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    Do You Need A Promotion
    A promotion does not necessarily mean financial benefits, it also means more responsibility. Before you look to get a promotion on your Job there are certain things you must take into consideration.First of all, think about your reasons to get a promotion. Can you handle more responsibility? Will the new job be what you want to do? Do you have skills that might benefit the company if they present you a higher position? If you have thought about all these questions, and you are sure you want the promotion, following are some tips that will make your chances or earning a promotion better.Evaluate yourself; your abilities and skills that give you an edge over your coworkers and fit for getting a promotion. Make sure you have been giving that extra bit to your job, for example working overtime, presenting new ideas, completing your projects/assignments on time. Once you have all the facts right and you think you're ready for a promotion, it is time to show your boss you are. Find the right time and place to talk to your boss. Make sure he isn't under too much stress or too busy when you approach him.You should take some time and study the company's situation before you go for a promotion. Make sure, the company has enough budgets to provide for your promotion. If you can not get a promotion, the least you can do is ask for more responsibility on your current job. More responsibility means more experience and more respect. You will automatically become a candidate for a promotion if they ever consider it or if a new position opens.If you are a good employee your chances of getting a promotion are good. Getting a promotion, should not mean a change in attitude. You should continue to work hard and perhaps, even harder than before to cope with the extra responsibility that comes with a promotion. Not getting a promotion should not mean disappointment or change in your attitude towards your job. Consider the possibilities that perhaps, the company could not afford to have promoted you. Also consider that maybe you had not provided enough reason to the company that giving you a promotion could benefit them, and thus work harder on your job.
    upplies.
    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.
    2. Train, train and train your new gm’s on the property they are going to. Make sure they know everything before you “turn them loose”.
    3. Pay them a fair wage, maybe even a bit more than fair. Boutique hotel companies seem to think they can attract new gm’s who maybe were a number two at a larger property, convince them that it is “cool” to be a part of your company and pay them less than the industry standard. This just makes your new gm start listening to those headhunter calls (they call hotel gm’s a lot!) with offers of much higher salaries back in the “comfort” zone of a branded hotel.
    4. Understand what goes on in the life of a boutique hotel gm. Most boutique hotel corporate staff have never been a gm at a real boutique hotel and have no idea what it is like. Get to know what happens on property.
    5. Insist that your gm’s take time off. It is easy for your gm to get wrapped up in the operation and start working 7 days a week. This will just burn them out. Figure out a way to get them the time with their families they need to stay sane, married etc…
    6. Don’t call them on their day off unless it is an emergency. If you don’t know what days your gm’s are off then shame on you.
    7. Don’t be double minded. Don’t show up one day and berate the gm for the pool deck needing re-surfacing and then two days later come down on them for requesting the funds to make property repairs.
    8. Give them realistic budgets, and if you sell a bonus during the interview process, make sure it is realistic.
    9. Give them the same “perks” that gm’s in large hotel properties get. You can skip the car allowance, but at least offer dry cleaning and travel privileges at your other properties.
    10. Talk to them often. Really talk to them, don’t talk at them. Listen to what is going on.
    11. If you tell them that “we are an entrepreneurial company” and that gm’s can “make their own decisions” and then second guess every decision they make you need to re-think your message.
