IHG Built a ChatGPT Booking App. Your Night Auditor Still Can't Fix the WiFi.
IHG just launched a ChatGPT integration that lets guests search and compare 7,000 hotels through conversational AI. The question nobody at headquarters is asking is what happens when the technology that finds the guest a room can't help the person who actually has to check them in.
So IHG launched a dedicated app inside ChatGPT on June 3rd. You can search hotels, compare rates, see real-time availability, pull up amenities, look at maps... the whole discovery experience, powered by conversational AI. Then when you're ready to book, it kicks you over to IHG's direct channels to complete the reservation. They're planning to bring the same conversational search to IHG.com and the One Rewards app next. This is the shiny version. Let's talk about the actual version.
Here's what this actually does: it's a distribution play dressed up as an innovation story. IHG is spending money to make sure that when someone asks ChatGPT "find me a hotel near the convention center in Nashville," IHG properties show up with real-time pricing and a direct booking link. That's not nothing. With 56% of U.S. travelers reportedly using AI for trip planning, being absent from that channel is a real risk. Wyndham launched a similar ChatGPT app in May. Accor did it in January. Marriott and Hilton are building their own conversational search tools. This is an arms race, and if you're not in it, you're ceding discovery to whoever is. I get it.
But here's where I lose patience. IHG has 160 million loyalty members and over 7,000 hotels. They appointed a Senior VP of AI and Architecture in January. They partnered with Google Cloud back in 2024 for a generative AI travel planner. They're migrating data infrastructure to the cloud, embedding machine learning into revenue management and marketing. That's a real technology roadmap... for headquarters. Now go walk into a 140-key Holiday Inn Express in a secondary market and ask the front desk agent what any of that means for their Tuesday night. Ask the GM how their PMS integration is running. Ask whether the WiFi infrastructure (probably wired sometime during the Obama administration) can handle the guest-facing tech the brand keeps layering on. I consulted with a hotel group last year that was running three different brand-mandated platforms, none of which talked to each other, and the front desk team had developed a workaround using a shared Google Sheet. A Google Sheet. That's the gap between the press release and the property.
Look, I'm not anti-AI. I'm an engineer. I've built booking systems. The architecture IHG is describing... separating discovery from transaction, using conversational AI for the search layer while routing the actual booking through owned channels... that's smart. It protects rate integrity, keeps the guest data in IHG's ecosystem, and avoids the OTA intermediary problem. Technically sound. But the Dale Test question here is: what happens when this AI-driven guest arrives at the property expecting the experience the chatbot described, and the property is running a skeleton crew with a PMS that crashed during the night audit? The technology that FINDS the guest the room is getting billions in investment. The technology that helps the person DELIVER the stay is still running on hope and a prayer at most properties. IHG reported $1.2 billion in operating profit last year. They returned $1.17 billion to shareholders through buybacks and dividends. The money exists. The question is where it flows.
Would this work at my family's hotel? The ChatGPT discovery piece... sure, if we were flagged. More eyeballs, more direct bookings, fewer OTA commissions. That math makes sense. But my dad would ask the same question he always asks: "What happens at 2 AM when nobody's here?" And right now, the answer is the same as it's been for years. The guest-facing AI gets smarter. The property-level technology stays stuck. And the person working the overnight shift is still solving problems with a three-ring binder and a phone call to a maintenance guy who may or may not pick up.
Here's what I'd actually do if I'm a GM at an IHG property right now. First, understand what this ChatGPT integration means for your inbound mix... if conversational AI starts driving discovery, your listing content (photos, amenity descriptions, rate accuracy) becomes even more critical because that's what the AI is pulling from. Audit your brand profile data this week. Make sure it's current, accurate, and reflects what a guest will actually experience when they walk in. Second, don't wait for the brand to solve your property-level technology gaps. If your PMS is crashing, your WiFi is dropping, or your team is running workarounds because the systems don't integrate... document it, cost it out, and bring it to your owner with a number attached. This is what I call the Vendor ROI Sentence... if you can't tie the investment to your P&L in one sentence, it's a story, not a solution. But it works both ways. If the brand can't tie their AI investment to your property's performance in one sentence, you deserve to ask why you're paying for it.