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The self-service travel trend spreads from airports to hotels


Skift Take

Self-service check-ins won’t work for every hotel: Business travelers want these one-stop services, but leisure travelers want see the services they pay for and appreciate the touch of humanity.

Hotels are changing the way guests check in to their rooms, eliminating the traditional stop at the front desk to speed up, simplify and, in some cases, personalize the process.

When guests arrive at citizenM, a small, boutique hotel in Amsterdam, Glasgow and London, they check in at a kiosk and go straight up to their rooms, stopping only to speak to a roving hotel “ambassador” if they have a question...

The hospitality industry is moving toward more automated check-in systems, said Tyler Craig, vice president and general manager for the NCR Corporation’s travel business, which develops these systems for hotels.

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