Our
digital experiences are altered by layers of data; we are tracked via GPS,
monitored through our click trail, spending habits and site behaviors. Anyone
who’s ever planned a trip knows this. As you gather and assemble data,
travel sites begin learning more about your intentions — the location, who is
traveling and budget all work to curate the perfect experience.
This
data can help you make informed, better decisions. A museum may be recommended,
or a popular brunch spot; recommendations to improve our experiences. When the
recommendations reflect an authentic understanding of neighborhoods and what
they offer, we call them “hyperlocal.”
If we
want a personal, truly meaningful connection with the places we travel to, we
need to zoom in on the microdata that builds a digital footprint. It creates
the opportunity to go global, efficiently. It affects every part of the
ecosystem by making even the most curated nuances entirely scalable. This
capability holds the key to peak customer satisfaction.
We
willingly submit our data everyday, allowing our lives to be driven by an
algorithm. This data then not only feeds our decisions, but also feeds others’
planning a similar stay. After all, the next four-person family has different
needs and interests that the algorithm didn’t consider. This data is often
limited to metropolitan areas, without much option to narrow it down to
suburbs, or even better, the unique and intricate neighborhoods that make up
the city’s social infrastructure.
Hyperlocalization: The human experience
Neighborhoods
are inherently intimate. By proximity alone, groups of people can collectively
experience the same defining moments and culture, and create similar memories.
These intricate, layered systems are always evolving and growing, creating a
richer backlog of information on the smallest, most invisible of
barriers.
It is
not always easy though, to discover these experiences. When we book a hotel, we
are told about its basic offerings. We do not often have an in-house
concierge to plan our excursions, introduce us to local experiences, or
examine the safety of our location. Technology that is inspired by
hyperlocal data can play a central role in emotionally-resonant
personalization.
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Two
blocks can be the difference between office buildings and authentic restaurants
and two more can be somewhere that locals would advise you to avoid. A simple
search engine may not be able to tell the difference. What can? Leveraging data
that zooms in closer can help with a safer decision or route.
We are
living in a pivotal time when artificial intelligence plays a large role in
not only technology, but every day discussion and decisions. But this pool of
information is only beneficial when it is informed by the human experience.
Especially when it comes to information on well-being and accessibility,
hyperlocal data must be dynamic. That is where AI fails to act alone.
Technology
is a necessary component in how we report and analyze safety at the hyperlocal
level — working in tandem with the residents and visitors experiencing their
neighborhoods — yet it can never fully replace the human
experience. The fabricated consciousness behind ChatGPT cannot independently
roam and report on our neighborhoods. AI relies on the input of human
knowledge.
Hotels
should consider what data-led, human-informed hyperlocal insights can do for them as providers. Real-time safety data is invaluable for
everything from concierge recommendations to your pricing models and
elasticity. Although our data is collected every time we skim the terms and
conditions, or jump to accept cookies, the results we get from our searches are
generalized. Our data has done enough to zoom out and expand our borders, but
now it must turn inwards, to bring us a richer, safer experience.
Tech’s role in hyperlocal: To empower and to limit
Technology
has made accessing information and communicating easier than ever before,
including our neighborhood and its community. Through apps like Nextdoor and
Ring Community, we can get a collection of anecdotal experiences and
collaborate together to meet individual needs. However, these forums can be
biased; they also exclude the experiences of those who do not live in the
neighborhood.
What’s
more, accurate, hyperlocal data does not just end at regular updates.
Location-based data, feedback loops, self-reporting, and multiple sources are
required to inform well-rounded decisions. If all this information can be
gathered and easily accessible, pinpointing exact locations that cater to
specific needs, the hard work is done for us.
Hyperlocal
data must also be dynamic — in the same way Google Maps accesses our location
in the moment, so too must our safety data. Wherever we go — and whenever we
require it — we need access to information regarding unsafe water,
illness outbreaks or after-dark neighborhood experiences. This information
exists — it is how safety scores have been created for years — but few have
granular access to it.
We have
reached a point where empowered, measured and safe self-reporting is possible.
Through cell phones, wearables and other devices, we can identify a degree of
hyperlocality as close as two or three blocks. We’re capable of calculating
safety at minute distances, informing all stakeholders and individual
travelers with ultra-refined, location-specific data. Hotels, rentals,
ride shares and all tourism alike can harness this power.
By
delivering hyperlocal data we can unlock untapped potential for changing how
tourism works on a digital level. With support from the tourism industry and
its counterparts, these safety features can incentivize more travelers to
explore beyond the closest coffeeshop, encouraging broader economic prosperity.
By
empowering locals and tourists alike to report real-time safety issues on a
block-by-block basis, we are able to immediately measure the trends and capture
safety progress to appropriately score and inform the community at-large. In
conjunction with neighborhood statistics, hyperlocality can include qualitative
and quantitative data to remain fluid and not static.
Hyperlocalized
data creates the personalization that reflects our appetite or unique
experience and embraces a traveler’s individuality, while keeping them safe in
foreign places. When we zoom out on this collaborative data, we are able to see
a more holistic view of our cities — demonstrating the reciprocal power of
hyperlocal information.
The
beauty in technology is that what we put in can be exceeded by what we get out.
The power of travel is the power of hyperlocal.