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Digg it UP - Lodging Management Companies: Expert Management or Incremental Revenues
IT Support: Don't Work Too Cheaply les reports such as; Top Client Report demonstrating the hotel’s top 20 clients’ productivity and changes in their productivity year-over-year; reports on the returns generated from advertising expenditures in pay-per-click, GDS, print and other advertising media; and Sales Person Productivity Reports to determine who is selling and producing at your hotel?If you set your IT support rates too cheap, you're going to have to work like crazy. The last thing you want to discover at the end of the quarter, after you've entered everything in QuickBooks or Excel, is that you've provided IT support for free.Be Sure To Make a Profit!Don't find yourself saying, "Gee my revenue was really awfully close to my expenses!" You don’t want to work for free. Make sure there is a big difference between the revenue you take in and the expenses you pay out. At the end of it all, you need to be able to draw a profit and be able to cover all of your overhead.There are going to be a number of micro small business that balk at paying acceptable IT support rates. There will also be some that are pretty comfortable with paying 75, 85, 95, $100 an hour or more.Qualify Your CustomersFind your ideal IT support customers and qualify them so you don’t waste your time with the time vampires. These a •receive reports on the effectiveness of your reservations department (such as turndown and conversion reports) and the quality of a guest’s stay through secret shopper calls or visits? •receive reports on industry performance in the areas of profitability, expenses, labor costs, REVPAR generation and market penetration of your hotel at least annually to compare your management company’s performance? •receive annual reports on the changes in the market such as more or fewer competitors, new or closed businesses or industries in the area? •receive an annual marketing plan with monthly or quarterly updates on progress? •receive assistance in planning and implementing capital projects? •receive an annual report on the condition of the asset and franchise compliance? As an owner the ball is on your court and many times you hire a management firm because you are too busy to involve yourself in the details needed to assure that your return on your hotel investment is maximized. Perha Learn How To Get The Most From Your Team As a hotel owner/investor with perhaps one or two hotel assets, you have invested your hard-earned capital and risked exposure to recourse on your loans in pursuit of a profitable lodging operation. Moreover, given your limited exposure to the hotel industry, you may have selected a professional management firm to operate your hotel. Perhaps a “first-tier” management firm, a company that not only franchises hotels but also provides management services. Alternatively, you may have selected a “second-tier” firm. That is a hotel owner/franchise holder with dozens, maybe even hundreds of hotels who manage their own assets and those of others. Or perhaps you may have chosen a smaller, boutique firm with possibly a hotel or two of their own who are seeking to grow their management portfolio. No matter whom you have selected, your expecting that they will have your best interests at heart with each decision they make. Well that may not exactly be the case.Being a leader isn’t easy. Every one looks to you to make decisions, resolve disputes, and to carry all the responsibility. Being a leader can be a lonely job.Some of us are born into leadership. For them it is effortless effort. They have no qualms (or at least they know how to hide them) about making tough decisions, about taking the responsibility, and knowing that it can lead to resentment and isolation from other team members.Others are forced into it. They find themselves taking over the role due to an unforeseen event, and try and balance their friendships and relationships with the requirements of the role. This almost always leads to frustration, stress and overall dissatisfaction with the situation from everybody.Then there are others that grow into the role. They are able to adapt to the pressures the role requires, and practice at balancing the responsibilities of the position with relationships both at work and The goals of lodging property owners and investors are infrequently philosophically or financially fully aligned with the goals their appointed management or at times even their brand. Operators and brands often have competing objectives, which are in direct conflict with maximizing owners’ return. For example, brands have a stake in maintaining brand standards and creating “brand equity” which may not always be in the best economic interests of an individual lodging asset. Sure brands will argue that what’s good for the brand will have some trickle down affect on you, but changing your brand new wallpaper behind the front desk from one shade of beige to a shade the brand wants to install at all of its hotels (which I have been asked to do by a major brand - who shall remain nameless) is really just a poor use of capital that will never impact either revenues or guest satisfaction. Management companies, on the other hand, have an interest in growing their portfolios and their revenues (usually a percentage of yours) but may not be motivated to assist your lodging operation in achieving its individual peek financial performance in the short, or worse, long term. They may also lack expertise or the incentive to control costs, target the best market position for an individual property, maximize a hotel’s market penetration or possess the knowledge to find their way through the myriad of old and new distribution channels. Given that the average management fees, which are currently around 2.5% of a hotel’s overall gross revenues (including any incentive fees), are significantly below the fees of yesteryear, is it any wonder. Over the last few years, in an attempt to grow revenues, management firms are focused on creating incremental revenue by adding properties to their roster at lower fees. Many of these firms are keeping the same amount of personnel and resources in place spreading them over more assets. Take the following example. At the current rate of fees, an additional $25,000 in hotel revenues represents about $500 in fees. Let’s face it, $500 is not a significant enough return on the additional efforts, staff time and resource