    12. Make sure you give them the ability to

    10 Keys to Stay Motivated And On Top Of Your Game
    What do you dream about? Do you have dreams of building a blockbuster business, material wealth, taking great vacations, writing the next bestseller, or contributing to the lives of others? Whatever dreams you have big or small, staying motivated can sometimes be a challenge.Initially, many people hit the ground running towards their goals with great enthusiasm and determination. They keep up the momentum for a period of time and often lose steam, (emotionally, psychologically, physically, and spiritually) for a variety of reasons. That's just part of being human!Below are 10 ways to help you stay motivated and moving forward:1. Create a vivid and compelling vision of the dream you wish to achieve. Consider all the aspects of your life as if you were looking through a wide-angled lens. See your vision take form as a picture in your mind. Write down all you see, think, and feel. See yourself in that vision of having what you want. Now, you must make the decision to say YES to have what you want. Making the decision is the first step to committing to a dream. In other words, how bad do you want it and what are you willing to do (or be) to have your dream?2. Identify what stimulates and motivates you. It might be certain music, movies, books such as Lance Armstrong’s amazing success story, exercise, magazines, places or people (heroes, role models) that get you juiced and pumped. Notice the people and things that drain and de-motivate. See #4.3. Be passionate. Webster’s dictionary defines passion as "A powerfull emotion or appetite; boundless enthusiasm". Passion is a great motivator and if you are motivated you are passionate! These are three strategies to keep your passions strong:- Revisit your vision, goals, and dreams daily so they stay up front in your heart and mind. - Design a "rough day" strategy. We all have days when it seems nothing is going the way we want. When faced with "one of those days", having a strategy on how to stay positive will be key to sustaining motivation. For me personally, I meditate to quiet my mind so that I feel more centered. Reaching out to a close friend also helps me regain perspective to recommit to my dreams. - Take control of your environment. We make choices everyday about the people we associate w
    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.

    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.
    2. You can delegate without concern.
    3. You can make decisions without committee recommendation.
    4. You can spend long hours at work. By long I mean sometimes up to 14 hours at a time.
    5. You have no problem spending the night at the property to make sure everything is ok.
    6. You don’t have a problem delivering luggage to guest rooms (you probably wont have a bellman to do this for you).
    7. You can valet park a car.
    8. You can re-program guest keys using the key card system.
    9. You really enjoy speaking with your guests….REALLY.
    10. You can mix a drink and you know who Mr. Boston is.
    11. You can run a commercial washing machine.
    12. You can re-set a circuit breaker.
    13. You can change a flat tire, jump start a car.
    14. You can re-set your router. If you don’t know what a router is then stop now and re-think any thoughts you have of being a boutique hotel gm. You will not have an on site IT manager to help you!
    15. You can check in/ out a guest using the front office system.
    16. You can process credit cards and split payments to various folios.
    17. You can run the switchboard at the front desk.
    18. You can ring in an order using the restaurants POS.
    19. You can re-set the restaurant POS.
    20. You can program a digital surveillance system.
    21. You can type your own memos, send your own e-mails and answer your own phones (this should be true of ANY gm nowadays).
    22. You can jump from one project to the next without hesitation.
    23. You know what to do when someone has a heart attack in your lobby.
    24. You know what to do when someone chokes in your restaurant.
    25. You can explain your restaurant menu items as well or better than your servers.
    26. You can brew coffee using a commercial coffee machine.
    27. You can draw a good cup of espresso.
    28. You know the difference between a latte and a cappuccino.
    29. You know the temperature requirements for your walk-in and refrigerators. If you don’t know what a walk-in is, stop here and think about your career choice.
    30. You know what to do when the health inspector shows up. Hint, it is not to grab a handful of cash!
    31. You know who to call if your phone system suddenly stops working.
    32. You know how to read the history off an electronic guest room lock.
    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.
    2. Train, train and train your new gm’s on the property they are going to. Make sure they know everything before you “turn them loose”.
    3. Pay them a fair wage, maybe even a bit more than fair. Boutique hotel companies seem to think they can attract new gm’s who maybe were a number two at a larger property, convince them that it is “cool” to be a part of your company and pay them less than the industry standard. This just makes your new gm start listening to those headhunter calls (they call hotel gm’s a lot!) with offers of much higher salaries back in the “comfort” zone of a branded hotel.
    4. Understand what goes on in the life of a boutique hotel gm. Most boutique hotel corporate staff have never been a gm at a real boutique hotel and have no idea what it is like. Get to know what happens on property.
    5. Insist that your gm’s take time off. It is easy for your gm to get wrapped up in the operation and start working 7 days a week. This will just burn them out. Figure out a way to get them the time with their families they need to stay sane, married etc…
    6. Don’t call them on their day off unless it is an emergency. If you don’t know what days your gm’s are off then shame on you.
    7. Don’t be double minded. Don’t show up one day and berate the gm for the pool deck needing re-surfacing and then two days later come down on them for requesting the funds to make property repairs.
