Business Today Middle East
  • News
  • Business
    • Markets
      • Money
      • Tech News
      • Healthcare
      • Opinion
    • Appointments
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Energy
  • Hospitality
    • Hotel
    • Catering
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Sports
    • Cars
    • Travel
  • Design
  • Interviews
  • Regional Roundup
No Result
View All Result
SUBSCRIBE
Business Today Middle East
  • News
  • Business
    • Markets
      • Money
      • Tech News
      • Healthcare
      • Opinion
    • Appointments
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Energy
  • Hospitality
    • Hotel
    • Catering
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Sports
    • Cars
    • Travel
  • Design
  • Interviews
  • Regional Roundup
No Result
View All Result
Business Today Middle East
No Result
View All Result
Home Hospitality

To gain competitive agility, hospitality players must revamp their operating model, LIRA Strategy Partners founder says

hotelnewsme by hotelnewsme
November 13, 2020
in Hospitality, Interviews & Features, News, Suppliers
0
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Former managing director at Accenture Strategy Middle East & Turkey for the past nine years, Raffaella Campagnoli is now the founder and managing director of LIRA Strategy Partners, a company that specialises in accelerating ecosystems.

You might also like

Nakheel and Bildits Launch ‘Blueprint for the Future’

DLD Promotes Lease Registration Compliance with New Ejari Awareness Campaign

KSIA Advances Airfield Expansion with Third Runway Milestone

With over 20 years of strategy consulting experience in international firms, Campagnoli reveals insights on how hospitality can face challenges, the most recent being the COVID-19 global pandemic.

Tell us a bit more about LIRA Strategy Partners, and its role in accelerating ecosystems.
LIRA Strategy Partners is a new strategic advisory boutique specialised in accelerating ecosystems, as you correctly said. Our mission is to support companies in building their competitive advantage by orchestrating specific capabilities provided by a network of expert partners.

In our view, this is fundamental for sustainability in the long term for every business: continuously innovating, rapidly scaling, operating with agility and variabilizing costs.

Your role revolves around transformation, a much-needed aspect in the wake of the global pandemic and what is yet to follow; how do you think hotels will transform throughout and after the crisis?
The hospitality industry has faced unprecedented disruption over the last two decades: now, the spread of coronavirus around the world has brought the worldwide tourism industry to a sudden freeze.

For the tourism industry, COVID-19 is turning out to be a bigger crisis than the SARS outbreak, 9/11 and the 2008 financial crisis. According to STR, Average Daily Rate (ADR) in the US takes time to recover; ADR recovery took 36 months and close to six years to recover post-9/11 and -2008.

Hotel operators must master competitive agility to bring back profitability and focus on producing the significant value which had been lost. Transformation, in this case, means boosting growth, championing optimising costs and refreshing the operating model by streamlining work processes. Of course, all of this is implemented by protecting the health and safety of employees, consumers and business partners.

How can operators gain competitive agility and what would you say should come first?
The challenge for hospitality now is to return to profitability as quickly as possible in a sustainable way for the future. We don’t know how long this pandemic will last and, moreover, we need to be prepared to face something similar in the future. Here are three programmes I would suggest for hoteliers to start to gain competitive agility:

Re-design the journey, digitalised: This means capitalising on existing technologies for making the hospitality and travel experience, not only friction-less, but also – potentially – touch-less.

In the event of another pandemic or similar challenge, hotel operators need to ensure employees, guests and partners a safe, protected environment. This goal can be reached by re-designing the full journey, enabled by technology.

Tools such as, for example, IoT, facial recognition, digital keys, wireless menus, robot-driven services, virtual reality and chatbots can still deliver personalised experiences, but also limit human interaction through an almost fully sterile journey.

This may not be what hospitality would probably call an ‘unforgettable experience,’ but at least hotels could become more agile and limit fixed-costs factors.