allocations that would be required by the management firm to generate that additional $25,000. However, as the owner, it can make the difference between paying your mortgage from cash flow or out of your pocket. The economic facts just don’t add up. Consider a typical, select-service hotel with 100 guest rooms, an average daily rate of $70 and a 70% annual occupancy. The average fees for this hotel would be around $35,000. With management firms per hotel revenues at this low level, what can an owner truly expect of them? While your hotel may benefit from any buying power, it will also absorb any expenses derived from the management firms related travel, accounting services, co-operative marketing, etc. This is often an area where some revenue lost in the last few years is re-gained by some less scrupulous management firms. When fees are at this low level, the game becomes volume. It is not my intention to bash any management firm. I was the Chief Operating Officer of three small to mid-size firms operating national brands as well as luxury independent hotels and I currently represent many hotel owners through our consulting practice. I see both sides of the issue. But… there are few business focused on volume sales in any industry that come to mind as being known for outstanding levels of service to its customers. So what is an owner to do? Become an informed owner who takes charge in monitoring their hotel’s performance (or who hires someone to do so for them). Realize that for $35,000 a year in fees, your services may be restricted to limited oversight of an on property manager; hopefully a good one. If you engage a management firm now or are in the stages of interviewing one, ask yourself some questions about your relationship and how you will be informed of your hotel’s level of success. You may not need all of the suggested information below but you most certainly need some. Ask yourself do you… •get a report from a representative of the firm who is on-site for a day or two each month detailing their findings of the physical plant, operations and sales efforts by the personnel they supervise? Does their finding match yours? •receive timely monthly operational statements that compare results to the budget and last year? •receive monthly reports on the hotel’s performance as measured by third party firms such as •receive monthly booking pace reports to review where you stand in revenues compared to the same time last year along with an action plan for improvement? •receive monthly sales reports such as; Top Client Report demonstrating the hotel’s top 20 clients’ productivity and changes in their productivity year-over-year; reports on the returns generated from advertising expenditures in pay-per-click, GDS, print and other advertising media; and Sales Person Productivity Reports to determine who is selling and producing at your hotel? •receive reports on the effectiveness of your reservations department (such as turndown and conversion reports) and the quality of a guest’s stay through secret shopper calls or visits? •receive reports on industry performance in the areas of profitability, expenses, labor costs, REVPAR generation and market penetration of your hotel at least annually to compare your management company’s performance? •receive annual reports on the changes in the market such as more or fewer competitors, new or closed businesses or industries in the area? •receive an annual marketing plan with monthly or quarterly updates on progress? •receive assistance in planning and implementing capital projects? •receive an annual report on the condition of the asset and franchise compliance? As an owner the ball is on your court and many times you hire a management firm because you are too busy to involve yourself in the details needed to assure that your return on your hotel investment is maximized. Perhap Self-Made Billionaires are Innovators And Risk Takers trickle down affect on you, but changing your brand new wallpaper behind the front desk from one shade of beige to a shade the brand wants to install at all of its hotels (which I have been asked to do by a major brand - who shall remain nameless) is really just a poor use of capital that will never impact either revenues or guest satisfaction.Do you think that dropping out of college to start a business is a risk? Are you a risk taker? Would you drop out of college to start a business? Bill Gates did. He dropped out of Harvard to start Microsoft, which became one of the most innovative companies ever. He's like many self-made billionaires and entrepreneurs; he is a risk-taker and an innovator (actually, that also describes many self-made millionaires).Risk tolerance and innovation are just two of the personality characteristics of self-made billionaires. Here are more: They are entrepreneurial They "step up to the plate" when an opportunity arises They see opportunity where nobody else does They don't procrastinate, they "make it happen" They are full of optimism They accept mistakes because there is an opportunity to learn from failure They enjoy success and thrive to achieve it They appreciate their o Management companies, on the other hand, have an interest in growing their portfolios and their revenues (usually a percentage of yours) but may not be motivated to assist your lodging operation in achieving its individual peek financial performance in the short, or worse, long term. They may also lack expertise or the incentive to control costs, target the best market position for an individual property, maximize a hotel’s market penetration or possess the knowledge to find their way through the myriad of old and new distribution channels. Given that the average management fees, which are currently around 2.5% of a hotel’s overall gross revenues (including any incentive fees), are significantly below the fees of yesteryear, is it any wonder. Over the last few years, in an attempt to grow revenues, management firms are focused on creating incremental revenue by adding properties to their roster at lower fees. Many of these firms are keeping the same amount of personnel and resources in place spreading them over more assets. Take the following example. At the current rate of fees, an additional $25,000 in hotel revenues represents about $500 in fees. Let’s face it, $500 is not a significant enough return on the additional efforts, staff time and resource allocations that would be required by the management firm to generate that additional $25,000. However, as the owner, it can make the