    8. Give them realistic budgets, and if you sell a bonus during the interview process, make sure it is realistic.
    9. Give them the same “perks” that gm’s in large hotel properties get. You can skip the car allowance, but at least offer dry cleaning and travel privileges at your other properties.
    10. Talk to them often. Really talk to them, don’t talk at them. Listen to what is going on.
    11. If you tell them that “we are an entrepreneurial company” and that gm’s can “make their own decisions” and then second guess every decision they make you need to re-think your message.
    12. Make sure you give them the ability to h

    Tailoring Doesn’t Always Refer to Your Wardrobe
    He has been a friend and client for many years, has heard me talk about it for at least a decade and still made the mistake that kills more resume submissions than anything else.For my search firm readers, how often do you receive a resume that causes you to scratch your head and wonder what the person was thinking of who sent their resume? With me, it happens more than a hundred times a day.Almost every resume I receive does not show the skills required to do the job even when I make it clear in my advertising to send their resume in Word ONLY IF YOU HAVE THE REQUIRED SKILLS.And if you think I have time to call everyone and ask them about the experience they have that fits the position for which they forwarded their resume, you’re wrong. I don’t. If I called everyone who emailed, waited for them to get back and qualified them for the missing part of the fit, I would never have time to do the marketing that helps people land the jobs I get for them.So here is the simple solution—stop flipping the same resume to job ads like they are burgers at a fast food restaurant. Tailor your resume to the position.Pretend a six year old is going to read it. Would your son or daughter at that age be able to figure out that you are qualified to do the job?Yes, that means you will have 50 or 100 versions of your resume and you will need to track which version you sent to whom.So what.A broken watch is right twice a day and a generic resume will get you some interviews.You will get more and better interviews if you tailor your resume to the specific job description, rather than sending the same one over and over again.
    eative 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.
    2. You can delegate without concern.
    3. You can make decisions without committee recommendation.
    4. You can spend long hours at work. By long I mean sometimes up to 14 hours at a time.
    5. You have no problem spending the night at the property to make sure everything is ok.
    6. You don’t have a problem delivering luggage to guest rooms (you probably wont have a bellman to do this for you).
    7. You can valet park a car.
    8. You can re-program guest keys using the key card system.
    9. You really enjoy speaking with your guests….REALLY.
    10. You can mix a drink and you know who Mr. Boston is.
    11. You can run a commercial washing machine.
    12. You can re-set a circuit breaker.
    13. You can change a flat tire, jump start a car.
    14. You can re-set your router. If you don’t know what a router is then stop now and re-think any thoughts you have of being a boutique hotel gm. You will not have an on site IT manager to help you!
    15. You can check in/ out a guest using the front office system.
    16. You can process credit cards and split payments to various folios.
    17. You can run the switchboard at the front desk.
    18. You can ring in an order using the restaurants POS.
    19. You can re-set the restaurant POS.
    20. You can program a digital surveillance system.
    21. You can type your own memos, send your own e-mails and answer your own phones (this should be true of ANY gm nowadays).
    22. You can jump from one project to the next without hesitation.
    23. You know what to do when someone has a heart attack in your lobby.
    24. You know what to do when someone chokes in your restaurant.
    25. You can explain your restaurant menu items as well or better than your servers.
    26. You can brew coffee using a commercial coffee machine.
    27. You can draw a good cup of espresso.
    28. You know the difference between a latte and a cappuccino.
    29. You know the temperature requirements for your walk-in and refrigerators. If you don’t know what a walk-in is, stop here and think about your career choice.
    30. You know what to do when the health inspector shows up. Hint, it is not to grab a handful of cash!
    31. You know who to call if your phone system suddenly stops working.
    32. You know how to read the history off an electronic guest room lock.
    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.
    2. Train, train and train your new gm’s on the property they are going to. Make sure they know everything before you “turn them loose”.
    3. Pay them a fair wage, maybe even a bit more than fair. Boutique hotel companies seem to think they can attract new gm’s who maybe were a number two at a larger property, convince them that it is “cool” to be a part of your company and pay them less than the industry standard. This just makes your new gm start listening to those headhunter calls (they call hotel gm’s a lot!) with offers of much higher salaries back in the “comfort” zone of a branded hotel.
