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Will You Add? - The Boutique Hotel Manager
Business Card Printing ory off an electronic guest room lock.A business card not only serves as a mere piece of paper containing your contact information, it also serves as a way to make your company recognized by potential clients. Business cards are handy tools that you give out to clients to make them remember you as a professional and what type of company that you represent.Since your business card is that important, everything should be considered to make sure that you end up having a stack of business cards that you can be proud of and not hesitant to give out to potential clients. Always remember that a great business card contains a classy, professional-looking design with a paper that feels good to the hands. Hand out these business cards to contacts, and you have already ensured a step forward in getting that piece of the business that you are going after.Some people want to do their own business cards. This option is economical, and will let your creative juices flow because you can incorporate your own design. You can look up sample templates in the Internet; replicate it into your card, and voila! Just make sure that in order to produce homemade cards that look professional, you got to have a quality printer that can produce copies as good as those that the professional printers make.If you are pressed for time and decided to have your cards done by a printing company, here are some things that you have to consider:1. Do you want a black and white card, or a full-color one? 2. Which paper stock do you prefer? 3. Is it going to be a one-sided card, or you want to have both sides printed? Now that you have noted the above concerns, you can now choose an online printing company that will meet your specifications and will give good service. Do not be in a rush to choose the right printer, be sure to ask around and preferably get a sample of their products.What makes a competent printing company? First, they should be able to offer these options to ensure the satisfaction of clients like you.1. They should be able to do pricing online – In order for customers to choose a printing company quickly, online price quotations should be allocated for them to know immediately if the printer’s fee is within their budget. Most printing companies can give you a price estimate; you only have to give the 33. You know how to make a bed as well as your best housekeeper. 34. You know what the ph level should be in your wash rinse. 35. You know how to check the chemicals in you pool and Jacuzzi. 36. You know what the interfaces are for each of your hotel software systems. 37. You know how to get guests online using your wireless internet service. 38. You know the difference between an p&l and a balance sheet. 39. You can run a commercial dishwasher. 40. You know your receivables and payables. 41. You know where your housekeeper buys their supplies. 42. You know local city ordinances as they apply to your property. 43. You can deliver a room service order. 44. You can clean a bathroom to 5 star standards. 45. You can fold a towel like your housekeepers. 46. You know where the water and gas mains are, and how to shut them off. 47. You know each of your guest room types. 48. You have no problem befriending your neighboring business and residents. 49. You can write a well researched and accurate month end report. 50. You know how to calculate flow through. 51. Have a number two person who can answer these questions as well. I task the many boutique hotel companies to ask these questions to gm candidates during the interview process. I know that you will save a lot of time, frustration and lower your turnover rates (higher for general manager positions in boutique hotels). If you are a boutique hotel company I would also ask you to make sure that you do the following for your hotel general managers, ensuring their success and lowering your gm turnover: 1. Don’t hire an experience luxury (non-boutique hotel) general manger unless they can answer yes or actually commit to learning the answer to each of the prior 51 questions. Looking for Job Opportunities in Dubai? Boutique Hotel. Just the words get the imagination going. Even before I dog eared the pages of Herbert Ypma’s first Hip Hotels book I was fascinated by the world of boutique hotel properties. “How cool would it be to be the general manager of a cool boutique hotel?” I often found asking myself as I flipped through the pages of his magnificent photos. Working hard to make a career out of the hotel industry, I was convinced that I just had to be involved with a boutique hotel someday.Dubai is a modern city with all the amenities of years. For years, it has been an attraction point for many people around the world and especially those from sub-continent. Just about every other person in Sub-Continent wants to attain first-class jobs in Dubai and get settled here. At present, Dubai is home to an assorted and stimulating blend of vibrant and young professionals from all around the globe that are paying their part in the development and intensification of this dream city. They all enjoy the unrivalled quality