difference between paying your mortgage from cash flow or out of your pocket. The economic facts just don’t add up. Consider a typical, select-service hotel with 100 guest rooms, an average daily rate of $70 and a 70% annual occupancy. The average fees for this hotel would be around $35,000. With management firms per hotel revenues at this low level, what can an owner truly expect of them? While your hotel may benefit from any buying power, it will also absorb any expenses derived from the management firms related travel, accounting services, co-operative marketing, etc. This is often an area where some revenue lost in the last few years is re-gained by some less scrupulous management firms. When fees are at this low level, the game becomes volume. It is not my intention to bash any management firm. I was the Chief Operating Officer of three small to mid-size firms operating national brands as well as luxury independent hotels and I currently represent many hotel owners through our consulting practice. I see both sides of the issue. But… there are few business focused on volume sales in any industry that come to mind as being known for outstanding levels of service to its customers. So what is an owner to do? Become an informed owner who takes charge in monitoring their hotel’s performance (or who hires someone to do so for them). Realize that for $35,000 a year in fees, your services may be restricted to limited oversight of an on property manager; hopefully a good one. If you engage a management firm now or are in the stages of interviewing one, ask yourself some questions about your relationship and how you will be informed of your hotel’s level of success. You may not need all of the suggested information below but you most certainly need some. Ask yourself do you… •get a report from a representative of the firm who is on-site for a day or two each month detailing their findings of the physical plant, operations and sales efforts by the personnel they supervise? Does their finding match yours? •receive timely monthly operational statements that compare results to the budget and last year? •receive monthly reports on the hotel’s performance as measured by third party firms such as •receive monthly booking pace reports to review where you stand in revenues compared to the same time last year along with an action plan for improvement? •receive monthly sales reports such as; Top Client Report demonstrating the hotel’s top 20 clients’ productivity and changes in their productivity year-over-year; reports on the returns generated from advertising expenditures in pay-per-click, GDS, print and other advertising media; and Sales Person Productivity Reports to determine who is selling and producing at your hotel? •receive reports on the effectiveness of your reservations department (such as turndown and conversion reports) and the quality of a guest’s stay through secret shopper calls or visits? •receive reports on industry performance in the areas of profitability, expenses, labor costs, REVPAR generation and market penetration of your hotel at least annually to compare your management company’s performance? •receive annual reports on the changes in the market such as more or fewer competitors, new or closed businesses or industries in the area? •receive an annual marketing plan with monthly or quarterly updates on progress? •receive assistance in planning and implementing capital projects? •receive an annual report on the condition of the asset and franchise compliance? As an owner the ball is on your court and many times you hire a management firm because you are too busy to involve yourself in the details needed to assure that your return on your hotel investment is maximized. Perha Is Your Job Becoming Extinct? Here's What To Do n fees. Let’s face it, $500 is not a significant enough return on the additional efforts, staff time and resource allocations that would be required by the management firm to generate that additional $25,000. However, as the owner, it can make the difference between paying your mortgage from cash flow or out of your pocket.Job growth--or lack of it--and the levels of unemployment continue to confuse obtuse government analysts and the Wall Street crowd.Why? They are ignoring the dramatic effect of rapidly-increasing self-employment.Recently, the weekly number of unemployed declined, but the number of newly-created jobs was very small. How could that happen when there were not enough new jobs created that week?Simple. More and more people are becoming self-employed, no longer wanting, needing and even seeking jobs.One reason: many kinds of American jobs are an endangered species. They're simply not needed any more by corporate America.These jobs include office administrators, production/factory work, farmers and ranchers, stock clerks, sewing machine operators, mail clerks, mail machine operators, computer operators, secretaries, telemarketers, meter readers and part-time sales people.The reasons: o The economic facts just don’t add up. Consider a typical, select-service hotel with 100 guest rooms, an average daily rate of $70 and a 70% annual occupancy. The average fees for this hotel would be around $35,000. With management firms per hotel revenues at this low level, what can an owner truly expect of them? While your hotel may benefit from any buying power, it will also absorb any expenses derived from the management firms related travel, accounting services, co-operative marketing, etc. This is often an area where some revenue lost in the last few years is re-gained by some less scrupulous management firms. When fees are at this low level, the game becomes volume. It is not my intention to bash any management firm. I was the Chief Operating Officer of three small to mid-size firms operating national brands as well as luxury independent hotels and I currently represent many hotel owners through our consulting practice. I see both sides of the issue. But… there are few business focused on volume sales in any industry that come to mind as being known for outstanding levels of service to its customers. So what is an owner to do? Become an informed owner who takes charge in monitoring their hotel’s performance (or who hires someone to do so for them). Realize that for $35,000 a year in fees, your services may be restricted to limited oversight of an on property manager; hopefully a good one. If you engage a management firm now or are in the stages of interviewing one, ask yourself some questions about your relationship and how you