    4. Understand what goes on in the life of a boutique hotel gm. Most boutique hotel corporate staff have never been a gm at a real boutique hotel and have no idea what it is like. Get to know what happens on property.
    5. Insist that your gm’s take time off. It is easy for your gm to get wrapped up in the operation and start working 7 days a week. This will just burn them out. Figure out a way to get them the time with their families they need to stay sane, married etc…
    6. Don’t call them on their day off unless it is an emergency. If you don’t know what days your gm’s are off then shame on you.
    7. Don’t be double minded. Don’t show up one day and berate the gm for the pool deck needing re-surfacing and then two days later come down on them for requesting the funds to make property repairs.
    8. Give them realistic budgets, and if you sell a bonus during the interview process, make sure it is realistic.
    9. Give them the same “perks” that gm’s in large hotel properties get. You can skip the car allowance, but at least offer dry cleaning and travel privileges at your other properties.
    10. Talk to them often. Really talk to them, don’t talk at them. Listen to what is going on.
    11. If you tell them that “we are an entrepreneurial company” and that gm’s can “make their own decisions” and then second guess every decision they make you need to re-think your message.
    12. Make sure you give them the ability to

    Image and Branding Advertising-Get over it or Go Broke!
    Out of 100 products, 90 never get past the initial development and testing stages, of the 10 that do 7 will fail in the market within 3 years.To make matters worse 80% of new businesses are gone within 3-5 years!WHY?Because a higher number of the Business Owners have no idea how to sell, promote, advertising or market their products. Most Business Owners are brilliant in their fields of expertise or they have a great product, but they couldn't market or advertising their way out of a wet paper bag!If you are serious about YOUR business then read every single word on this page. You see today I'm covering a subject that sent a lot of those 80% of businesses to an early grave!"Image and Brand Advertising"Sometimes when people go into business, they feel they have to throw heaps of money at advertising because that’s what the “Top Guns” do isn’t it?We are surrounded by image advertising everywhere we look. It’s in our face 24/7. Half the time, we are a compete loss as to what the business is actually trying to sell?And let’s face it, most of us who are in business just don’t have money to burn. As an entrepreneur every dollar must be watched, after all the reason we go into business in the first place is to make a profit right?“Image Advertising” is the type of ad campaign that use music, sexy women and men, dancing, singing and then end with the company’s logo. They give absolutely no reason for the buyer to take immediate action in most cases.Unless you are a huge company like Coca Cola or Nike, and have very deep pockets, this type of advertising will do nothing to attract “top of mind awareness”. Using “Image” advertising is one of the major traps that traditional and online businesses fall into today. People get wound up trying to be clever, cutesy or creative that they forget WHY they’re advertising the first place.Now correct me if I’m wrong, buy wouldn’t you agree the whole reason for spending big bucks on advertising and marketing is to make money? So don’t go getting trapped in all that glitz and glamour. Think about the number one reason for being in business. (Yes, apart from the money!)It’s to serve your customer. Because let’s not forget, it’s them who has the money you want in their pockets! If you really wa
    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.
    2. You can delegate without concern.
    3. You can make decisions without committee recommendation.
    4. You can spend long hours at work. By long I mean sometimes up to 14 hours at a time.
    5. You have no problem spending the night at the property to make sure everything is ok.
    6. You don’t have a problem delivering luggage to guest rooms (you probably wont have a bellman to do this for you).
    7. You can valet park a car.
    8. You can re-program guest keys using the key card system.
    9. You really enjoy speaking with your guests….REALLY.
    10. You can mix a drink and you know who Mr. Boston is.
    11. You can run a commercial washing machine.
    12. You can re-set a circuit breaker.
    13. You can change a flat tire, jump start a car.
    14. You can re-set your router. If you don’t know what a router is then stop now and re-think any thoughts you have of being a boutique hotel gm. You will not have an on site IT manager to help you!
