Demand Calendar Blog by Anders Johansson

Clarity Reveals Waste Along the Guest Journey

Written by Anders Johansson | 21 October 2025
Dan Heath defines waste in his book Reset as:
 
“Any activity that doesn’t add value for the customer.”
By that definition, hotels are full of it. Waste is the invisible cost that drains both productivity and passion. It frustrates staff, weakens the guest experience, and silently erodes profit. The irony is that most hotel leaders don’t see it happening — because it hides inside our systems, processes, and traditions.
 
If we follow the guest journey, stage by stage, it becomes clear just how much waste stands between the guest and the experience we want to deliver.
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Waste When We Attract

Every guest journey starts long before check-in — when someone begins imagining a stay. Here, waste appears as misdirected marketing: campaigns that target everyone, not the ideal guest. We pay for clicks that never convert, send emails no one reads, and publish offers that compete with our own channels. All that activity looks productive, but rarely moves the needle. The guest feels it too. Generic messaging creates no emotional connection. The moment of inspiration — that spark of “I want to stay there” — never happens. A hotel business intelligence system can expose this kind of waste instantly. By analyzing channel efficiency, market segments, and customer acquisition costs, leaders can see which efforts create real value and which are simply noise.

Waste When We Capture

When the guest decides to book, waste often meets them at the door. Slow websites. Inconsistent pricing. Complicated booking flows. We make guests repeat their details or face confusing rate structures that change across channels. This kind of waste doesn’t just frustrate — it repels. Guests abandon the process and book elsewhere, even if they love your property. With proper data visibility, we could see where friction kills conversion.

Waste When We Prepare

This stage is where internal waste often peaks. Before the guest arrives, departments scramble: Sales updates one system, operations another. F&B doesn’t see group details. Revenue updates forecasts manually. Housekeeping finds out about early arrivals too late. The result? Miscommunication, rework, and missed upsell opportunities. This is pure waste — work that adds no value from the guest’s perspective. The solution isn’t another meeting; it’s alignment through shared data. When everyone sees the same truth — reservations, expected spend, preferences, and arrival times — preparation becomes proactive instead of reactive.

Waste When We Deliver

The guest finally arrives — and we greet them with… paperwork. Manual check-ins, repeated questions, and staff typing behind screens instead of engaging with people. Guests feel like data entries, not human beings. Meanwhile, staff waste time copying information between systems instead of creating moments of hospitality. This is operational waste that directly damages guest experience. Technology should amplify human service, not replace it — by freeing employees from low-value tasks so they can focus on high-value interactions.

Waste When We Review

After the guest leaves, waste still lingers.
Many hotels collect feedback but never analyze it meaningfully. Surveys are read but not acted on. Valuable data from reviews, service recovery, or loyalty interactions sits idle in disconnected systems.
 
This is inventory waste in its purest form — storing information without turning it into insight. With a hotel business intelligence tool, these signals become part of a continuous improvement loop. You can link satisfaction scores to revenue performance, identify which experiences drive repeat stays, and make every stay a learning opportunity.

Why Waste Persists

Hotels are full of passionate, hardworking people. But passion doesn’t eliminate waste — systems do.
 
Most hotels were designed for another era:
  • Data lived in silos.
  • Processes favored control over collaboration.
  • Meetings substituted for clarity.
As leaders, we often confuse activity with value. We reward the busiest teams instead of the most effective ones. When I was a CEO, I learned that people don’t resist change — they resist confusion. Give them clarity, data, and purpose, and they’ll gladly stop doing what doesn’t matter.
 
That’s why the solution to waste isn’t more effort. It’s better visibility.

The Real Meaning of Productivity

Reducing waste isn’t about cutting costs — it’s about creating value.
A hotel free from waste can move faster, serve better, and make decisions based on truth instead of tradition. Every hour saved from manual work becomes an hour invested in creativity, innovation, and genuine hospitality. In the end, removing waste is an act of respect — for guests, for employees, and for the craft of hospitality itself. So ask yourself:
 
Where does your guest journey leak value — and what would it look like if every activity truly served the guest?

Final Thought

You don’t need more reports. You need to see clearly. Start by identifying waste — and you’ll start building a hotel organization designed to create value in every moment of the guest journey.