
The word hospitality derives from the Latin verb hospitare, meaning “to receive as a guest.” Hospitality may bring to mind the times your relatives stayed over at your home, or the times your family went on vacation and stayed at a resort or hotel. As a guest, what do you need? Traditionally, the requirements of a guest are food, drink, and shelter. If the word hospitality refers to the provision of these three necessities to travelers, then the industry consists of businesses that do this. Some hosts, however, also provide entertainment for their guests, like on a cruise ship or a casino. The entertainment industry is far- reaching, including everything from theme parks to sports events. Unlike hospitality, entertainment is not associated with the provision of a traveler’s basic needs, and is a separate industry altogether.
The hospitality industry is, by itself, a giant $3.5 trillion service sector and comprises hotels, resorts, clubs, restaurants, catering, and meeting and event planning. According to the International Hotel & Restaurant Association, the hospitality industry includes 300,000 hotels, 8 million restaurants, and employs 60 million people worldwide.
The hotel, arguably the most basic element of the hospitality industry, is a commercial establishment that offers lodging to travelers, usually on a short- term basis. The differing costs of a hotel room are indicative of the location of the property, quality of furnishings, and range of amenities and services available. We’re all familiar with the one to five star rating system, where more stars indicate greater luxury, more amenities, and more personalized service. Instead of stars, the American Automobile Association (AAA) uses one to five diamonds to rate hotels. But the correlation between ratings and guest experience is loose at best. The market research company JD Power has surveyed US hotel guest satisfaction since 1996. It ranks hotel chains in six segments: luxury, upscale, mid-scale full service, mid-scale limited service, economy/budget, and extended stay. A 2008 study found that satisfaction is down overall in the North American market as compared to 2007 levels, primarily due to guest complaints regarding amenities and room features.
From a JW Marriott to a Doubletree, there are a variety of hotels on the market with different price points to choose from. Most hotels are independently owned but are often managed by a subsidiary of a global giant like the InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG), which owns the Holiday Inn franchise as well as Starwood Hotels and Resorts, the parent company of world-renowned chains such as Sheraton and Westin. In recent years, the boutique hotel concept has become increasingly popular. The concept is typically used to describe independent establishments that are more intimate and authentic in their approaches, and larger hotel companies have created internal boutique brands, like Starwood’s W chain or Marriott’s Edition, in order to capture market share. That said, finding affordable luxury often does not require looking further than the Four Seasons. Budget travelers might consider staying at a Microtel, which according to the JD Power study, has ranked the highest in guest satisfaction in the budget segment every year since 2001. In this world of lodging, however, there exists much more than standalone hotels and motels.
Attach shopping and sport to a hotel and it can be classified as a resort, a place for both recreation and vacation. Resorts are more often establishments operated by a single independent company, although resort chains like Aman Resorts or Club Med are common. Not surprisingly, a hotel is frequently the central feature of a resort, like at the Atlantis in the Bahamas. A self-contained resort, such as the one at Walt Disney World, attempts to provide everything a guest might want, so that guests need never leave the resort for any reason. Some resorts boast activities such as golf, watersports, winter sports, spa facilities, or luxury safaris. For example, within South Africa’s famous Sabi Sand Reserve, the Sabi Sabi Private Game Reserve offers a blend of luxury accommodation, personalized service, extraordinary wildlife encounters, and delectable cuisine. In Las Vegas, casinos like Wynn and the Venetian are classified as destination resorts, to which visitors flock, disregarding the other attractions in the area. Their counterparts in Macau, China, offer the same experiences with a distinctive touch of Asian hospitality.
When travelers stay for extended periods of time, they might opt for a serviced apartment, which is furnished to resemble a home, with the provision of cooking and dining facilities, more closet space, and other such comforts. Such apartments are often cheaper than hotel rooms, and are popular with families looking to “live” rather than “stay” somewhere, albeit for a short time. Many hotels have an apartment arm adjacent to it, like the Residences at the Ritz Carlton New York in Battery Park. The hotel staff is usually at the disposal of apartment residents, combining the flexibility of apartment living with the services of a hotel. Luxurious amenities like 42-inch plasma TVs and king-size beds with 400-count sheets are not unheard of. Not your average dorm room!
The Food and Beverage (F&B) component of the hospitality industry
involves a mix of different establishments, devoted to menu type, dining style and pricing. The F&B industry includes
everything from Polish sausages, to pretzels sold from a cart on a street corner, to delicatessens, to Mickey D’s, to fine dining venues within or without hotels. The Michelin Guide is a contemporary restaurant reviewer that is popular in Europe. Their incognito inspectors accord one to three stars to restaurants that they regard as having high culinary merit. A good example of a three star Michelin restaurant is Restaurant Gordon Ramsay at Royal Hospital Road in London, which is frequently rated as one of the world’s best restaurants. Here in the US, Mobil rates restaurants on a 1-5 star scale, in contrast to AAA’s 1-5 diamonds. Both Mobil
and AAA dispatch checklist-wielding inspectors to evaluate establishments, leading some restaurants and hotels to improve by working to the checklist, rather than improving their overall performance. Students may be more familiar with the popular Zagat Survey, which compiles individual comments about restaurants and does ratings on a 30-point scale.
In the current global market, operating hotels face significant challenges. Even after the economy recovers, some aspects of the crisis will continue to linger. The factors that will most impact the hospitality industry include elevated food and fuel prices, troubled capital and credit markets, and excessive consumer debt levels. Other issues include a shortage of skilled labor, changing demographics, and, in certain parts of the world, security concerns.