Find fuel for change: Owners and operators should put in place a set of actions to find the money to fund growth and change. The answer, both for the short and long term, is optimising existing people and non-people costs.

Looking at labour productivity is certainly something that major hospitality players are already engaged in, but deep diving into SG&A expenditures is definitely key to facing tomorrow’s challenges.

Operating with a Zero-Based Budgeting (ZBB) mentality, like many other industries have done over the last 10 years, would bring not only a clear picture on who is spending how much on what, but also a significant amount of money to re-invest for growth.

For example, introducing clear cost accountability models, increasing back-office effectiveness with shared services and optimising recurring costs (such as waste management, sponsorship, partnerships and travel) could generate up to 20-30% savings on the cost baseline.

Enhance the operating model: In order to gain competitive agility by infusing innovation and optimising costs, hospitality players will have to set up their ecosystems to capitalise on its power and potential. The idea is very simple: keep the core and strategic capabilities inside and get non-core capabilities from specialised and partners.

In the extreme, this is the same model Airbnb or Uber have been using to shape their business model: asset-free, leveraging on a network of partners delivering the best service, and controlling and monitoring tools orchestrating service levels.

More innovative industries such as retail (think about Amazon) or fashion (for example, Kering) are driving towards this model. Hospitality should move towards that direction too: what’s the value of delivering training internally if we can partner with specialised operators? Why not to leverage on a digital marketing-specialised agency rather than sustaining the cost of an internal team for doing that? Why not to engage with outsourcers for integrating data and working on analytics?

What’s the value of sustaining the cost of http://www.staging.businesstoday.me/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/sample10.jpgistration and payroll, now commoditised on the market? We live in an era of specialisation, where every single piece of the value chain must be the best possible, executed for bringing organisations to success.

‘Digital’ is now the keyword for many industries; while hotels can utilise technology, it’s still an industry that relies heavily on offline factors. How can properties make the most of digitisation?
I think this is a very important point: hotel owners and operators are still very much driven by traditional business models. The key point is here is that technology isn’t necessarily a substitute to human interaction or personalised services: technology is an enabler and facilitator across the entire hospitality value chain.

Let’s look at guest experience, for example: nowadays, knowing the customer and anticipating their needs is key for any customer-driven organisation and this is why consumer goods companies and retailers have been investing in big data analytics and artificial intelligence.

The power of digitalisation can enhance the way hospitality offers its services to guests, increase efficiency (marketing efforts, for example), and streamline the very expensive labour cost as digitisation would reduce friction points (for example, automating non-core processes such as baggage storage and delivery).

In your research, you have stated that the ‘industry has been lagging behind in innovation efforts,’ can you please tell us a bit more about this and what it can do to accelerate?

The big challenge is that hospitality players need to build capabilities to capture the full value that can be generated by these technologies. For example, according to Gartner, 85% of Artificial Intelligence projects are expected to fail since many companies don’t have the foundations or the capital to implement such technologies.

To gain competitive agility by infusing innovation and optimising costs, hospitality players will have to revamp their operating model, consider digital innovation as a key aspect for facing the future and set up their ecosystems to capitalise on its power and potential.

By collaborating with specialised players from other industries, startups, and even competitors, hospitality can design, build, and execute the needed capabilities to lead in the ‘new’, gain momentum in the market and accelerate return on investment.

When it comes to collaborating with other industry players, how can hospitality go about doing that? What importance would you place on supplier/F&B relationships and partnerships?
As I mentioned, the future competitive strategy for such a traditional industry is revamping the operating model and capitalising on continuous innovation (products, services, customers and partners) to define the real entry barriers for the ‘new’.

Engaging with trusted partners and orchestrating this joint effort is the way to make it happen: in one of my recent projects, for example, we designed the ‘room of the future’ for a local hotel chain. The chain wanted to share the investment with other players: as soon as we went into the market, the kind of response we got from cross-industry operators was surprising – from FF&E manufacturers and digital advertising companies, to waste management software developers, virtual reality leaders, and payment systems operators…we found that a significant number of companies were keen on co-investing.

