Fintech adoption, digital maturity and operational efficiency Among 3-star hotels in Nairobi Metropolitan area, Kenya
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Date
2025
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KCA University
Abstract
The study examined the effect of financial technology (FinTech) adoption on the operational
efficiency of three-star hotels within the Nairobi Metropolitan Area, Kenya. FinTech innovations
have become critical tools for enhancing service delivery, cost control, and financial management
in the hospitality industry. Despite this, many mid-sized hotels continue to experience
inefficiencies arising from delayed payments, manual invoicing, and limited digital integration.
Guided by the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), the Technology–Organization–
Environment (TOE) framework, the Resource-Based View (RBV) theory, and the Financial
Intermediation Theory, the study sought to assess how mobile money payment, card payment, and
electronic invoicing influence operational efficiency, and to analyze the moderating effect of
digital maturity on these relationships. The study adopted a descriptive research design and
targeted all 62 registered three-star hotels in the Nairobi Metropolitan Area, where the unit of
analysis was the hotel and the unit of observation was the operations manager. A census approach
was employed, and data was collected using structured questionnaires administered through both
physical and electronic channels. The data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, correlation,
and hierarchical multiple regression analysis. Diagnostic tests were conducted to ensure normality,
linearity, homoscedasticity, and the absence of multicollinearity. Results revealed that all FinTech
dimensions were positively correlated with operational efficiency. Regression analysis indicated
that card payment and electronic invoicing had significant positive effects on operational
efficiency, while mobile money payment showed a positive but weaker relationship. After
introducing digital maturity as a moderator, the strength of all relationships increased, and the
model’s explanatory power improved (R² rising from 0.217 to 0.650). The moderation results
confirmed that hotels with higher digital maturity derived greater efficiency gains from FinTech
use. The study concludes that FinTech adoption significantly enhances operational efficiency
among three-star hotels and that digital maturity amplifies this relationship by improving
technological readiness, staff competence, and innovation capability. It recommends that hotel
management invest in digital capacity building, continuous system upgrades, and strategic
partnerships with FinTech providers to optimize service delivery and operational performance.
Policymakers should also support digital transformation initiatives in the hospitality sector through
incentives, training programs, and regulatory frameworks that promote innovation and
competitiveness.
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Keywords
fintech, fintech adoption, digital maturity, electronic invoicing, card payments, operational efficiency, financial management, hospitality industry, three-star hotels