of life that Emirate offer to them in return of their services. The facilities offered in Dubai are the best in the world. This is reason that Dubai is currently the fastest growing population in the world.More and more people move abroad to Dubai to experience the very best in the world of employment and lifestyle. They search for job vacancies in Dubai through various online job portals and newspapers and clutch on to it if find any. One of the most striking and abrupt feature of being employed in Dubai is the absence of personal taxes. Surprised, but it is true that there are no personal taxes levied against income from the jobs in Dubai. This is not an encouragement to pull of foreign investment. It is owing to the fact that direct taxes are against the mores of entire United Arab Emirates. This means you always have additional cash in your pouch to afford and get pleasure from the lifestyle that others could only imagine.Internet can help you in the best way in finding good jobs opportunities in Dubai. There are many online job portals like Dubizzle that can help you in this regard. There are many industries like Information Technology, Telecommunications, Engineering, and Construction to acquire a good job in Dubai but financial services industry is best when it comes to financial support of their employees.Working hours for jobs in Dubai show a discrepancy from industry to industry. One thing is certain that you will never find your job timings as exploitative. As much as salary is concern, you will find it different among different industries. Normally, salaries are disbursed on a 13-month cycle. It is not a custom to receive bonus in Dubai or UAE. In most cases you become eligible of gratuity if you resign from a firm after 12 month’s of working with That someday came true, when in 2004 I was invited to be the general manager of what was and still is one of Palm Springs most hip boutique hotels. I left another huge opportunity just to be a part of this amazing world. The art, the design, the vibe. I had never really worked anywhere with a “vibe”. A year later and I knew, I knew what many in the hotel business do not…what it is really like to be the gm of a hip, cool boutique hotel. It’s not for everyone and amazing for many. There is a mini storm brewing in the boutique hotel world, one I don’t think most involved in this industry are aware of. With more and more boutique hotel operators entering the playground, more and more bad hiring decisions are being made. The right General Mangers are working at the wrong hotels. Like a square peg and a round hole, some things just do not work. Who is to blame and what can be done? The Boutique Hotel First let me first tell you that I have a very narrow view of what really constitutes a boutique hotel. I think that the term “Boutique” when used to describe a hotel is often misapplied. A boutique hotel is not defined by simply a hot design, as many would argue. In my opinion, a boutique hotel is a property that is uniquely significant in four ways: 1. Architecture and Design. 2. A high level of service. A property must not exceed 150 guest rooms, enhancing the guest to staff ratio. 3. Sell to a specific demographic. 4. Are independently owned and operated (this is where some will disagree with me). A boutique hotel must be an independent operation. The hotel must not be part of a collection that is more than say, 10 properties. Beyond this you get into having a corporate hierarchical management style that is required in running a large company and maintaining brand consistency. Take W Hotels for example. In my opinion these are not boutique hotels. They look like a boutique hotel, even feel like one. Many boutique hotels would strive to be as great as a W. But a W Hotel is run and managed by a massive corporation. The property level management makes very few decisions about what services are offered and how the property is run. A boutique hotel must be operated as close to the actual physical operation as possible. W’s and the like are amazing, but in my opinion don’t fit the definition of a boutique hotel. Boutique hotels are also constantly re-inventing themselves, making sure that their fickle guest never get bored and look to stay at the latest new, hip and cool property. Boutique Hotel Guest Travelers chose to stay at a boutique hotel because of the story, or the experience. The experience is very important and must be unique and somewhat cutting edge. The general demographics are individuals 20 to 50 years of age, work in more creative fields like advertising or entertainment and appreciate a higher level of service. When Ian Schrager entered the market with what many consider to be the first boutique hotel, this demographic discovered that they could use their travel budget get them a room at a cool, hip hotel rather than a generic mid-level branded property. And the boom started. Boutique hotel guests enjoy experiences, unique architecture, cutting edge interior design and in some cases an urban location. The market is expanding and the demographic model explained earlier is beginning to bleed into others. You might very well find a Fortune 500 CEO staying at a boutique hotel. It is