Episode 34

Ted Horner: Navigating hotel tech ROI, AI, and the future of hotel profitability

In this episode, hospitality technology pioneer Ted Horner challenges the hotel industry’s outdated approach to technology and profitability. He argues that major hotel brands now operate more like marketing companies, while hotel owners struggle with razor-thin margins as OTAs take increasingly large commissions. Ted also explains why the industry continues to underinvest in technology, pointing to weak ROI cases from vendors. Looking ahead, he predicts a more seamless, mobile-first guest experience that blends high-tech convenience with personalized service.

 

About the guest

Ted Horner

Ted Horner

Managing Director, E. Horner & Associates

 

Ted Horner is a globally recognized hospitality technology consultant and Managing Director of E Horner & Associates, with more than 40 years of experience helping hotels navigate digital transformation. A pioneer in hospitality tech, he has been a leading advocate for open technology standards and smarter hotel operations, earning recognition as the first non-American inducted into the HFTP International Hospitality Technology Hall of Fame. Today, he continues to advise hotel owners and operators on technology strategy, profitability, and the future of guest experience.

AI-generated transcript

Sebastien Leitner


Welcome to The Turndown. My next guest argues that hotel brands have become marketing companies, warns that owners are spending too little on technology to survive the next decade, and predicts that front desks, room phones, plastic key cards and entire hotel departments could disappear faster than the industry expects.


Meet Ted Horner, a hospitality technology pioneer who helped shape the industry before digital strategies even existed.


A co-founder of HT and G and the first non-American inducted into the HFTP Hall of Fame, he has spent four decades attending high-tech and advising hotel owners globally.


We dive into AI agents, the future of hotel loyalty and why OTAs have become more profitable than the hotels themselves. In short, TED doesn’t hold back. Let’s get into it. I’d love to get going. We are typically opening up with sort of the standard opening question, which is what keeps