
Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association has named respected Caribbean hotelier Nicola Madden-Greig to be its new president.
The award-winning Jamaican businesswoman was elevated to the position during CHTAโs annual general meeting last week. She will serve the final year of a two-year term vacated by Pablo Torres, who tendered his resignation as he assumed broader regional responsibilities with Hilton International.
Madden-Greig recognized Torres for his work as president, thanking him โfor stepping up to the plate to lead the association at a time of extreme crisis.โ She lauded his leadership during the pandemic and wished him well in his new role as area vice president of operations โ Full and Focus Service Hotels in the Caribbean, Mexico and Central America for Hilton International.
In accepting the presidency, she said technology and sustainability will be two of her top priorities as she embarks on a three-year term. She looks forward to growing CHTAโs membership and helping the association become an even stronger voice for Caribbean tourism.
Declaring that โCaribbean tourism must not only survive but thrive,โ Madden-Greig stressed the importance of better collaboration, establishing new partnerships and strengthening existing ones as the industry grapples with the ongoing threat of climate change and the continuing challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Looking to the future, she said, โClimate change still presents an existential threat to a sustainable industry.โ She added that technology has vastly changed how tourism works.
โFrom the way we tackle our tasks to how we communicate with co-workers, suppliers and current and prospective customers, technology has created ripples of change that have impacted companies in every industry,โ she said.
As an example, she pointed to the tourism industryโs response to COVID-19, โwhere the virtual world became front and center and a proliferation of apps, communication tools such as Zoom and Microsoft Teams and other platforms became indispensable.โ
She urged members of the Caribbean tourism sector to reimagine the industry and use the latest technological tools to deliver new customer experiences โgeared around hyper-customization.โ
To that end, Madden-Greig said one of her goals is to create a Caribbean tourism technology task force within CHTA that would examine opportunities to use tools such as artificial intelligence, augmented reality, virtual reality, big data and robotics to establish smart tourism enterprises in smart destinations, utilizing smart teams.
However, while technology offers innovative solutions, she cautioned the sector against compromising the trademark, which is the authentic warmth of Caribbean people, noting that โa resilient, engaged, human-centric and sustainable industry is critical in this new paradigm shift.โ
This people-centered approach, she said, โmust continue to be an integral part of the planning process as we embed Industry 5.0 technology into tourism enterprises and work to upskill, reskill and provide support mechanisms for team members to transition into new roles or to provide exit options and support.โ
She affirmed that small, micro and medium-sized tourism enterprises must not be left behind in the shift to a higher-tech industry, and urged broad-based collaboration among the public and private sectors, non-governmental organizations, multilateral groups as well as local hotel and tourism associations to ensure smooth delivery of new products and services.
Acknowledging the value of education, Madden-Greig underscored the need to work with academic institutions across the Caribbean to ensure available programs reflect the changing trajectory of tourism and that โour young people are getting the right tools to be able to meet the challenges and opportunities of the sector.โ
The new president also reiterated that broadening membership participation to build a stronger CHTA will be critical in moving forward.
โLetโs ensure the Caribbean rhythm never stops and vibrates throughout the entire world,โ she said.
Madden-Greig, who is currently the group director of marketing and sales for The Courtleigh Hospitality Group, brings two decades of tourism industry experience to her new role with CHTA.
She is a former two-term president of the Jamaica Hotel & Tourist Association and current chair of the Gastronomy Tourism Network. Madden-Greig is also a director on the Jamaica Tourist Board and the boards of JHTA, the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce and the Tourism Linkages Council of Jamaica. She received JHTA’s Presidentโs Award in 2006 and 2019, and, earlier this year, was named a recipient of Jamaicaโs Order of Distinction (officer), one of her countryโs highest honors.