hard to ignore the hype. Brands vs. Boutiques Luxury hotel operators are scrambling to avoid losing market share to the boutique world. Some hotels are actually taking the “brand” off their marketing and streamlining their operations so that their properties are authentically boutique. Take the Kahala Mandarin Oriental for example. This famous luxury property recently took Mandarin Oriental away so that they could operate and compete in the new marketplace of more independent hotels. They are now simply “The Kahala” and are working hard to be authentically local and independent of a major brand identification. I think others will follow. The Boutique Hotel General Manager For the sake of this publication, I will use the luxury hotel as the comparison to the boutique since most closely associate a boutique hotel with luxury travel. So what is so different about being a general manager at a luxury hotel versus a boutique hotel? Can it really be that different? The basics are the same. The general manager is responsible for the entire day to day operation, hiring decisions, marketing, budgets, forecasting, rate strategy, facility maintenance etc… The key for both types of properties is guest service and guest interaction. The guest at a high end luxury hotel expects to be able to interact with the hotel general manager, as do the guests at a boutique property. It is all high touch. The difference is that a boutique hotel general manager wears just a few more hats than the luxury general manager. A boutique general manager might be preparing complex budget forecasting spreadsheets at 10am and at 10:30 am be clearing the pool towels from around the hotel’s salt water plunge. When was the last time you saw the general manager of the Peninsula Beverly Hills with an arm full of towels? Don’t get me wrong, I know that the general manager of the Peninsula would do this in a second, if they had to. The general manager of a boutique hotel HAS to, because there is nobody else. The one server working the restaurant is also probably responsible for taking care of the pool, taking room service orders, delivering the orders and on and on…. The general manager of a boutique hotel is sometimes also the HR director and breaks the front desk agents. If the gm is in California then the gm might find themselves breaking just about every position just to avoid getting sued and fined! Take this example; you are the GM of a hot boutique property in the desert. The temperature is pushing 118 degrees. Since occupancy during the summer is very low, you encourage a lot of your team to take their vacations so you can get that vacation accrual off your books. One of those who takes you up on this is your chief engineer, one of two engineers for your entire five acre property. He goes home to the motherland, Germany for a week. Now just because it’s hot does not mean that you don’t have customers. Some tourists seem to love the heat, and so it was with this particular steamy day in August. As the sun begins to set, your guests make their way from the pool to their bungalows. Dusk and 100 degrees, everyone turns on their aged air conditioners full blast so they can cool down. Your only other engineer has gone home for the day. It is at about this time that the calls start coming in. The ac units are freezing up. The old units freeze up when they are turned on full blast. Many blow the circuit breakers. So there you are, in your office doing the forecast for your weekly corporate status report call when the front desk calls you in a panic, “the guests are flipping out” cries your new front desk agent. You check out the calls and see that you need your engineer back on property, but his pre-paid cell phone (you cant afford to pay for a cell phone for him) is out of time –you cant reach him! So what do you do? You head to the rooms to see if you can fix them. Room by room you tackle the challenge of explaining to your sweaty and angry guests why they cant turn their ac on full and that it will take at least two hours for the ice built up around the coils to melt. Then you start looking for the circuit breakers, which are scattered all over the 60 year old property. By the time you reach the last room the guest who answers the door almost screams at the sight of the sweaty, dirty general manager holding a tool box with a dazed look on his face. “Wasn’t this the same guy who was pouring us Mimosas at the pool this morning honey?” asks the guest as you begin your repairs. Once the craziness is over you get a call on your cell phone. Yes, it is your engineer returning your call. “You trying to reach me boss?”