Of course, this is to be considered as the first step towards innovation – once piloted, then the partnerships need consolidation.

What’s the key piece of advice you can give hotels now and how do you see the future?
Making the new to happen isn’t complicated, but it requires a cultural change across the entire organisation. There are two main challenges that hospitality will have to overcome in the near future and revise their strategies accordingly:

Face the different innovation maturity levels across markets: Hospitality players might fail to provide a consistent experience across countries because of the gap in resources available and innovation maturity.

For this reason, there’ss no doubt that innovation strategy is to be centralised and the execution is to be “localised.” Yet, partner companies (orchestrators) can redefine localisation by connecting hospitality players with local partners, sponsors and suppliers in the ecosystem, who are the most suitable in driving the innovation strategy.

Fix the contention between fixing legacy systems and innovating: Due to inorganic growth operations in the hospitality industry, it often happens that players’ IT systems are fragmented and different. This has pushed hospitality players to fix the legacy systems in place.

Yet, the longer players take to innovate, the less relevant they will be for guests. Fixing the legacy system and innovating are not mutually exclusive – both can happen concurrently – while partner companies (orchestrators) can support players to innovate through the ecosystem.

Share30Tweet19
hotelnewsme

hotelnewsme

Recommended For You

Nakheel and Bildits Launch ‘Blueprint for the Future’

by Reeba Asghar
January 8, 2026
0
Through the programme, students explored key principles of sustainable material selection, carbon-conscious design, and effective waste management

Nakheel has joined forces with Bildits to introduce Blueprint for the Future, a first-of-its-kind program for high school students

Read moreDetails

DLD Promotes Lease Registration Compliance with New Ejari Awareness Campaign

by Reeba Asghar
January 8, 2026
0
The campaign is launched under the slogan ‘Step by Step’ and focuses on delivering clear, simplified awareness content that addresses the most common inquiries about Ejari services

Dubai Land Department (DLD) has launched a new awareness campaign on the Ejari system as part of its ongoing efforts to engage all customer segments

Read moreDetails

KSIA Advances Airfield Expansion with Third Runway Milestone

by Reeba Asghar
January 8, 2026
0
The third runway represents a milestone within the King Salman International Airport Master Plan

The construction of KSIA’s third runway, led by a joint venture between FCC Construcción and Almabani General Contractors

Read moreDetails

Unwind, Reconnect, and Discover JOMO at The Red Sea

by Staff writer
January 7, 2026
0
Unwind, Reconnect, and Discover JOMO at The Red Sea

Embrace the Joy of Missing Out through slow travel that transforms into a rejuvenating journey Framed by desert, mountains, and the sea, The Red Sea, located on Saudi...

Read moreDetails

Morocco Welcomes 19.8 Million Tourists in 2025 in Record Tourism Year

by Staff writer
January 7, 2026
0
Morocco Welcomes 19.8 Million Tourists in 2025 in Record Tourism Year

Morocco achieved a historic milestone in its tourism sector in 2025, securing a record-breaking 19.8 million arrivals, according to official data released by the Moroccan Ministry of Tourism....

