SEATTLE (February 29, 2008) –
Progress in systems integration and interoperability
was the dominant theme this week at the fourth
annual Hotel Technology Next Generation (HTNG)
Members’ Meeting and Conference. More than 350
senior technology executives from hotels, vendors,
and consulting groups travelled from 18 countries
across four continents to gather at the Westin
Seattle Hotel for the two-day conference.
Recapping the event at the
closing ceremony, HTNG President Barry Shuler, who
also serves as Senior Vice President and Chief
Technology Officer of Marriott International and
Chief Information Officer of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel
Company, commented on HTNG’s increased maturity,
noting that this year’s conference “had a real sense
of collegial cooperation and collaboration, with
just an incredible amount of goodwill going back and
forth between industry partners and hoteliers,
coming together at a meeting place to try to make
things happen for our industry.” Shuler also noted
that this year’s conference showcased much more
maturity from HTNG’s workgroup efforts, with “more
progress and more concrete deliverables then we have
ever had before, with an incredible amount of
progress in the last year.”
Conference sessions highlighted
the progress of HTNG’s six workgroups, in which more
than 400 industry leaders and specialists are now
participating on an ongoing basis. HTNG’s
workgroups identify practical problems facing
hotels, which can be solved through cooperative
design, open standards, and vendor commitment to
implementation. Just a few of the workgroups’
accomplishments that were cited from the past year
include:
-
Adoption of version 2.1 of
the HTNG Web Services Framework, which provides
robust, seamless plug-and-play connectivity
between any two systems using a consistent
implementation of standards from the World Wide
Web Consortium (W3C).
-
Completion of the standard
for the HTNG Open Data eXchange (ODX) protocol,
which enables the transfer of data between any two
systems using the HTNG Web Services Framework.
ODX supports the migration of legacy interfaces
into the most up-to-date web-services
technologies, which can ensure high reliability,
redundancy, and third-party monitoring of even
legacy-system interface performance.
-
The first release of the HTNG
back office integration standard, which connects
property management and outlet point-of-sale
systems to back-office accounting systems.
-
The second major release of
the HTNG distribution specification, supporting
reservations delivery, rate and availability
updates, yield controls, and statistical
extracts. Among other improvements, the new
release incorporates logic for shares, group
blocks, and best available rate (BAR) handling.
The HTNG specification is a constrained version of
the widely supported OpenTravel Alliance
standards, requiring adherence to specified ways
of implementing those standards to achieve rapid
integration.
-
The first release of the HTNG
digital signage interface, allowing plug-and-play
connectivity between sales and catering systems
and digital signage systems to ensure real-time or
near-real-time updates of digital displays based
on group, meeting, and event programming.
-
The first reference
implementation of the HTNG identity management
specification, which enables centralized
monitoring of user rights across multiple systems
and greatly reduces the burden of regulatory
compliance.
-
Preliminary approval of the
first HTNG specification for set-top boxes, to
provide a neutral platform for deployment of guest
room entertainment systems that support off-the
air broadcast, cable, pay-per-view, Internet, and
custom programming.
-
Preliminary approval of the
HTNG auxiliary panel specification, which
describes the minimum requirements for a
connection panel that enables hotel guests to
connect to the in-room audio and video
technologies and use a variety of mobile devices
such as laptop computers, PDAs, MP3 players and
cameras.
-
Preliminary completion of the
HTNG distribution content management
specification, enabling the consistent and timely
delivery of rich descriptive content from hotels
into distribution channels, including
intermediaries and online travel agencies.
-
Initial directions of a new
HTNG workgroup to vastly reduce the burden of
regulatory compliance with the Payment Card
Industry Data Security Standard through a
methodology that reduces or eliminates the need to
store sensitive credit card information in
multiple systems.
-
The first release of a
reference architecture for hotel technology,
describing the key business processes and
interactions among systems. The reference
architecture is expected to ultimately serve as a
repository for all HTNG specifications, ensuring
consistency and version control, and allowing
hotels and vendors alike to use the same language
when describing the capabilities of their
systems.
Thought Leadership
Presentations
The conference kicked off with
a keynote presentation from David Margulius,
Principal Analyst with Enterprise Insight, who
frequently moderates CIO roundtables and is a
regular contributor to InfoWorld. Margulius shared
his insights on the thinking of CIOs from across the
spectrum of the technology world, and focused on
what hotel technologists could learn from disruptive
innovators and consumers.
Two thought leadership
presentations also highlighted practical examples of
common deployment and management of complex systems
provided by multiple vendors. One session, led by
Gustaaf Schrils, Vice President of InterContinental
Hotels Group (IHG), and Raul Arce, Vice President of
Travel & Transportation for IBM Corporation,
described the “Hotel-in-a-Box” program that IHG and
IBM are deploying in limited-service IHG properties
in North America, where one vendor provides total
support for deployment, configuration, training, and
management of all of the critical systems needed to
run a hotel.