. The next day, while on your conference call you listen to a speech about how general managers need to spend more time with their guests rather than in their offices. Duh, you think as you try to scrub the grit out from under your fingernails. The financial realities of a boutique hotel are unique. The appearance of three to five star service with a two star budget is the norm, and the gm’s get caught in the middle. The boutique hotel just does not have the budget to staff like a true luxury property and everyone has to pull their weight. The gm who does not will not be there long and hate every second of their lives. Along with the additional sweat and frustration of being a boutique hotel gm are the rewards. For the right individual, they will find that the entrepreneurial management style required of them is highly empowering. The gm can make a lot of decisions on their own, decisions that in a larger corporate hotel would require an approval or worse….committee discussion! The fact that some towels need to be picked up and maybe a drink or two be mixed and served is actually fun to them. The rewards of always being in front of your guests are what most gm’s want anyway, but many are not really ready for it when they are tasked to make that happen every day. So what kind of person would do well as a general manager of a boutique hotel? Answer these questions, if you can say yes to each answer then you will probably really like the challenge. Please note that I am assuming that you are already an experienced manager and qualified to be a general manager. The 51 Questions 1. You do not need routines to feel successful at work. I task the many boutique hotel companies to ask these questions to gm candidates during the interview process. I know that you will save a lot of time, frustration and lower your turnover rates (higher for general manager positions in boutique hotels). If you are a boutique hotel company I would also ask you to make sure that you do the following for your hotel general managers, ensuring their success and lowering your gm turnover: 1. Don’t hire an experience luxury (non-boutique hotel) general manger unless they can answer yes or actually commit to learning the answer to each of the prior 51 questions. Sarbanes Oxley Europe: The EU Data Protection Directive vs. Sarbanes Oxley Whistleblower Protection e experience is very important and must be unique and somewhat cutting edge. The general demographics are individuals 20 to 50 years of age, work in more creative fields like advertising or entertainment and appreciate a higher level of service. When Ian Schrager entered the market with what many consider to be the first boutique hotel, this demographic discovered that they could use their travel budget get them a room at a cool, hip hotel rather than a generic mid-level branded property. And the boom started.
Boutique hotel guests enjoy experiences, unique architecture, cutting edge interior design and in some cases an urban location. The market is expanding and the demographic model explained earlier is beginning to bleed into others. You might very well find a Fortune 500 CEO staying at a boutique hotel. It is hard to ignore the hype.The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, adopted as a reaction to corporate scandals, has a significant impact on European companies. The reason is simple: Hundreds of European-headquartered companies are dually listed on two stock exchanges, one in Europe and the other in the United States. 470 non-US companies are listed on the New York Stock Exchange, with a combined market capitalization of $3.8 trillion, 30 per cent of the total value of capitalization of companies quoted on the exchange.EU Data Protection DirectiveWhat is personal data (according to EU)? Personal data can be any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person (directly or indirectly): Name, telephone number, photos. Data specific to his physical, physiological, mental, economic, cultural or social identity. What is processing of personal data? Any operation performed upon personal data whether or not by automatic means.Data Controllers must adhere to the following rules: Data must be relevant and not excessive in relation to the purpose for which they are processed. Data must be accurate. Data controllers are required to provide reasonable measures for data subjects to rectify erase or block incorrect data about them. The directive prohibits transfer of personal information to countries outside the EU, which lack adequate protection of privacy.Sarbanes OxleySection 301. Public company audit committees: Each audit committee shall establish procedures for: (A) The receipt, retention, and treatment of complaints received by the issuer regarding accounting, internal accounting controls, or auditing matters; and (B) The confidential, anonymous submission by employees of the issuer of concerns regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters.The challenge How a US company with offices throughout the EU can comply with the notice and choice principles of EU Data Protection laws while simultaneously complying with the whistle blower requirements under Sarbanes Oxley?How can we have both: 1. A Sarbanes Oxley hotline reporting service for employees to use anonymously, and 2. A Data Protection control: Data subjects must learn, rectify, erase or block incorrect data about them.The problems On 14 June 2005 the French Data Protection Authority refused to authorize the use of anonym Brands vs. Boutiques Luxury hotel operators are scrambling to avoid losing market share to the boutique world. Some hotels are actually taking the “brand” off their marketing and streamlining their operations so that their properties are authentically boutique. Take the Kahala Mandarin