators can see how the entire machine is performing, they’re in a much better position to keep it running at peak efficiency.