Doloca.net: Online Booking - Hotels and Resorts, Vacation Rentals and Car Rentals, Flight Bookings, Activities and Festivals, Tour

Thursday, March 22, 2018

Nobu Hotels' Secret Sauce + Lufthansa's Innovation Play + Tourism Jobs Spike

March 22, 2018 View in browser

Editor's Note

Depending on the hand a company has been dealt, it can look internally to spearhead growth or it can venture beyond the corporate fiefdom to fuel expansion. Today, we present two examples in the form of Nobu Hospitality and the Lufthansa Group. Nobu Hotels is leaning on its renowned restaurant brand to build its lodging portfolio so executives wouldn't think of opening a new property if a Nobu restaurant wouldn't work well at that location.

The Lufthansa Group, meanwhile, knows that its bureaucracy can be very resistant to change so it has turned to outsiders — people with no airline experience —to staff its Innovation Hub in Berlin. Its mission basically is to craft the airline of the future. Either method, namely looking internally or externally, can work, or fail. That's one of the things that makes the travel business so interesting.
Report: Insights in Digital Aviation 2018
Sponsored by London Aviation Festival
In this exclusive two-part report from our partner London Aviation Festival, you will gain insight into how today's digital aviation leaders are rethinking current processes and building digital into their DNA.
Learn More
Top Stories
Nobu Hotels CEO on a Restaurant-First Approach to Hospitality
It certainly helps to have your hotels named after a wildly successful global restaurant chain, but making sure people don't only think of your brand as a place to eat can be a challenge.

How Lufthansa Group Tries to Beat Back Its Own Bureaucracy
The bureaucracy at a major legacy airline often rivals that of a government. So when Lufthansa Group decided it needed an innovation hub, it purposely built it in Berlin, far from the main headquarters. That was probably a good idea.

Tourism Jobs Numbers Increase Despite Modest Introduction of Artificial Intelligence
Travel executives love to say that their employees are at the heart of their brands and they are on the front lines of the guest and visitor experience. Employees will toast to that notion, but hope they won't have to tussle with a robot or virtual assistant to prove their worth.

Apple Leisure Group CEO Believes Vacations Are Much Better Than Virtual Reality
The CEO of Apple Leisure Group isn't concerned about the prospect of virtual reality or other technology taking the place of actual vacations. But he is worried about the impact of policy that throws up roadblocks to traveling — a much more immediate concern.

Mexico's Volaris Sticks with Its U.S. Focus Despite Recent Stumbles
Yes, 2017 wasn't the best year for Volaris. But don't count out the airline. It has one of the lowest cost bases in the world. That's always a good thing — especially in a downturn.

The Current State of Restaurant Delivery Competition
As third-party delivery services claim the both headlines and diners' dollars, they're working to make themselves indispensable to restaurant operators. But operators, especially large companies, know they have leverage when it comes to working with a large organization.

Personalized Events Empower Planners and Attendees
Meeting and event planners know they need to do a better job tailoring events to their attendees and providing their sponsors with a stronger idea of how successful their partnership has been. New solutions will make it easier for them to make informed decisions moving forward.
Still Popular
Puerto Rico's New Tourism Push Faces Another Kind of Storm Six Months After Maria
Puerto Rico hasn't had the chance to grow up as a destination over the years, and its tourism industry finally thinks it has a shot to do that. But to become known for more than its beaches and golf, it'll have to overcome an intense political establishment that's been defined by its financial woes and disorganization.

Eurostar Tech Update Signals Action in Once-Sleepy Rail Sector
There used to be only two ways for railways to make money: luck and state handouts. But that's changing, as countries look at privatization and as railways look to technology to streamline operations. Sqills and SilverRail are two tech vendors that smell an opportunity.

TUI Group Is Quietly Joining the Cruise Heavyweights
TUI Group is slowly building up quite a formidable cruise operation. How long before it starts to consider buying out joint venture partner Royal Caribbean?
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Linked In Send via Email

For Gmail users: If you are using the tabbed inbox, Skift emails may be pushed to the 'Promotions' tab. To get updates from Skift direct to your primary inbox, drag and drop this email to that tab.

You received this email because you are subscribed to Skift Daily Newsletter from Skift.

If you'd like to unsubscribe from this email, click here

If you'd like to receive fewer emails, click here

If someone shared this email with you and you would like to subscribe, visit our newsletters page on Skift

No comments:

Post a Comment

Ethereum Miner - Mine and Earn free Ethereum

Video Poker Livestream in One Hour at 8pm EST!

  LIVESTREAM IN ONE HOUR! Watch Steve and Matt Play Video Poker Live From the Seminole Hard Rock Casino...