Oriental for example. This famous luxury property recently took Mandarin Oriental away so that they could operate and compete in the new marketplace of more independent hotels. They are now simply “The Kahala” and are working hard to be authentically local and independent of a major brand identification. I think others will follow. The Boutique Hotel General Manager For the sake of this publication, I will use the luxury hotel as the comparison to the boutique since most closely associate a boutique hotel with luxury travel. So what is so different about being a general manager at a luxury hotel versus a boutique hotel? Can it really be that different? The basics are the same. The general manager is responsible for the entire day to day operation, hiring decisions, marketing, budgets, forecasting, rate strategy, facility maintenance etc… The key for both types of properties is guest service and guest interaction. The guest at a high end luxury hotel expects to be able to interact with the hotel general manager, as do the guests at a boutique property. It is all high touch. The difference is that a boutique hotel general manager wears just a few more hats than the luxury general manager. A boutique general manager might be preparing complex budget forecasting spreadsheets at 10am and at 10:30 am be clearing the pool towels from around the hotel’s salt water plunge. When was the last time you saw the general manager of the Peninsula Beverly Hills with an arm full of towels? Don’t get me wrong, I know that the general manager of the Peninsula would do this in a second, if they had to. The general manager of a boutique hotel HAS to, because there is nobody else. The one server working the restaurant is also probably responsible for taking care of the pool, taking room service orders, delivering the orders and on and on…. The general manager of a boutique hotel is sometimes also the HR director and breaks the front desk agents. If the gm is in California then the gm might find themselves breaking just about every position just to avoid getting sued and fined! Take this example; you are the GM of a hot boutique property in the desert. The temperature is pushing 118 degrees. Since occupancy during the summer is very low, you encourage a lot of your team to take their vacations so you can get that vacation accrual off your books. One of those who takes you up on this is your chief engineer, one of two engineers for your entire five acre property. He goes home to the motherland, Germany for a week. Now just because it’s hot does not mean that you don’t have customers. Some tourists seem to love the heat, and so it was with this particular steamy day in August. As the sun begins to set, your guests make their way from the pool to their bungalows. Dusk and 100 degrees, everyone turns on their aged air conditioners full blast so they can cool down. Your only other engineer has gone home for the day. It is at about this time that the calls start coming in. The ac units are freezing up. The old units freeze up when they are turned on full blast. Many blow the circuit breakers. So there you are, in your office doing the forecast for your weekly corporate status report call when the front desk calls you in a panic, “the guests are flipping out” cries your new front desk agent. You check out the calls and see that you need your engineer back on property, but his pre-paid cell phone (you cant afford to pay for a cell phone for him) is out of time –you cant reach him! So what do you do? You head to the rooms to see if you can fix them. Room by room you tackle the challenge of explaining to your sweaty and angry guests why they cant turn their ac on full and that it will take at least two hours for the ice built up around the coils to melt. Then you start looking for the circuit breakers, which are scattered all over the 60 year old property. By the time you reach the last room the guest who answers the door almost screams at the sight of the sweaty, dirty general manager holding a tool box with a dazed look on his face. “Wasn’t this the same guy who was pouring us Mimosas at the pool this morning honey?” asks the guest as you begin your repairs. Once the craziness is over you get a call on your cell phone. Yes, it is your engineer returning your call. “You trying to reach me boss?”. The next day, while on your conference call you listen to a speech about how general managers need to spend more time with their guests rather than in their offices. Duh, you think as you try to scrub the grit out from under your fingernails. The financial realities of a boutique hotel are unique. The appearance of three to five star service with a two star budget is the norm, and the gm’s get caught in the middle. The boutique hotel just does not have the budget to staff like a true luxury property and everyone has to pull their weight. The gm who does not will not be there long and hate every second of their lives. Along with the additional sweat and frustration of being a boutique hotel gm are the rewards. For the right individual, they will find that the entrepreneurial management style required of them is highly empowering. The gm can make a lot of decisions on their