SACM - France

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://drepo.sdl.edu.sa/handle/20.500.14154/9654

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • ItemRestricted
    Exploring the Impact of Cybersecurity Incidents on Hotel Operations and Reputation in Saudi Arabia
    (Saudi Digital Library, 2025) Alasiri, Abdullah; Khurdi, Ruby Bakshi
    The hospitality industry continues to integrate various technologies to improve guests’ satisfaction and optimize organizational performance. However, this reliance also poses a cybersecurity threat to hotels according to Al Hamli and Sobaih (2023). The expansion of the tourism and hospitality sectors within Saudi Arabia under vision 2030 also serves to explain the increased vulnerability to cyber threats. Statement of the Problem The hotel industry is among the most vulnerable to cyber threats because of the kind of information that it processes. A cyber security attack can hinder business activities in a hotel and negatively affect the organization’s reputation, resulting in considerable losses and low customer confidence (Almaiah et al., 2022). The purpose of this research is to examine the effects of such occurrences on the hotels’ business in Saudi Arabia.
    1 0
  • ItemRestricted
    Exploring the Impact of Vision 2030 on Saudi Arabia's Hospitality and Tourism Industry
    (Saudi Digital Library, 2025) ALJOHRA, TAYEB; Annamarie, Sisson
    This study investigates the impact of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 on the country’s hospitality and tourism industry, focusing on how national reforms are experienced and interpreted by key industry stakeholders. Vision 2030 aims to diversify the Saudi economy, reduce oil dependence, and develop a globally competitive tourism sector through giga-projects such as NEOM, AlUla, and the Red Sea. Using a qualitative, interpretivist methodology, the research draws on semi-structured interviews with 15 professionals representing public agencies, giga-project management teams, and private enterprises across various regions. Thematic analysis reveals four core findings: economic transformation, sustainability implementation gaps, cultural authenticity concerns, and stakeholder coordination challenges. The study applies tourism development and destination branding theories to contextualize these themes, highlighting both the ambitious scale of reform and the practical frictions encountered during implementation. Contributions include an empirical perspective on stakeholder alignment, a critique of top-down planning in emerging destinations, and recommendations for more inclusive and sustainable tourism governance. This research offers theoretical and practical insights for policymakers, industry leaders, and scholars examining transformational tourism agendas in developing economies.
    1 0
  • ItemRestricted
    The Impact of Implementing Development Policies for Saudi Hotels and Lodging Industry on Rating and Customer Satisfaction: Challenge, Critical Success Factors, And Opportunities
    (Saudi Digital Library, 2025) Barayan, Ayman; Witte, Alexandra; Moysidou, Mania; Annamarie, D. Sisson
    This study investigates how Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 diversification agenda translates into measurable performance gains across the Kingdom’s upscale hotel sector. A crosssectional survey was distributed to managers and frontline staff in 4- and 5-star properties in Riyadh, Jeddah, Makkah–Madinah, and the Eastern Province. Using a rigorously validated instrument (Cronbach’s α = 0.957), 312 usable responses were analysed with Pearson correlations and hierarchical linear regressions. Results show that the intensity of Vision-aligned policy implementation correlates strongly and positively with overall hotel ratings (r = 0.776) and customer satisfaction (r = 0.751) at the 0.01 significance level. Regression models confirm that Vision-driven initiatives explain 60 % of the variance in hotel ratings (R² = 0.60; β = 0.659, p < .001) and 56 % of the variance in customer satisfaction (R² = 0.56; β = 0.645, p < .001). Qualitative follow-ups identify staff upskilling programmes, green-retrofit incentives, and AI-enabled guest-service apps as the most influential levers linking national policy to firm-level outcomes. These findings provide the first empirical evidence that Saudi Arabia’s macro-level diversification strategy can be converted into micro-level performance improvements, offering hotel operators and policy-makers a clear roadmap for leveraging Vision 2030 to enhance competitiveness, guest loyalty, and revenue growth.
    1 0

Copyright owned by the Saudi Digital Library (SDL) © 2026