    15. You can check in/ out a guest using the front office system.
    16. You can process credit cards and split payments to various folios.
    17. You can run the switchboard at the front desk.
    18. You can ring in an order using the restaurants POS.
    19. You can re-set the restaurant POS.
    20. You can program a digital surveillance system.
    21. You can type your own memos, send your own e-mails and answer your own phones (this should be true of ANY gm nowadays).
    22. You can jump from one project to the next without hesitation.
    23. You know what to do when someone has a heart attack in your lobby.
    24. You know what to do when someone chokes in your restaurant.
    25. You can explain your restaurant menu items as well or better than your servers.
    26. You can brew coffee using a commercial coffee machine.
    27. You can draw a good cup of espresso.
    28. You know the difference between a latte and a cappuccino.
    29. You know the temperature requirements for your walk-in and refrigerators. If you don’t know what a walk-in is, stop here and think about your career choice.
    30. You know what to do when the health inspector shows up. Hint, it is not to grab a handful of cash!
    31. You know who to call if your phone system suddenly stops working.
    32. You know how to read the history off an electronic guest room lock.
    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.
    2. Train, train and train your new gm’s on the property they are going to. Make sure they know everything before you “turn them loose”.
    3. Pay them a fair wage, maybe even a bit more than fair. Boutique hotel companies seem to think they can attract new gm’s who maybe were a number two at a larger property, convince them that it is “cool” to be a part of your company and pay them less than the industry standard. This just makes your new gm start listening to those headhunter calls (they call hotel gm’s a lot!) with offers of much higher salaries back in the “comfort” zone of a branded hotel.
    4. Understand what goes on in the life of a boutique hotel gm. Most boutique hotel corporate staff have never been a gm at a real boutique hotel and have no idea what it is like. Get to know what happens on property.
    5. Insist that your gm’s take time off. It is easy for your gm to get wrapped up in the operation and start working 7 days a week. This will just burn them out. Figure out a way to get them the time with their families they need to stay sane, married etc…
    6. Don’t call them on their day off unless it is an emergency. If you don’t know what days your gm’s are off then shame on you.
    7. Don’t be double minded. Don’t show up one day and berate the gm for the pool deck needing re-surfacing and then two days later come down on them for requesting the funds to make property repairs.
    8. Give them realistic budgets, and if you sell a bonus during the interview process, make sure it is realistic.
    9. Give them the same “perks” that gm’s in large hotel properties get. You can skip the car allowance, but at least offer dry cleaning and travel privileges at your other properties.
    10. Talk to them often. Really talk to them, don’t talk at them. Listen to what is going on.
    11. If you tell them that “we are an entrepreneurial company” and that gm’s can “make their own decisions” and then second guess every decision they make you need to re-think your message.
    12. Make sure you give them the ability to

    Important Aspects of Surety Bonds
    In today’s unstable and unpredictable economic climate, surety bonds are extremely important for company owners who wish to ensure that the legal terms of their closed contracts and agreements are properly respected by all parties involved. The practice of establishing surety bonds dates back hundreds of years ago, when such agreements had the role to increase the safety and efficiency of long-distance trade. Nowadays surety bonds can take various forms, play a wide range of roles and are commonly used to secure the terms of major contracts. At present, surety bonds are extensively used in the construction industry, as contractors are often obliged to provide project owners a bond that guarantees the respecting of the terms stipulated in the contract. Sometimes owners are also required to provide payment bonds to ensure that the suppliers and construction teams will receive their payment in time.According to a series of recent studies, the construction industry in the US is a 445 billion dollar business that includes around a million contractors, up to 70 national contractor agencies and associations, and more than 7 million workers. Elaborate market investigations recently conducted in the US have revealed that over 60,000 contractors in the construction industry failed to respect their agreements over the last 10 years, canceling public and private sector construction projects worth more than 18 billion dollars. In order to prevent major financial losses and an entire succession of undesirable results, increasingly larger numbers of companies nowadays consider using surety bonds when closing major deals. In the construction industry and not only, surety bonds have a crucial role, enabling project owners to minimize serious financial risks.Surety bonds generally establish a temporary tripartite relationship between the obligee (the secured party), the obligor (the principal) and the surety (the party that is secondarily liable). Suretyships basically require the surety to undertake the debt of another party (the principal). Although many people still confuse a surety with an insurer, they are two distinctive notions. Thus, it is very important to distinguish between suretyship and insurance agreements. For instance, a liability insurer may pay a third party on behalf of the insured, in
    at 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.
