Unless they're hiring the porter to live with them for the entirety of the trip -- carrying all that stuff up and down to the room and back, unpacking it all, and then repacking it all -- having an airport solution solves a small part of the problem.
A wheelchair service at the airport stops helping even before the traveler leaves the airport. Then what?
Lightening the load helps all the time for all trips in all weather for all occasions. 100-pounds of stuff in Hawaii is 80 pounds too much stuff. I typically get by with 15 pounds, including the bag. And often I can go even lighter -- particularly to hot, humid destinations, where I pack all my high-tech, fast-drying clothes. I can pack a week's worth of that in a 1 gallon ziploc bag.
Getting over the need to pack a trampoline, a hammock, a clothes iron, and the full Monty of cast-iron cookware liberates travel. This is why I'll cheerfully drop everything, grab an appropriate bag, and fly to Mongolia or Angola. I'm already packed for either trip. The people who hate to travel invariably make two mistakes: they try to cram too much into their trip; and they try to cram too much into their luggage.