Choice Hotels Just Shipped Four AI Tools at Once. Let's Talk About What They Actually Do.
Choice Hotels unveiled Business Direct, EasyBid, RAISE, and CHARLIE at its 70th annual convention, promising AI-driven revenue and efficiency gains for franchisees. The question isn't whether the tools sound impressive in a ballroom demo... it's what happens when a 90-key owner with one person on the night shift tries to use them.
So Choice dropped four product names in one convention keynote... Business Direct, EasyBid, RAISE, and CHARLIE... and every one of them has "AI" somewhere in the description. I want to be fair here, because some of what they announced is genuinely interesting. But when a franchisor rolls out four tools simultaneously and wraps every single one in AI language, my first instinct is to separate what's real from what's dressing.
Let's start with the one that actually has numbers behind it. EasyBid, the group RFP tool, reportedly cut response times by about 30% in Q1 2026 and bumped conversion rates by roughly 250 basis points. That's specific. That's measurable. And the EasyBid Plus layer, where Choice responds to RFPs on behalf of owners who don't have a sales team, is solving a real problem I've seen at dozens of independents and smaller franchised properties. If you're a 120-key Comfort Inn without a dedicated sales coordinator, group RFPs either sit unanswered or get a half-hearted reply three days late. Automating that response at the brand level, at no additional cost to the owner... that's a workflow I can point to and say yes, this addresses something broken. The mechanism makes sense. I want to see the conversion numbers at six months, not just Q1, but the architecture is sound.
RAISE is where I start squinting. It's described as a rate management tool that uses AI to "provide relevant information and maintain competitiveness." That language is doing a lot of work while saying almost nothing. What model? What inputs? Is this a recommendation engine that suggests rate adjustments, or is it actually pushing rates to the PMS? Does it account for comp set positioning, or is it optimizing against Choice's own loyalty contribution targets? (Those are very different objectives, and if you've ever watched a brand's revenue tool optimize for the brand's interests rather than the owner's, you know exactly what I'm talking about.) Joshua Sloser, Choice's Chief Commercial Officer, said RAISE will "simplify pricing and inventory management." Simplify for whom? The owner managing rates at 11 PM, or the brand trying to standardize yield across 7,500 hotels? I'm not saying it's bad. I'm saying I need to see the mechanism before I call it good. "AI-powered rate management" is a sentence that could describe anything from a sophisticated machine learning model to a rules engine with a new logo.
CHARLIE, the AI virtual assistant, is the one that concerns me most. An AI "digital coach" that supports hotel teams through Choice's operating platforms sounds great in a convention demo. But here's what I keep coming back to... what happens when CHARLIE encounters a scenario it wasn't trained on? What happens when the front desk agent at 2 AM asks it something edge-case and gets a confident wrong answer? I've built systems that worked beautifully in testing and spectacularly failed in production because hotel operations generate situations no training dataset anticipates. A guest checking in with a reservation under a name that doesn't match their ID because their company booked it. A group block that released early because someone fat-fingered a date. A loyalty member insisting on a benefit the property doesn't offer. These aren't rare events. They're Tuesday. And if CHARLIE's fallback is "contact support," you haven't replaced the problem... you've added a step to it.
The bigger picture here is actually worth paying attention to, though. Choice completed its cloud migration to AWS in January 2024. The enterprise AI integration with AWS AgentCore announced in April 2026 gives them a real infrastructure backbone. That's not nothing. Most hotel companies are still running pilot programs and calling it "AI strategy." Choice is at least building on a unified architecture, which means these tools have a chance of actually talking to each other instead of being four separate databases with a shared login. Anna Scozzafava's comments about "agentic commerce" (where AI agents book travel on behalf of consumers) suggest Choice is positioning for a distribution shift that most hotel companies haven't even started thinking about. Whether that shift happens in 2027 or 2032 matters a lot for the ROI timeline... but at least someone's asking the question. My concern isn't the strategy. It's the execution gap between a convention stage and a property in Shreveport with a PMS that was last updated in 2019 and a GM who just wants the WiFi to stop dropping during check-in.
Here's what to do if you're a Choice franchisee who just sat through that convention. EasyBid Plus is the one to activate first... if you don't have a dedicated sales person handling group RFPs, let the brand do it and measure the results against your current close rate over 90 days. That's free revenue you're probably leaving on the table right now. RAISE... don't hand over rate management without understanding exactly what it's optimizing for. Ask your franchise business consultant one question: "Does this tool optimize for my RevPAR index or for Choice's loyalty contribution?" If they can't answer that clearly, keep your hands on the wheel. This is what I call the Vendor ROI Sentence... if Choice can't tie each tool's value to your P&L in one sentence, it's a story, not a solution. And CHARLIE... let your team use it for basic queries, but make sure your night auditor knows that when the AI gets it wrong (and it will), the old way still works. Technology should be the safety net, not the tightrope.