While Part One of the article
focussed on the strategic aspects, Part Two is more tactical in its
suggestions.
Let’s look at these
career-building and job saving tricks of the trade.
Know your Product / Company
How many times, I cannot recall,
have I seen a Concierge, Housekeeper, Server embarrassingly fumble and fail to
blurt out the correct response! There have been so many occasions when a Sales
Manager has given out wrong facts and figures at an important site inspection.
There have been a large number of PR people callously putting down incorrect
information in their press releases. I have seen Sales Directors and General
Managers look towards the nearest saving assistant as they fudge data or spin a
yarn to quickly fill in the gaps in the gaping holes of their sell story.
It’s not just us hoteliers. A
similar pattern follows with people from different industries – from toothbrush
to travel and food to forensics.
But there is no excuse; no
escaping the embarrassment we bring upon ourselves when we turn up in our
green-horned, half baked avatars.
It is our duty, well almost a
moral binding, to know our product and our company like the back of our hands –
every factoid, every star performer who is such a stellar brand up-sell, every
interesting gem of a story that went into making what we are and yes, most
importantly all the warts that we must be on a war path to remove permanently.
Know the other Product / Company
better
This is a two-edged sword in our
armoury. By knowing our competition better, we know clearly what we are doing
right. More significantly, competition knowledge helps us realize and rectify
what we may be doing wrong. And that is a big step forward.
FAMs of new properties and
restaurants in town or other cities are such a great learning exercise. First
hand exposure is, indeed, an indelible imprint on one’s mind that promises to
stay with you for a long time.
When I was going off on my
overseas Scholarship, my boss at the time suggested I get in touch with sister
hotels, part of the Leading Hotels of the World association that we were a
member of, for possible stays so that I could have an up, close and personal
look at some of the world’s best run establishments. An invaluable tip that has
left behind some priceless lessons on the best practices adopted by significant
others in business!
No amount of marketing
literature, PR collateral, website interface and 360 degree views can take
place of what you experience in flesh and blood.
Know your guests
Knowing your guests is akin to
knowing your job. Whatever you do in your different departments – creating
recipes or collateral, devising sales strategies, reinforcing security plans,
developing innovative standards of service, introducing new concepts and
products, changing draperies or dresses – you do it for your guests. In fact
they are the only reason for your existence and for ensuring that your business
sails or tanks.
Hotels that make sure that all
their staff cross map the guests and get to know them well, not only come out
on top at most reader surveys and awards but also have healthy bottom-line,
regardless of the seasonal factors.
Most of the illustrious General
Managers I have worked with urged me to work the lobby in order to greet and
meet guests and put aside decent amount of time to spend with the guests. That
is one of the sanest times invested in one’s job as you learn so much about
what the guests really want and take their feedback and suggestions to the
relevant forums. You get to share right information about your hotel with the
right audience in the most focused and targeted manner at the right time. This
also allows for a two-way feel-good exchange that promises to have a
long-standing reach and penetration far more than any advertising or marketing
thrust would aspire to have.
Know your Colleagues
Hotels are one of the most
people-centric industries. Most organisations have the luxury of a weekend but
hotels work round the clock, with end of the week days getting busier. What’s
more, a hotel never goes to sleep. This nature of business ensures that you are
in contact with your colleagues all the time and that there are too many of
those colleagues around. It then becomes essential to know your colleagues
well, more in this work milieu.
Knowing you team mates across
departments and cadres is an extremely profitable proposition. Of course you
need to know different people to different levels of familiarity – from
pleasant exchanges in the corridor (please get away from the cursory nods) with
some and getting together with a sense of bonhomie in the staff cafeteria with
few others to building lasting bonds (some of which can grow to include the
families) with those that you frequently work closely with. Decide on the level
you want to get to, judiciously, professionally and with reason.
Harbouring a sincere and friendly
disposition, being approachable, being a congenial personality and a caring
person and having a helpful, down to earth nature considerably increases your
likeability quotient. This helps widen your circle from top to bottom and
creates a good vibe around you.
Knowing your colleagues eases the
atmosphere, makes the work environment conducive, dissolves crisis situations,
makes things less strenuous and actually injects the element of cheerfulness
and fun into toughest of work conditions. Some prominent hotel chains around
the world have set a stellar example in “know your employee” policy so much
that your performance on this attribute can wing its way into your appraisal!
Learn new tricks
Yes, it is a fact of life. Change
is, truly, the only constant. As time goes, we stay in a continuous state of
churning. Everyone and everything – our vision, our projection, the way we do
our business, demands on us, guest expectation, technology, creative
influences, benchmarks, our aspirations from the brand value and the bottom
line – yes, we all are in a state of upward progression.
That is why we must be perpetual
learners, adding new skills to our repertoire. As a PR Specialist, I know that
I must become adept at the social media, website management, SEO, photo
editors, publishing tools, webinars, video conferencing, virtual meets et. al.
A Sales resource must be as
proficient in the traditional sales strategies as in Digital marketing,
TripAdvisor, Reputation and Social media management, prompt addressing of
comments left behind on the Company website or elsewhere.
It pays for a Concierge or Guest
Relations executive to be multi-lingual. This holds true for a lot of other
team members too. At hotels, not only do we work in a multinational /
multicultural environment, our guests too fly in from all corners of the globe.
It is a given that speaking in someone’s native tongue is an instant connector
breaking down most other barriers.
The General Manager has to be a
jack of all trades, mastering new facets from all departments so as to be
efficient enough to captain his ship.
One of the finest practices an
erstwhile boss had adopted was to share a lot of information covering all
departments with his team. We were a part of his change agent team working at
re-launching a brand and he made sure that each of us kept up our eagerness to
learn what was happening around us in the other areas. I remember being
reprimanded by the French boss when I came for the morning meeting through the
lobby failing to notice the spectacular flower show-stopper that had been put
together by the newly hired Floral Artists. The GM kept up with his incessant
reminders for us to branch out and develop a keen interest in all the other
functions of the hotel, prohibiting us from becoming the proverbial ostriches.
Today, when I write informative articles about General Hotel Management and
find my pieces used as case studies by hotel schools, I have a lot to thank the
GM and his ways for.
Do reflect on these tips to
bridge the gap between your efforts and expected rewards.
Here’s wishing a wonderful and
productive 2015 to you!
**************
Pictures courtesy - Google Images