With a push from novel technologies used in creative ways, and a pull towards authentic experiences that make us more human, the resulting tension is redefining our customers and the ways in which we serve them.
Customer passion isn’t a given and loyalty isn’t transactional. They’re tickets to something deeper: connection, immersion, a sense of place.
The Delta lounge isn’t just a space to wait; it's a signal of belonging, with speakeasy bars and Michelin-inspired menus. McDonald’s CosMc’s isn’t just a drink; it’s an aesthetic, a vibe, a post.
The new currency is less about rewards, and more about identity. The brands that last won’t just serve; they’ll see. They won’t just sell; they’ll shape the feeling that you were always meant to be here.
Here are the seismic shifts reshaping travel, hospitality, and dining in 2025—bold, visceral, inevitable.
Generated from rigorous research, refined with internal experts at Publicis Sapient, and scaled globally with the help of AI in analyzing global trend reports, this document uncovers critical consumer, technology, and social trends that are affecting companies now and over a 3-year time horizon.
Many of the trends described herein necessarily overlap with Publicis Sapient’s market-leading work in strategy, product, experience, engineering, and data/AI (our “SPEED” construct), while other trends explore relevant topics beyond what we do. In this way, we hope this report stands out not only for its insights, but for its integrity in helping our clients determine priorities in years to come. If you’re curious about how to harness the future inherent in these trends, give us a call; we'd love to leverage our digital business transformation expertise on your behalf.
Consumers are tired of algorithmic déjà vu. They want recommendations that feel like they’re discovering a hidden secret, something unexpected, yet delightful.
AI shouldn’t just predict what you like—it should expand your world. Consumers are tired of algorithmic déjà vu. They want recommendations that feel like they’re discovering a hidden secret, something unexpected, yet delightful. Like a friend who knows you well enough to get you that perfect gift you never would have chosen for yourself.
So what? AI plus the element of surprise equals a refreshing new perspective. While there is comfort in predictability and familiarity, consumers are increasingly seeking out experiences that expand their perspective and perhaps even their comfort zones, and brands should help facilitate this widening aperture. Those with the best data, and the ability to connect data, capabilities, and consumer identity will be the ones who win.
Where it’s happening:
63% of consumers say they are likely to visit a Detour Destination on their next trip. (Source: Expedia)
Consider: What data would make your product or service “the perfect gift”? How might we use CLV (customer lifetime value) to fine-tune our offerings? “Want to be an early adopter” is an incentive to try a new location. Use AI to curate unexpected travel itineraries, recommend off-menu dining experiences, and introduce hidden-gem destinations that customers didn’t know they needed. Predictability breeds indifference. The brands that win in 2025 will be those that make the unexpected feel inevitable.
Consumers don’t want just a space—they want stories. No one wants to stay in a blank slate. Consumers care about what's behind the brand and how it got here. They want to know the provenance of their food, of the land on which their lodging sits, and how their favorite place came to be. It's not one-way, either: people want to create and share their own story of how they've interacted with that brand, creating an even tighter symbiotic relationship.
So what? The places that matter (the ones people return to, talk about, carry with them) are the ones with a pulse, a past, a voice. For hotels, it’s about more than the physical plant and its amenities: it’s about how that property connects to the history, ecology, and culture of its location. For restaurants, it’s not just about the food: it’s about the health it engenders, the communities it’s sustaining, and the cultural moments it’s supporting. For newer brands, storylines aren’t brought out by heritage, but rather by authentic connection to the lives of their customers, and the recognizable pain or joy their targets are seeking to address.
Where it’s happening:
Consider: What stories exist within your brand? How might we manifest them, in digital and physical touchpoints? Do you have a story, or just a “brand position”? Take care to develop your story and then support with appropriate technology. Use guest profiles to tailor experiences based on past behavior, implement geolocation tools to deliver hyper-local recommendations, and integrate augmented reality or interactive apps that let customers explore a destination’s history and culture in real time.
The best travel, hospitality, and dining experiences are expanding the boundaries of their offerings with surprising connections. Your favorite hotel now includes a fitness membership, a co-working space, and an art residency. Your airline ticket comes with ride-sharing credits and dinner reservations. In 2025, experiences are ecosystems of partnerships without borders, creating expansive platforms for deepening engagement.
So what? Your customer wants more than a meal. Help them incorporate that meal or that lodging into other areas of their life they care about that provide delight, efficiency, or exploration.
Where it’s happening:
Consider: What new adjacent services could enhance day-to-day life and special moments? How do brands monetize partnerships effectively? Use AI to power cross-brand integrations, unify loyalty and payments, and create seamless travel, hospitality, and dining experiences.
Loyalty is no longer a punch card—it’s a belief system. Punch cards gather dust. Rewards emails go unread. The points economy is a relic. Instead, you find your natural alignment: the coffee shop that remembers how you take your espresso, the airline that donates miles to causes you care about, the hotel that stocks your favorite books on the bedside table. No points. No expiration dates. Just the quiet certainty that you belong.
Where it’s happening:
Consider: What are the true moments that matter in your customers’ experience with you? Keep in mind that they may not be the loudest or shiniest moments, but they may not be costly, either. How might we make those moments reinforce a sense of belonging, and not just a cold transaction? A robust customer identity program should go beyond pure data and be able to recognize what drives customer intimacy and ultimately devotion.
Whether it’s food, travel, or entertainment, consumers are seeking deeply satisfying experiences that nourish mind, body, and soul.
