HOTELLIGENCE PODCAST

Hotelligence Podcast

The Hotelligence Podcast explores how hotel operators across different markets and property types navigate incidents, uncertainty, and risk in environments where liability, expectations, and tolerance for action vary widely. Hosted by Don Carr, who has owned and operated private security companies serving hotel properties, and Jim, a retired federal investigator, the podcast focuses on the space between awareness and action — where many real-world hotel decisions quietly live. Rather than offering tactics or prescriptions, the show examines how structure, neutrality, escalation, and decision-making responsibility are understood differently across hotel categories and markets, and why the same approach does not apply everywhere. The podcast is organized into seasons, each with a clearly defined scope.

  1. May 20

    Season 2, Ep. 5: When Escalation Feels Like Safety

    The call comes in at 11:47 PM. Your front desk agent has a situation. They don't want to handle it alone. So they call you. And the second you pick up, something just happened that nobody in the building understands yet, including you. The risk didn't move to someone more equipped to carry it. It moved to the person whose name is on the loan. This episode is for the owner who has taken that call more times than they can count and never stopped to ask what the call itself was doing. Don Carr and Jim Cords sit with a quieter truth than the operational playbooks teach. Escalation is rarely the moment a situation became serious. It is usually the moment someone decided the weight was heavier than they wanted to hold. The record that gets built afterward cannot tell the difference. Here is what most owners miss. Every time your property escalates, you are not just resolving tonight's incident. You are setting a baseline. The next time something similar happens and the agent doesn't call, the question in any review, any claim, any deposition is not whether they should have escalated. It is why they didn't. The threshold you set on a Tuesday at midnight becomes the standard you are measured against on every shift that follows. The real cost lands somewhere most owners never look. It lives in the gap between escalation that is deliberate and escalation that is reflexive. One is a defensible decision. The other is a habit the front desk built because no one gave them anything else to reach for. Structure is what changes the math. Not a thicker SOP binder. Something the agent at midnight can actually stand on, so the call upstairs happens when it should, and doesn't happen when it shouldn't. If you have ever picked up that phone at 11:47 and felt the weight land on your shoulders before you even heard the full sentence, this one is for you. Hosts: Don Carr and Jim Cords. Hotelligence is independently produced. No on-air product or company endorsements. Next episode: ambiguity. Why trying to resolve it too early can cost an owner more than the uncertainty itself. The Insider Briefing goes out Wednesday. Link is in the show notes. We're in this together. Together, we make hospitality stronger.

    8 min
  2. May 6

    Season 2, Ep. 3: When Visibility Feels Like Control

    Seeing more feels like being in control. That feeling is one of the most expensive assumptions in hotel operations. Visibility isn't neutral. The moment information becomes visible, awareness increases. Awareness creates expectation. Expectation invites response. And response — in a hotel with intentionally limited roles — creates obligation that no one in the building ever agreed to carry. No decision required. It happens on its own. Jim and Don examine why hotels are especially vulnerable to this. Not because visibility is wrong. But because visibility is consistently mistaken for preparedness. When something can be seen, guests and staff alike assume it is being watched. When it's being watched, they assume it's being managed. That assumption doesn't ask permission before it shifts responsibility. This episode looks at what happens when visibility starts doing the deciding. When attention migrates toward what appears most urgent instead of what actually matters. When dashboards and cameras and monitoring infrastructure quietly redefine what the property is responsible for — not through policy, but through presence. Structure doesn't require everything to be seen. It requires information to be placed correctly. Some information belongs preserved and quiet. Not surfaced. Not monitored. Just held. Visibility should follow role. When it starts redefining role instead, the exposure doesn't announce itself. It accumulates.

    5 min
  3. Apr 15

    Ep. 15: What Responsible Systems Refuse to Do

    This marks the conclusion of Season 1: Constraints, Neutrality, and the Cost of Urgency Season 1 of the Hotelligence Podcast examines how hotel operators across different markets and property types navigate situations where awareness increases faster than responsibility can safely expand. These episodes focus on the constraints that shape hotel decision-making — including neutrality, liability, escalation risk, and role boundaries — and why urgency and premature action often create additional risk rather than resolve it. Season 1 is intentionally non-directive and does not offer instructions or calls to action. In this episode of the Hotelligence Podcast, Jim and Don examine a principle that often gets overlooked after awareness increases: responsible systems are defined as much by what they refuse to do as by what they enable. The conversation explores why expanded capability does not automatically create obligation, how “doing more” quietly turns awareness into duty, and why refusal is not inaction but an intentional design choice. Jim and Don outline the boundaries responsible systems maintain — refusing to label people, escalate weak signals, promise outcomes, or force speed where structure is required. This episode focuses on restraint as governance, boundaries as protection, and why the most mature systems preserve responsibility by knowing exactly where their role ends. We’re in this together. The Hotelligence Insider Briefing A short written briefing that accompanies each new episode. Sent Wednesdays when the episode drops.   For hotel owners, operators, carriers, and counsel. https://hotelligencepodcast.com/

    6 min

About

The Hotelligence Podcast explores how hotel operators across different markets and property types navigate incidents, uncertainty, and risk in environments where liability, expectations, and tolerance for action vary widely. Hosted by Don Carr, who has owned and operated private security companies serving hotel properties, and Jim, a retired federal investigator, the podcast focuses on the space between awareness and action — where many real-world hotel decisions quietly live. Rather than offering tactics or prescriptions, the show examines how structure, neutrality, escalation, and decision-making responsibility are understood differently across hotel categories and markets, and why the same approach does not apply everywhere. The podcast is organized into seasons, each with a clearly defined scope.