Introduction: The syncretisation of differentiated managerial paradigms – ranging from classical dispositions to systemic and situational approaches – predetermines the capacity of hospitality enterprises to manoeuvre effectively within a turbulently evolving market landscape, ensuring a heightened degree of reactive adaptability to exogenous challenges of diverse provenance and intensity. The institutionalisation of adaptation strategies within this context emerges as an imperative component of an antifragile operational framework for entities within the hospitality sector, wherein intensive technological transformation and the dynamic evolution of consumer preferences continuously modify dominant managerial practices. Innovation-driven trajectories in the hospitality domain are reflective not only of the specific exigencies of target clientele and their solvency levels but also of the relativised parameters of market conjuncture, collectively underscoring the exigency of a polyphonic, multiparadigmatic discourse for the optimisation of adaptive matrices and the formation of viable innovation clusters.Objective: The principal aim of this investigation is summarizing patterns of efficacy inherent in the utilisation of a multiparadigmatic methodology of business management within the hospitality sphere, with an emphasis on the construction of sustainable adaptive mechanisms for enterprises confronting the exigencies of a postmodern operational environment. In parallel, the study seeks to identify adaptive strategies and innovative constructs capable of enhancing competitiveness, transforming operational processes, and meeting the evolving demands of consumers.Methods: The methodological apparatus employed encompasses a synthetic amalgamation of comparative analysis, systematisation, generalisation of empirical data, and structured surveying.Results: The analysis of survey data substantiates that the segmental structure of the hospitality market exhibits a pronounced predisposition toward autonomous hotel units, which constitute 80% of the total sample, whereas motels comprise 10% (122 entities), national hotel chains 5% (61 entities), hostels 4% (49 entities), and international hotel chains a mere 1% (12 entities). The implicit dominance of the classical management paradigm – employed by 512 establishments – attests to a deeply entrenched institutional inertia within prevailing governance models. Simultaneously, it has been identified that 39.6% of independent hotels articulate a high degree of decision-making flexibility, serving as an indicator of their latent adaptive potential. The principal impediments to the implementation of a multiparadigmatic approach are identified as resistance to organisational transformation (39.4% in independent hotels) and the complexity of integrating conceptually disparate managerial doctrines (39.3% in motels and 34.5% in hostels). Notably, in the category of international hotel chains, the capacity for rapid responsiveness to environmental fluctuations is defined as the key vector of adaptation (59.8%), a figure that resonates with similar tendencies among independent hotels (49.5%).Conclusions: The analysis of innovation drivers reveals that intensifying competitive pressures, shifts in consumer behaviour, and aspirations for revenue augmentation serve as the predominant motivational determinants, with such factors being most acutely actualised in international hotel chains. Concurrently, it has been established that hostels and motels face greater impediments arising from constrained resource endowments and insufficient qualification levels among personnel.
Honchar et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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