Read moreDetails
Next Post

Ultra Brasserie and Reform Social & Grill launch first-ever meal plan service

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

UAE Team Emirates’ Pogacar dominates Il Lombardia

UAE Team Emirates’ Pogacar dominates Il Lombardia

October 10, 2021
DUKES Dubai management team named

DUKES Dubai management team named

October 6, 2015
Interview: All about the DEWA-owned Mai Dubai

Interview: All about the DEWA-owned Mai Dubai

November 10, 2020

Browse by Category

  • 1Win Brasil
  • 1WIN Official In Russia
  • 1xbet Russian
  • Analysis
  • Appointments
  • Architecture
  • Arts & Lifestyle
  • Bags
  • blockchain
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • BusinessToday
  • BusinessToday Magazines
  • Cars
  • casino
  • Catering
  • Commercial Vehicles
  • Commercial Vehicles
  • Conferences/Summit
  • Construction
  • Construction Business News
  • Deals
  • Decor Review
  • Design
  • Design ME
  • Education
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Events
  • Events
  • Expert Insight
  • Fashion
  • Featured
  • Features
  • Fintech
  • Fit Out
  • Food & Drinks
  • GM Leaders Conference
  • Government
  • Healthcare
  • Hospitality
  • Hotel
  • Hotels
  • Infrastructure
  • Interviews
  • Interviews & Features
  • Jewellery
  • Leaders in Hospitality Awards
  • Logistics News
  • Logistics News ME
  • Machinery
  • Magazines
  • Markets
  • Media
  • Money
  • Movie Reviews
  • Multimedia
  • Music
  • News
  • On Site
  • OP-ED
  • Opinion
  • Opinion
  • Photos
  • Pick of The Month
  • Politics & Economics
  • Power 60 2020
  • Projects
  • Projects
  • Property
  • Real Estate
  • Real Estate
  • Regional Roundup
  • Restaurants/Cafés
  • Retail
  • Reviews
  • Small Business
  • Sports
  • Supplier Focus
  • Suppliers
  • Suppliers
  • sustainability
  • Tech News
  • Telecom
  • Tips & Tricks
  • Transport
  • Transport
  • Travel
  • Travel & Hospitality
  • Travel & Tourism
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Watches
BusinessToday

Building #10, Dubai Media City
PO Box 502511, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

+971 4 420 0506

sales@bncpublishing.net
Jo@bncpublishing.net

CATEGORIES

  • 1Win Brasil
  • 1WIN Official In Russia
  • 1xbet Russian
  • Analysis
  • Appointments
  • Architecture
  • Arts & Lifestyle
  • Bags
  • blockchain
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • BusinessToday
  • BusinessToday Magazines
  • Cars
  • casino
  • Catering
  • Commercial Vehicles
  • Commercial Vehicles
  • Conferences/Summit
  • Construction
  • Construction Business News
  • Deals
  • Decor Review
  • Design
  • Design ME
  • Education
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Events
  • Events
  • Expert Insight
  • Fashion
  • Featured
  • Features
  • Fintech
  • Fit Out
  • Food & Drinks
  • GM Leaders Conference
  • Government
  • Healthcare
  • Hospitality
  • Hotel
  • Hotels
  • Infrastructure
  • Interviews
  • Interviews & Features
  • Jewellery
  • Leaders in Hospitality Awards
  • Logistics News
  • Logistics News ME
  • Machinery
  • Magazines
  • Markets
  • Media
  • Money
  • Movie Reviews
  • Multimedia
  • Music
  • News
  • On Site
  • OP-ED
  • Opinion
  • Opinion
  • Photos
  • Pick of The Month
  • Politics & Economics
  • Power 60 2020
  • Projects
  • Projects
  • Property
  • Real Estate
  • Real Estate
  • Regional Roundup
  • Restaurants/Cafés
  • Retail
  • Reviews
  • Small Business
  • Sports
  • Supplier Focus
  • Suppliers
  • Suppliers
  • sustainability
  • Tech News
  • Telecom
  • Tips & Tricks
  • Transport
  • Transport
  • Travel
  • Travel & Hospitality
  • Travel & Tourism
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Watches

BROWSE BY TAG

Abu Dhabi bank barrel basket Business Company Construction COVID-19 crude design Development Dubai Economic Emirates Energy exchange Financial GCC Global gulf index Interiors International Kuwait Kuwaiti market Middle East Minister oil OPEC price qatar rate Real estate Saudi arabia shares stock technology trade traders trading uae USD US dollar World

© 2026 BusinessToday . All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Contact Us

© 2026 BusinessToday . All Rights Reserved.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?