Sensory overload is out. Mindful indulgence is in. People don’t want more. They want to feel better. It's luxurious to be intentional. Whether it’s food, travel, or entertainment, consumers are seeking deeply satisfying experiences that nourish mind, body, and soul. With the rise of things like non-alcoholic alternatives and sleep-focused vacations, consumers are embracing healthy choices that present different socialization options.
So what? This shift demands that brands rethink indulgence. How do you make an experience feel decadent while still aligning with wellness trends? Restaurants and hotels alike must reframe luxury to stay ahead of changing behaviors.
Where it’s happening:
In just the past year, 1 in 4 global travelers has either reduced or stopped their consumption of alcohol.
Consider: How might you develop wellness products and services, even if you’re not a “health” company? How can you build a global-but-local perspective on what plays well in a regional context?
The future isn’t about looking back—it’s about bringing the past forward. Surrounded by screens in a world that moves ever-faster, consumers are longing for a connection to a time that seemed less artificial and digital. To get there, they are returning to old-school cool that’s been updated with modern sensibilities.
So what? Hospitality, travel, and dining brands can harness the desire for old-school value and vibe as long as it’s done authentically. In doing so, even newer brands can foster deeper, more loyal connections.
Where it’s happening:
Consider: How can nostalgia be engaged authentically? What multi-sensory experiences could brands create to connect customers to this longing, while respecting the desire to simplify? Leverage data to bring back classic products, personalize throwback recommendations, and design immersive campaigns that blend past and present.
Consumers don’t just want cheap. They want worth it. With inflation fatigue at an all-time high, businesses are recognizing that consumers want a break. QSRs (quick-serve restaurants) have responded with ever-more-competitive value meals that drive traffic but also erode margins. Whether this is a temporary accommodation or a new normal for price expectations, travel and dining companies are navigating new territory in defining what constitutes value in today’s economy.
So what? The battle isn’t about low prices—it’s about making every dollar feel maximized. QSRs will continue to demonstrate their contemporary relevance via family-friendly, affordable offerings that don’t feel like bargain-basements, but they will need to maintain their brand relationships with more engaging loyalty programs.
Where it’s happening:
Consider: How might we use AI to help increase customer delight and revenues? How can we safely experiment with new value offerings without eroding our brand or customer perception? How can value still have an element of fun? Consumers will pay if it feels like a win. Implement dynamic pricing, bundle high-value offerings to increase spend, and design loyalty programs that prioritize personalized rewards over discounts.
Magic fades without the human hand. The art is in the balance: knowing when to let the AI machine hum in the background and when to let people make it real.
The past few years have been about AI hype. In 2025, AI matures, goes mainstream, and drives true business value. AI is no longer the story—it’s the infrastructure. Invisible, inevitable, and shaping the world without a whisper. Much like the internet, we’ll soon take it for granted and expect it to hum in the background. In travel and hospitality, AI will accelerate and de-risk the innovation and customer experience (CX) design process, allowing for safe and scaled experimentation, while also increasing operational efficiency.
So what? The risk of this “everyday AI” is that in the desire for rapid progress, we forget to keep the human in the loop and launch shallow, low-value products because they were easy and safe to generate.
Where it’s happening:
“What is written without effort, is read without pleasure.” – Samuel Johnson
Consider: Where might your organization need to accelerate? Could AI help? How might we retain the human element of product development, but integrate AI? Consider an hour-glass product development approach with lots of input to generate ideas, but also lots of testing on the back end to make sure they measure up.
A rise in digital interactions and frictionless cashless payments is intersecting with dramatic declines in the cost to capture and analyze customer data. As a result, it’s finally affordable to identify your most valuable customers.
Loyalty isn’t a promise. It’s a pattern, traced in cashless swipes and scans, refined in the swift analysis work of AI. Traditional points-based rewards programs are losing relevance and usefulness as brands shift towards behavior-based incentives, connected to customer data platforms that feel more natural.
So what? Hospitality brands, ranging from high frequency/low-AOV (average order value) QSRs to low-frequency/high-AOV cruise lines, can all build customer data platforms and loyalty programs that inform promotions, customer investments, and product development. And in return for providing their data, consumers want to feel understood and valued. The future of loyalty isn’t transactional—it’s about finding the VIPs and making them feel like VIPs without them having to ask.
Where it’s happening:
Brand loyalty will decline 25%, but usage of loyalty programs will increase. (Source: Forrester)
Consider: How might we foster community among our consumer groups and create broader brand fans, not just individual relationships within their segment? How might we measure customer lifetime value at transaction and attitudinal levels? Don't chase; just attract. Gamification can entice customers between purchases, helping to tailor perks and rewards to behavioral archetypes, rather than outdated “earn and burn” models.
Robots are no longer hidden in the kitchen. Now, they meet you at your table. Automation was once invisible to the customer, relegated to warehouses and ghost kitchens. But in 2025, robots aren’t just behind the scenes. With an increase in processing power, decrease in IoT component prices, and onboard AI, they have become savvy and safe enough to show up in front of the customer.
So what? Realistic use cases for robots aren’t about replacing humans, they are about handling low-level tasks which then allows humans to focus on high-value customer and employee interactions.
Where it’s happening:
Consider: What business value could a robot provide? Use robotics to enhance service, streamline kitchens, and power drive-thrus that move fast without losing the human connection.
The future belongs to the brands that are chosen intuitively.
The world doesn’t need another five-star hotel, another app, or another airline rewards program. It needs brands that create experiences so rich, so intuitive and so inevitable that they don’t feel like a choice. And it needs brands that anticipate needs and create delight in ways that earn the hearts, minds, and wallets of their customers.
They feel like destiny. And they have a firm grasp on their identity, and their customers’ identities, in ways that allow symbiotic relationships to blossom, enabled by often-invisible technology.