In Brief: Mike Pavicich discusses the potential disconnect between rapid technological advancement in the hotel industry and customers’ ability to keep pace, suggesting it could affect the user experience.
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Is Hotel Tech Moving Too Fast and Leaving Customers Behind? – Image Credit SalesAndCatering.com
The pace of innovation in hospitality technology has accelerated dramatically in recent years. Cloud platforms, data integration, and now artificial intelligence are reshaping how hotels manage everything from distribution to guest engagement.
For software companies, this acceleration often translates into a competitive race to release new capabilities as quickly as possible.
But from the perspective of hotel operators, the experience can feel very different.
Sales teams, revenue leaders, and property managers operate in environments defined by constant demand. Incoming inquiries, active negotiations, internal coordination, and day-to-day operational challenges leave little room for experimentation with complex new tools.
This creates a critical tension in the technology ecosystem.
On one hand, innovation is essential. The industry cannot remain competitive without modern systems capable of supporting faster decision-making, improved analytics, and automation of routine tasks.
On the other hand, the success of any technology ultimately depends on adoption.
Hotel leaders are increasingly aware that rapid product development does not automatically translate into operational value. A feature that appears impressive in a product announcement may deliver little benefit if teams struggle to integrate it into their daily workflows.
This is particularly true in hotel sales operations, where processes are highly dynamic and involve multiple stakeholders.
Proposals must move quickly. Customer expectations are immediate. Teams rely on systems not only for data management, but also for coordination across departments and properties.
In this environment, innovation must be paired with usability.
The most effective technology providers are recognizing that the true measure of progress is not the volume of features released, but the degree to which those features meaningfully improve how customers operate.
That requires a different mindset.
Instead of focusing solely on the speed of the product roadmap, successful technology companies are investing more heavily in understanding how their customers actually work. Product decisions are increasingly shaped by direct feedback from hotel operators, revenue leaders, and sales professionals who rely on these systems every day.
This collaborative approach may appear slower from the outside, but it produces more sustainable outcomes.
In hospitality, technology should not pull the industry forward faster than its operators can realistically move.
The companies that will define the next generation of hospitality technology are those that advance alongside their customers—introducing innovation in ways that strengthen operations rather than disrupt them.
When technology evolves in a way that respects those realities, adoption tends to follow.
Progress, after all, is only meaningful when the people using the technology can move forward with it.
About Mike Pavicich

Mike Pavicich is the Global Sales Vice President at SalesAndCatering.com, where he leverages over 20 years of rich experience in the hospitality industry. His professional trajectory is marked by a series of leadership roles across prestigious hotel brands, demonstrating a consistent ability to drive sales performance and revenue enhancement. Mike’s roots in the industry trace back to fundamental roles in sales and operations at distinguished establishments such as Hyatt Hotels, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, and Station Casinos.
Mike’s career trajectory shifted when he began exploring the synergistic blend of technology and hospitality. His contributions have been pivotal in advancing growth-driven solutions at leading technology firms, including Orbitz (now part of Expedia), Rainmaker (later acquired by Cendyn), and Sabre. In a recent role, he played a key part in managing the gaming markets for Priceline-Agoda. As a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, class of 1999, Mike combines a profound understanding of the hospitality sector with a keen insight into technological innovations.
Outside the professional sphere, this industry veteran is a dedicated family man residing in Las Vegas. When not working, he relishes quality time with his wife and two teenage sons, passionately supports the UNLV Running Rebels basketball team, and contributes to the community as a volunteer youth lacrosse coach.
Connect with Mike on Linkedin

About SalesAndCatering.com
SalesAndCatering.com provides the most affordable full-featured Sales and Catering systems for hospitality. Its STS Cloud Sales and Catering system is widely installed and engineered to give property sales teams the sales tools that help them achieve their goals. SalesAndCatering.com’s systems are developed and supported by the company’s US-based offices. It is a trusted full-service sales and catering partner that delivers solutions via a software-as-a-service model that ensures greater client communication to streamline the sales process and maximize staff productivity. SalesAndCatering.com’s systems help hotel companies meet revenue goals through anytime-anywhere data access and integration with multiple PMS systems. STS Cloud delivers unparalleled performance to help you thrive in today’s competitive sales environment.
For more information, please visit salesandcatering.com.