own, decisions that in a larger corporate hotel would require an approval or worse….committee discussion! The fact that some towels need to be picked up and maybe a drink or two be mixed and served is actually fun to them. The rewards of always being in front of your guests are what most gm’s want anyway, but many are not really ready for it when they are tasked to make that happen every day. So what kind of person would do well as a general manager of a boutique hotel? Answer these questions, if you can say yes to each answer then you will probably really like the challenge. Please note that I am assuming that you are already an experienced manager and qualified to be a general manager. The 51 Questions 1. You do not need routines to feel successful at work. I task the many boutique hotel companies to ask these questions to gm candidates during the interview process. I know that you will save a lot of time, frustration and lower your turnover rates (higher for general manager positions in boutique hotels). If you are a boutique hotel company I would also ask you to make sure that you do the following for your hotel general managers, ensuring their success and lowering your gm turnover: 1. Don’t hire an experience luxury (non-boutique hotel) general manger unless they can answer yes or actually commit to learning the answer to each of the prior 51 questions. Exploitation of Carwash Labor and Illegal Aliens elves breaking just about every position just to avoid getting sued and fined!Why would the largest carwash chain in the United States hire illegal aliens? Obviously you would think that a publicly traded company would be smarter than that. Yet this company was not, in fact they were not only hiring illegal aliens they were over 90% of their crews and they had been doing this for over five years and right out in the open. Yet, why did it take so long for the authorities to bust them?Well because the patrons wanted a good deal on car washes and because the authorities operate on complaints. They do not investigate unless someone complains. So who finally complained? Well, it was probably a competitor, but why did someone speak up earlier?At four car washes the company had 56 illegal aliens and they were raided by authorities on a Monday, their slowest day, not a weekend or Friday when the total could have been even higher. During the raid illegal aliens scattered and they authorities said they caught most of them, but not all. Why is it that Americans care so much about illegal aliens and still will not call authorities when they see a company hire them?Why is it that Americans will go to the car wash a couple of times a month and never even make mention of it? A simple phone call would help this problem. So, I ask you will you call authorities next time you see at your local car wash the exploitation of illegal immigration labor? Will you pick up the phone and do the right thing? Or are you a hypocrite just like all the rest? Consider this in 2006. Take this example; you are the GM of a hot boutique property in the desert. The temperature is pushing 118 degrees. Since occupancy during the summer is very low, you encourage a lot of your team to take their vacations so you can get that vacation accrual off your books. One of those who takes you up on this is your chief engineer, one of two engineers for your entire five acre property. He goes home to the motherland, Germany for a week. Now just because it’s hot does not mean that you don’t have customers. Some tourists seem to love the heat, and so it was with this particular steamy day in August. As the sun begins to set, your guests make their way from the pool to their bungalows. Dusk and 100 degrees, everyone turns on their aged air conditioners full blast so they can cool down. Your only other engineer has gone home for the day. It is at about this time that the calls start coming in. The ac units are freezing up. The old units freeze up when they are turned on full blast. Many blow the circuit breakers. So there you are, in your office doing the forecast for your weekly corporate status report call when the front desk calls you in a panic, “the guests are flipping out” cries your new front desk agent. You check out the calls and see that you need your engineer back on property, but his pre-paid cell phone (you cant afford to pay for a cell phone for him) is out of time –you cant reach him! So what do you do? You head to the rooms to see if you can fix them. Room by room you tackle the challenge of explaining to your sweaty and angry guests why they cant turn their ac on full and that it will take at least two hours for the ice built up around the coils to melt. Then you start looking for the circuit breakers, which are scattered all over the 60 year old property. By the time you reach the last room the guest who answers the door almost screams at the sight of the sweaty, dirty general manager holding a tool box with a dazed look on his face. “Wasn’t this the same guy who was pouring us Mimosas at the pool this morning honey?” asks the guest as you begin your repairs. Once the craziness is over you get a call on your cell phone. Yes, it is your engineer returning your call. “You trying to reach me boss?”