    2. You can delegate without concern.
    3. You can make decisions without committee recommendation.
    4. You can spend long hours at work. By long I mean sometimes up to 14 hours at a time.
    5. You have no problem spending the night at the property to make sure everything is ok.
    6. You don’t have a problem delivering luggage to guest rooms (you probably wont have a bellman to do this for you).
    7. You can valet park a car.
    8. You can re-program guest keys using the key card system.
    9. You really enjoy speaking with your guests….REALLY.
    10. You can mix a drink and you know who Mr. Boston is.
    11. You can run a commercial washing machine.
    12. You can re-set a circuit breaker.
    13. You can change a flat tire, jump start a car.
    14. You can re-set your router. If you don’t know what a router is then stop now and re-think any thoughts you have of being a boutique hotel gm. You will not have an on site IT manager to help you!
    15. You can check in/ out a guest using the front office system.
    16. You can process credit cards and split payments to various folios.
    17. You can run the switchboard at the front desk.
    18. You can ring in an order using the restaurants POS.
    19. You can re-set the restaurant POS.
    20. You can program a digital surveillance system.
    21. You can type your own memos, send your own e-mails and answer your own phones (this should be true of ANY gm nowadays).
    22. You can jump from one project to the next without hesitation.
    23. You know what to do when someone has a heart attack in your lobby.
    24. You know what to do when someone chokes in your restaurant.
    25. You can explain your restaurant menu items as well or better than your servers.
    26. You can brew coffee using a commercial coffee machine.
    27. You can draw a good cup of espresso.
    28. You know the difference between a latte and a cappuccino.
    29. You know the temperature requirements for your walk-in and refrigerators. If you don’t know what a walk-in is, stop here and think about your career choice.
    30. You know what to do when the health inspector shows up. Hint, it is not to grab a handful of cash!
    31. You know who to call if your phone system suddenly stops working.
    32. You know how to read the history off an electronic guest room lock.
    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.
    2. Train, train and train your new gm’s on the property they are going to. Make sure they know everything before you “turn them loose”.
    3. Pay them a fair wage, maybe even a bit more than fair. Boutique hotel companies seem to think they can attract new gm’s who maybe were a number two at a larger property, convince them that it is “cool” to be a part of your company and pay them less than the industry standard. This just makes your new gm start listening to those headhunter calls (they call hotel gm’s a lot!) with offers of much higher salaries back in the “comfort” zone of a branded hotel.
    4. Understand what goes on in the life of a boutique hotel gm. Most boutique hotel corporate staff have never been a gm at a real boutique hotel and have no idea what it is like. Get to know what happens on property.
    5. Insist that your gm’s take time off. It is easy for your gm to get wrapped up in the operation and start working 7 days a week. This will just burn them out. Figure out a way to get them the time with their families they need to stay sane, married etc…
    6. Don’t call them on their day off unless it is an emergency. If you don’t know what days your gm’s are off then shame on you.
    7. Don’t be double minded. Don’t show up one day and berate the gm for the pool deck needing re-surfacing and then two days later come down on them for requesting the funds to make property repairs.
    8. Give them realistic budgets, and if you sell a bonus during the interview process, make sure it is realistic.
    9. Give them the same “perks” that gm’s in large hotel properties get. You can skip the car allowance, but at least offer dry cleaning and travel privileges at your other properties.
    10. Talk to them often. Really talk to them, don’t talk at them. Listen to what is going on.
    11. If you tell them that “we are an entrepreneurial company” and that gm’s can “make their own decisions” and then second guess every decision they make you need to re-think your message.