The second session on this
theme, led by Edward Goldman, Vice President of IT
Strategy for Marriott International, with the
participation of a Marriott franchisee and four
vendors, described three distinct approaches to
coordinated management of network services being
used in various Marriott hotels in the United States
and Asia. The session highlighted the challenges of
ensuring that all network users within a hotel –
staff, guests, internal systems, guestroom systems,
and transient visitors – get the bandwidth they
should, while ensuring appropriate authentication,
network security, and regulatory compliance.
Yet another thought leadership
session highlighted the emerging world of unified
communications, with a presentation by Eric Swift,
senior director of the Unified Communications Group
at Microsoft, on the evolution and future of unified
communications and implications for hotel staff and
guests.
Rosemary Jay, who is one of the
world’s most recognized experts on data privacy law,
presented an overview of data privacy requirements
and the ways in which hotels can ensure that
sensitive guest data is used in ways that are
consistent with the evolving legal standards around
the world. Jay is Partner and head of the
Information Law group at UK-based Pinsent Masons law
firm.
Leadership Awards
HTNG also recognized the
leadership of key individuals from the hotel and
vendor community, who have been instrumental in the
progress of HTNG’s working groups. Top honors went
to three individuals who received the Directors’
Leadership Award, in recognition of outstanding
contribution to the success of HTNG and to the
entire hotel technology industry. The Directors’
Leadership Award is bestowed annually based on a
vote of the Directors of HTNG, who are comprised of
CIOs, CTOs, and other senior technology officers
from a dozen recognized hotel companies. It is
awarded to one hotelier and one person from the
vendor community. For 2007, the vote for the
hotelier ended in a tie, resulting in three
individuals receiving the Award:
-
T. Paul Armstrong, Executive
Vice President and Chief Technology Officer for
MICROS Systems, was recognized for his commitment
to supporting HTNG integration efforts through the
contribution of existing interface specifications,
and the deployment of very significant staff
resources to aid in the modification and
documentation to achieve standards that were
ratified by a broad spectrum of hotels and
vendors.
-
Natasha Nelson, Corporate
Director of Information Systems for Four Seasons
Hotels and Resorts, was honored for her leadership
of the HTNG Property Web Services workgroup and
successful implementation of the HTNG Single Guest
Itinerary specification in hotels.
-
Monika Nerger, Vice President
of Information Technology for the Americas for
Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group, for her leadership
as co-chair of the HTNG In-Room Technology
Workgroup and use of workgroup-developed solutions
in hotels.
In addition to the Directors’
Leadership Awards, several individuals were
recognized by their peers for their leadership in
various HTNG workgroup efforts, including:
-
John Bell, Enterprise
Architect for Marriott International, for his
contribution to the Architecture Workgroup
-
Dave Blancard, Architect for
Distribution Technology for Fairmont Raffles
Hotels International, for his leadership of the
Property/Distribution Solution Workgroup
-
Stephen Burke, Vice
President, Product Management for Knowcross
Solutions Pvt. Ltd., for his leadership as chair
of the Architecture Workgroup
-
Chris Farrar, President of
Percipia, for his leadership as chair of the IP
Telephony Team of the In-Room Technology Workgroup
-
Thomas Gresham, Development
Manager for MICROS Systems, Inc., for his
contribution to the Property Web Services
Workgroup
-
Natasha Nelson, Corporate
Director of Information Systems for Four Seasons
Hotels & Resorts, for her leadership as co-chair
of the Property Web Services Workgroups
-
Monika Nerger, Vice President
of Technology-The Americas for Mandarin Oriental
Hotel Group, for her leadership as co-chair of the
In-Room Technology Workgroup
-
Francesca Pasetti, Senior
Product Manager for Interfaces for Trust
International Hotel Reservation Services GmbH, for
her leadership of the Message Definition Team
within the Property/Distribution Solution
Workgroup
-
Victor Robison, Chief
Technology Officer of VFM Interactive, for his
leadership as chair of the Distribution Content
Management workgroup
About Hotel Technology Next
Generation
The premier technology
solutions association in the hospitality industry,
HTNG is a self-funded, non-profit organization with
members from hotel and hospitality companies,
technology vendors to hospitality, and other
industry members including consultants, media, and
academic experts. HTNG’s members participate in
focused workgroups to bring to market open solution
sets addressing specific business problems. HTNG
fosters the selection and adoption of existing open
standards. Where necessary, it also develops new
open standards to meet the needs of the global
hospitality industry.
Membership in HTNG is open to
hotel and hospitality companies, technology vendors
to hospitality, consultants, academics, press and
others. Currently nearly 375 corporate and
individual members from across this spectrum,
including most of the world’s leading hotel
companies and technology vendors, are active HTNG
participants. Workgroup proceedings, drafts, and
specifications are published for all HTNG members as
soon as they are created, encouraging rapid and
broad adoption. Specifications are released to the
public domain as they are ratified by the
workgroup. For more information, visit
www.htng.org.
*
* *
Source: Hotel Technology Next Generation
Contact: Douglas Rice, Executive Vice President &
CEO
+1 847 303 5560
www.htng.org