. The next day, while on your conference call you listen to a speech about how general managers need to spend more time with their guests rather than in their offices. Duh, you think as you try to scrub the grit out from under your fingernails. The financial realities of a boutique hotel are unique. The appearance of three to five star service with a two star budget is the norm, and the gm’s get caught in the middle. The boutique hotel just does not have the budget to staff like a true luxury property and everyone has to pull their weight. The gm who does not will not be there long and hate every second of their lives. Along with the additional sweat and frustration of being a boutique hotel gm are the rewards. For the right individual, they will find that the entrepreneurial management style required of them is highly empowering. The gm can make a lot of decisions on their own, decisions that in a larger corporate hotel would require an approval or worse….committee discussion! The fact that some towels need to be picked up and maybe a drink or two be mixed and served is actually fun to them. The rewards of always being in front of your guests are what most gm’s want anyway, but many are not really ready for it when they are tasked to make that happen every day. So what kind of person would do well as a general manager of a boutique hotel? Answer these questions, if you can say yes to each answer then you will probably really like the challenge. Please note that I am assuming that you are already an experienced manager and qualified to be a general manager. The 51 Questions 1. You do not need routines to feel successful at work. I task the many boutique hotel companies to ask these questions to gm candidates during the interview process. I know that you will save a lot of time, frustration and lower your turnover rates (higher for general manager positions in boutique hotels). If you are a boutique hotel company I would also ask you to make sure that you do the following for your hotel general managers, ensuring their success and lowering your gm turnover: 1. Don’t hire an experience luxury (non-boutique hotel) general manger unless they can answer yes or actually commit to learning the answer to each of the prior 51 questions. Old Vending Machines hly empowering. The gm can make a lot of decisions on their own, decisions that in a larger corporate hotel would require an approval or worse….committee discussion! The fact that some towels need to be picked up and maybe a drink or two be mixed and served is actually fun to them. The rewards of always being in front of your guests are what most gm’s want anyway, but many are not really ready for it when they are tasked to make that happen every day.Old vending machines are the ancestors of the present sophisticated vending machines. Old vending machines are generally treasured by people for many reasons. Restored old models are cheap solutions for vending machines. They have an additional sentimental value which reflects past memories. The historic relevance of the vintage model is also important. Old vending machines mostly adorn game rooms, home theatre, business area etc.Old vending machines show the evolution of vending machine through ages. The first vending machine was made by Hero from Alexandria, in 215 B.C. The oldest vending machine was designed with a self-contained urn to squirt the holy water, when the coin is inserted. It was a gravity based system. The modern era of vending machines starts from the French postcard mini-kiosk established in the 18th century. Tutti-Fruiti gumball vending machines made in 1888 are the oldest machines in the USA, which were marketed by Thomas Adams Gum Company.Old vending machines of a wide variety of soda brands including Coca Cola, 7up, Dr. Pepper, RC Cola, etc are available in the market. Old candy machines are also available aplenty in the market. The round top models were the trend of 1950?s cola machines. In 1960?s, versatile square top machines which offer both cans and bottles were introduced. Antique gumball machine is a hot favorite among the vintage models. Some old models are exhibited in the malls.Old vending machines are restored to make them functional. They are restored in professional ways to provide a brand new attribute. All the damaged parts are repaired or replaced. The machines are painted with custom colors chosen from the available wide pool of colors. The steel parts are re-fabricated and new refrigerating system is installed. So what kind of person would do well as a general manager of a boutique hotel? Answer these questions, if you can say yes to each answer then you will probably really like the challenge. Please note that I am assuming that you are already an experienced manager and qualified to be a general manager. The 51 Questions 1. You do not need routines to feel successful at work. I task the many boutique hotel companies to ask these questions to gm candidates during the interview process. I know that you will save a lot of time, frustration and lower your turnover rates (higher for general manager positions in boutique hotels). If you are a boutique hotel company I would also ask you to make sure that