Bangkok at dusk: Under a single bulb, a woman works a street corner kitchen, one hand tossing noodles, the other handing a plate to a customer. It’s not fine dining. But somehow the experience can feel more special than when paying 10x (or more) for many luxury experiences.
Strip away the cost and what remains are some of the most enduring lessons in hospitality, lessons global brands can’t afford to ignore.
There’s no CRM logging guest profiles. No loyalty program recording preferences.
They don’t ask for your name, but they remember your face. They don’t upsell you. You feel like a regular from the first exchange. Their pace is fast but never rushed. You leave feeling not just served, but acknowledged.
This is not romantic nostalgia. It’s proof that hospitality powered by cultural instinct and emotional intelligence can outperform the most sophisticated systems. The core ingredients – authenticity, attentiveness, generosity, care – don’t require scale. They require intent. Even the world’s most renowned hotels struggle to achieve this.
Plastic Chairs, Michelin Hearts
It’s easy to underestimate the relevance of this example within the multi-trillion-dollar global tourism economy. Yet these micro-entrepreneurs offer a blueprint for guest-centric service that leaders across the industry should take seriously:
Emotional Presence Over Polished Performance: They welcome every guest with genuine kindness, whether local or foreign. Needs are anticipated without intrusion. There is no “brand voice” script, only authentic human engagement.
Lesson: Train teams to prioritize presence over performance. Sincerity creates belonging, and belonging builds loyalty.
Flow-Focused Service: Orders are taken before you sit. Plates arrive within minutes. The pace is efficient yet never mechanical – service choreography at its best.
Lesson: Map the guest journey. Remove friction. Empower staff to anticipate, not just respond. Efficiency becomes meaningful when it creates ease.
Transparent Value, Zero Pretension: Pricing is clear. The setting is democratic. There is no hierarchy, only inclusivity and fairness.
Lesson: Avoid complexity disguised as luxury. Clarity and inclusivity create trust that lasts.
Micro-Moments of Connection: A joke about the spice level. A sincere “come back tomorrow.” Small gestures that last longer than the meal itself.
Lesson: Encourage unscripted human moments. Ten seconds of sincerity can outshine a $10 upsell.
These behaviors are not accidental. They grow from cultural norms of generosity and humility. And they prove that hospitality’s edge comes not from marble floors or culinary awards, but from the intent behind every interaction.
In the Age of AI, the Most Human Brands Will Win
Bangkok’s street vendors expose an uncomfortable truth: the travel industry has often confused efficiency with hospitality. Apps can secure a booking in seconds. AI can resolve a query instantly. Yet neither can deliver the recognition of a familiar face.
The opportunity is not to resist technology but to let it carry the operational load so people can carry the emotional one. In an era where convenience is everywhere, the rarest luxury is still human attention – or, in other words, cultural memory. The next competitive advantage in travel will come from brands that scale their hospitality cultural memory as intentionally as they scale operations.
For Western brands, that means restoring the soul of service by recruiting for empathy and identifying the “cold spots” in the guest journey where personal touch has been stripped away.
Middle Eastern mega-projects must weave cultural traditions of welcome into their foundations before opening day. Mass tourism hubs can revive authenticity by easing strain on overcrowded areas, giving hosts the time and space to connect, and by measuring hospitality quality as rigorously as arrival numbers.
And for airlines, OTAs, and platforms, the task is to humanize digital touchpoints, layering in small human signals and ensuring guests can shift seamlessly from automation to a real person when it matters most.
The real differentiator is the cultural memory of hospitality – and most organizations have no clear strategy to measure, design, or scale it. Helping hone that strategy is an important focus of Skift Advisory.
The future of hospitality will belong to those who make every guest feel like they truly matter, whether it’s a street vendor in Bangkok remembering your face, a Lisbon innkeeper pouring a glass of port at sunset, or a safari guide in Kenya recalling your child’s favorite animal as the campfire burns low.
These moments outlast the journey. And in the end, the brands and destinations that thrive will be the ones that don’t just serve guests, but truly see them.
– Aleix Rodriguez Brunsoms is a Director of Strategy for Skift Advisory
About Skift Advisory
Skift Advisory is a consultancy that harnesses the power of brands, strategy, research, communications, and technology to create a unique competitive position and a blueprint for the future for leaders that span the travel, tourism and entertainment ecosystem.
We work with leaders of travel and tourism destination management organizations, operators, hoteliers, airlines, and investors to define their unique, sustainable competitive advantage and to develop, implement, and assess enduring tourism strategy. We are wholly-owned by Skift, the world’s most influential travel and tourism industry thought leader.