The hospitality industry is service- oriented and labor-intensive by necessity. The problem of attracting and retaining qualified workers is becoming a human resource challenge for hotels worldwide. The hospitality industry has long been criticized for offering compensation levels below those common in other lines of business. Robert Whitfield, general manager at the Four Seasons Hualalai in Hawaii, recognizes that the industry is notorious for long hours and weekend shifts. These working conditions induce college students to seek other careers with better hours and/or better starting salaries. In this current economic turmoil, employee training continues to be important as hotel brands attempt to meet high customer expectations while exercising prudent fiscal responsibility.
The impact of changing demographics on travel trends leaves no sector in the hospitality industry unaffected. Whether it is the gradual retirement of baby boomers, rampant globalization, or the newly-rich entrepreneurs pouring out of China, the dramatic worldwide shift in demographics presents a multitude of obstacles for the industry. Hoteliers need to begin offering services and products that address multi- generational needs and desires. Hoteliers must cater to the special needs of older consumers (like our parents), as well as younger travelers (students like us), whohave very different expectations relating to design and technology. Traditional practices of brand standardization go out the window as hoteliers look for ways to enhance the experience of guests of all ages.
The current economic environment makes it increasingly difficult to sustain profit growth and improved return on investment for several reasons. First, the early months of the new year will see drops in revenue per available room (RevPAR), a primary indication of the overall financial performance of a hotel. PKF Hospitality Research forecasts as much as a 7.8% fall in RevPAR for the domestic lodging industry.Second, there are a large number of fixed costs of operation that hotel owners have to pay regardless of occupancy levels. Industry analysts are predicting a decrease in 2009 occupancy levels, which does not bode well for hotel returns. Third, as hotels conform to green culture, higher energy costs can affect profits. According to Donald Lim, vice president at the Hotel Equatorial Group in Malaysia, sustaining profitability has to come from controlling costs. The single largest component of cost will be labor, followed by food costs in those properties where food & beverage accounts for a substantial part of revenues.
With regard to security, the post 9/11 environment presents
hoteliers with the difficult task of having to balance accessibility with increased levels of protection for guests.
Governments have stepped up security at key locations such as airports and embassies. Therefore, hotels, with their relatively lax security, have become alternative targets for terrorists, as seen in the Marriott bombing in Pakistan last September and the recent attacks at the Taj and Oberoi hotels in Mumbai. Not only must there be increased expenditure for equipment (e.g. CCTV building access controls), but there has to be substantial investment in the training of all hotel staff to be more vigilant and security-conscious. Short of deploying armed guards and metal detectors outside lobby entrances, as many hotels in the Philippines and Indonesia have done, it is crucial that hotels re-evaluate their security protocols. Only then can guests be assured of their personal safety.
The hospitality industry provides all the usual challenges of running a business, along with the perks. Opportunities to travel and interact with people from different parts of the world, unpredictable twists and turns—they make for an interesting lifestyle. It surprises me to find that there are relatively few future hoteliers, compared with future doctors, lawyers, bankers, and engineers, in liberal arts colleges and universities.
Perhaps this is due to the incorrect assumption that one needs to have a degree from a hotel school in order to break into the industry. While there are specialized hospitality-related skills that one is not likely to pick up from an Ivy League school, the truth is that a hotel is like any other commercial organization. It is a business that requires people skilled in management, accounting and finance, marketing, sales, and communications. The unfortunate reality is that many students in elite schools do not consider careers in hospitality, as other professional options are more obviously attractive. As a result, there is a dearth of graduates from elite universities entering the industry, industry where talent is very much in demand.
Another problem is that many college graduates look at the industry and think, “Well, there are food servers and housekeepers,” and forget that positions exist in senior management and corporate development as well. Each hotel is a mini company, and each chain is a multinational corporation. According to Randy Goldberg, executive director of recruiting for the Hyatt chain, many students don’t realize that a job in hospitality can be a lucrative way to avoid the dreaded office cubicle. He says that a front-office manager at the Hyatt Regency Chicago can be making between $60,000 or $70,000 a year, and a general manager can expect an income in the six-figure range, depending on the size of the hotel. At the
Four Seasons, a recent graduate will likely start as an assistant manager making about $40,000 per year. It may not seem like much to begin with, but with promotion come notable gains. It is not unusual for hotel general managers to live at the hotel with their families in addition to receiving private school tuition for their children and a personal chauffeur, Such benefits are provided alongside salaries of $200,000 - $300,000.
In the summer after my freshman year at Stanford, I interned at the Four Seasons Hong Kong, spending time in both the accomodations and finance departments. As an international relations major, I thought I would be at a disadvantage to the rest of my intern class who all hailed from different hotel schools all over the world. Over the course of my internship, I learned that the traits required to succeed in this industry are good interpersonal, problem-solving, and time management skills — combined with reliability and the capacity to take initiative and work under pressure. These skills are really no different from those required in banking or consulting. Not surprisingly, many senior executives in hotel holding companies have had experience in hospitality, travel, and leisure consulting. Frits van Paasschen, Starwood CEO, spent eight years at consulting firms McKinsey and BCG before assuming his current position as leader of one of the world’s iconic hotel companies.
So, imagine yourself in an occupation with all of the usual challenges, but one that knows no geographical boundaries and gives you the chance to meet people from all walks of life—from John Doe to leaders in business, politics, entertainment and sports. Is it saying too much to suggest that this sounds kind of fun?So, imagine yourself in an occupation with all the usual challenges...that gives you the chance to meet people from all walks of life, from John Doe to leaders in business, politics, entertainment and sports. Is it saying too much to suggest that this sounds kind of fun?
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