you do the following for your hotel general managers, ensuring their success and lowering your gm turnover: 1. Don’t hire an experience luxury (non-boutique hotel) general manger unless they can answer yes or actually commit to learning the answer to each of the prior 51 questions. How to Use Public Access TV to Promote Your Business and Build Your Credibility ory off an electronic guest room lock.Local public access TV stations may be the best kept secret in America. Where else can you get free access to training, equipment, support and the local airwaves all in one location? For small businesses, local access TV is an opportunity to produce your own TV show, become known in the community and build your reputation as an expert in your field.Here are five easy ways to get on your local public access TV station:1. Check your local listingsNot every town has all three “PEG” outlets, but with over 3,000 community media centers across the country, chances are there’s one near you. Check your town’s Web site or contact your town hall. Another misconception: You do not necessarily have to live in the town to utilize their community access station. Most access centers are eager for new producers and new programs. FYI: The Alliance for Community Media is a national, non-profit organization that promotes and supports public access TV. They maintain an extensive database and links to local access centers. Look for your town there.2. Get free trainingMost community media access centers provide frequent producer orientations, equipment training and studio instruction. The focus is typically on getting you up and running in one or two sessions. Volunteers and producers are the life blood of public access, so you’ll find plenty of accommodating help.3. Go make TVAs long as you’re armed with an idea, you’re ready to produce a show. If you’re not quite ready for your close up, start by assisting with another show, or by being a guest on another’s producer’s program. There’s no shortage of opportunities in front or behind the camera, so just dive in.FYI: For more ideas and information, check out the Public Access TV Blog, which has some suggestions for getting started. The Alliance for Community Media’s online bookstore also features books and videos for additional training or inspiration.4. Fix it in postYou can produce your program “live to tape,” if you’re doing a talk show or just want to do your show “on the fly.” In most cases, you’re probably going to want to edit your tape. Post production is where you can make your program look more professional by editing mistakes, inserting graphics or adding music. Most home computers now i 33. You know how to make a bed as well as your best housekeeper. 34. You know what the ph level should be in your wash rinse. 35. You know how to check the chemicals in you pool and Jacuzzi. 36. You know what the interfaces are for each of your hotel software systems. 37. You know how to get guests online using your wireless internet service. 38. You know the difference between an p&l and a balance sheet. 39. You can run a commercial dishwasher. 40. You know your receivables and payables. 41. You know where your housekeeper buys their supplies. 42. You know local city ordinances as they apply to your property. 43. You can deliver a room service order. 44. You can clean a bathroom to 5 star standards. 45. You can fold a towel like your housekeepers. 46. You know where the water and gas mains are, and how to shut them off. 47. You know each of your guest room types. 48. You have no problem befriending your neighboring business and residents. 49. You can write a well researched and accurate month end report. 50. You know how to calculate flow through. 51. Have a number two person who can answer these questions as well. I task the many boutique hotel companies to ask these questions to gm candidates during the interview process. I know that you will save a lot of time, frustration and lower your turnover rates (higher for general manager positions in boutique hotels). If you are a boutique hotel company I would also ask you to make sure that you do the following for your hotel general managers, ensuring their success and lowering your gm turnover: 1. Don’t hire an experience luxury (non-boutique hotel) general manger unless they can answer yes or actually commit to learning the answer to each of the prior 51 questions. The point? So what is the point to all of this? The boutique hotel general manager, in my opinion is a completely different job than a general manager at a full service luxury property. But unfortunately the two are muddled together in a basket full of un-attainable expectations. I think that the boutique hotel general manager should have a new title— I leave this up to the boutique hotel companies and the creative genius that drives their brands. At the end of the day, a title is really not important, but the expectations are. Make sure you understand your role as a boutique hotel general manager or the role your general managers play at your boutique hotels. Make certain that as you take a job or when hire them, they know what a boutique hotel manager really is.
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