    12. Make sure you give them the ability to

    Designing Ads? Remember the Reader
    When you are creating advertising design for the newspaper, magazine or direct mail, what do you think might be one of the most important considerations?If you answered readability, congratulate yourself! Fancy graphics may get the ad noticed, but readers must be able physically to read the words. This elementary concept sounds simple enough, yet is often ignored. If they can't read it, they can't understand enough about your offer to respond.With today's sophisticated and virtually unlimited graphic computer options, it is easy for the graphic design advertising person to get sidetracked into believing what is on the screen looks like a true work of art!Here are some advertising design questions to ask:1. Want your ad to look different? Examine a few past issues of the publication where your ad will be appearing. Often publications create ads themselves ("pub-set") and they can tend to look similar. See if you can spot them. Then try to develop a graphic look different than the other ads. Set your ad apart by using a different type face family that is easily read.2. Is the advertisement legible? In their desire to be different and stylish, some of todays' magazines make reading difficult.Here are some common problems. White type on a light pastel background. Or light pastel type on a slightly darker background of the same color. Or colors that don't contrast well when viewed in black and white, such as dark forest green type printed on a background of fire engine red.It is better to go for the headline in big, lighter type against a much darker background.3. Trying to cram too much information into a small space? One of the big problems is trying to fit too many words and concepts into a small space.Here is where small space is actually your friend. It forces you (or the writer) to break down your ideas into simple words and simple concepts. Bear in mind that the goal of many advertisements is to solicit an inquiry, not to tell the entire story.Often readers look to the details to figure out if they want to act. The type showing those details should be large enough to see and comprehend, even for those who have trouble with their vision. Type in color really needs to be 10 point, if not 11 to be read by the e
    upplies.
    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.
    2. Train, train and train your new gm’s on the property they are going to. Make sure they know everything before you “turn them loose”.
    3. Pay them a fair wage, maybe even a bit more than fair. Boutique hotel companies seem to think they can attract new gm’s who maybe were a number two at a larger property, convince them that it is “cool” to be a part of your company and pay them less than the industry standard. This just makes your new gm start listening to those headhunter calls (they call hotel gm’s a lot!) with offers of much higher salaries back in the “comfort” zone of a branded hotel.
    4. Understand what goes on in the life of a boutique hotel gm. Most boutique hotel corporate staff have never been a gm at a real boutique hotel and have no idea what it is like. Get to know what happens on property.
    5. Insist that your gm’s take time off. It is easy for your gm to get wrapped up in the operation and start working 7 days a week. This will just burn them out. Figure out a way to get them the time with their families they need to stay sane, married etc…
    6. Don’t call them on their day off unless it is an emergency. If you don’t know what days your gm’s are off then shame on you.
    7. Don’t be double minded. Don’t show up one day and berate the gm for the pool deck needing re-surfacing and then two days later come down on them for requesting the funds to make property repairs.
    8. Give them realistic budgets, and if you sell a bonus during the interview process, make sure it is realistic.
    9. Give them the same “perks” that gm’s in large hotel properties get. You can skip the car allowance, but at least offer dry cleaning and travel privileges at your other properties.
    10. Talk to them often. Really talk to them, don’t talk at them. Listen to what is going on.
    11. If you tell them that “we are an entrepreneurial company” and that gm’s can “make their own decisions” and then second guess every decision they make you need to re-think your message.
    12. Make sure you give them the ability to hire a strong #2. One of the reasons your gm’s leave for other companies is because most boutique hotel companies don’t give their properties the budgets to have a number two, so they have nobody to take their place if other in-company opportunities come up. This is the old and very tired “to move up you have to move out” dynamic that kills us in the hotel industry.
    13. That takes me to this point---set out to develop bench strength. Have leaders waiting in the wings to take positions as you grow. If you don’t you will end up “borrowing” leaders from each of your properties to open your newest. This leaves your existing properties, already running lean on management with an over worked and stressed out group of leaders and staff. Make this a priority.
    14. Thank your gm’s. This is a no-brainer but a much forgot important task as a hotel company. THANK YOUR GM’s. This goes for any hotel company. Your general managers get beat up a lot. By unhappy staff, guests and you. You hit them with constant “notes” on how to perform better. Make sure to balance the coaching with praise.

    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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