will be informed of your hotel’s level of success. You may not need all of the suggested information below but you most certainly need some. Ask yourself do you… •get a report from a representative of the firm who is on-site for a day or two each month detailing their findings of the physical plant, operations and sales efforts by the personnel they supervise? Does their finding match yours? •receive timely monthly operational statements that compare results to the budget and last year? •receive monthly reports on the hotel’s performance as measured by third party firms such as •receive monthly booking pace reports to review where you stand in revenues compared to the same time last year along with an action plan for improvement? •receive monthly sales reports such as; Top Client Report demonstrating the hotel’s top 20 clients’ productivity and changes in their productivity year-over-year; reports on the returns generated from advertising expenditures in pay-per-click, GDS, print and other advertising media; and Sales Person Productivity Reports to determine who is selling and producing at your hotel? •receive reports on the effectiveness of your reservations department (such as turndown and conversion reports) and the quality of a guest’s stay through secret shopper calls or visits? •receive reports on industry performance in the areas of profitability, expenses, labor costs, REVPAR generation and market penetration of your hotel at least annually to compare your management company’s performance? •receive annual reports on the changes in the market such as more or fewer competitors, new or closed businesses or industries in the area? •receive an annual marketing plan with monthly or quarterly updates on progress? •receive assistance in planning and implementing capital projects? •receive an annual report on the condition of the asset and franchise compliance? As an owner the ball is on your court and many times you hire a management firm because you are too busy to involve yourself in the details needed to assure that your return on your hotel investment is maximized. Perha Having Trouble Understanding What Makes Your Business Different? Here's A Simple Exercise That Helps ner who takes charge in monitoring their hotel’s performance (or who hires someone to do so for them). Realize that for $35,000 a year in fees, your services may be restricted to limited oversight of an on property manager; hopefully a good one. If you engage a management firm now or are in the stages of interviewing one, ask yourself some questions about your relationship and how you will be informed of your hotel’s level of success. You may not need all of the suggested information below but you most certainly need some. Ask yourself do you…One of the keys to successful marketing is identifying what makes your business unique and letting everybody know about it. This helps your prospects to understand why they should buy from you rather than your competition. When used successfully, it makes your product or services the obvious choice. This is often called a USP or Unique Selling Proposition.The best USPs consist of unique concepts that set your business favorably apart from the competition. When you do this, you effectively make the prospective customer a promise that you do things a certain way, and get specific results. Therefore, it’s vitally important that you never use a USP that you can’t honestly fulfill.Companies who employ USPs have a basis for competing in the marketplace that goes way beyond price. And, since there always seems to be someone who can do it cheaper, it puts your business into a different league.Surprisingly enough, there are many comp •get a report from a representative of the firm who is on-site for a day or two each month detailing their findings of the physical plant, operations and sales efforts by the personnel they supervise? Does their finding match yours? •receive timely monthly operational statements that compare results to the budget and last year? •receive monthly reports on the hotel’s performance as measured by third party firms such as •receive monthly booking pace reports to review where you stand in revenues compared to the same time last year along with an action plan for improvement? •receive monthly sales reports such as; Top Client Report demonstrating the hotel’s top 20 clients’ productivity and changes in their productivity year-over-year; reports on the returns generated from advertising expenditures in pay-per-click, GDS, print and other advertising media; and Sales Person Productivity Reports to determine who is selling and producing at your hotel? •receive reports on the effectiveness of your reservations department (such as turndown and conversion reports) and the quality of a guest’s stay through secret shopper calls or visits? •receive reports on industry performance in the areas of profitability, expenses, labor costs, REVPAR generation and market penetration of your hotel at least annually to compare your management company’s performance? •receive annual reports on the changes in the market such as more or fewer competitors, new or closed businesses or industries in the area? •receive an annual marketing plan with monthly or quarterly updates on progress? •receive assistance in planning and implementing capital projects? •receive an annual report on the condition of the asset and franchise compliance? As an owner the ball is on your court and many times you hire a management firm because you are too busy to involve yourself in the details needed to assure that your return on your hotel investment is maximized. Perha Slip And Fall Professionals; Service Businesses les reports such as; Top Client Report demonstrating the hotel’s top 20 clients’ productivity and changes in their productivity year-over-year; reports on the returns generated from advertising expenditures in pay-per-click, GDS, print and other advertising media; and Sales Person Productivity Reports to determine who is selling and producing at your hotel?Since you own a business you probably have liability insurance to help you against a scam of slip and fallers. Some entrepreneurs call them slip and fall professionals. The scout out the area, bring friends as witnesses trip and fall and then file a lawsuit, go to their chiropractor who is best friends with a lawyer and soak you or your insurance company out of tens of thousands of dollars. If you own a service company and you work on site, do not think for one minute you are safe from these insurance scams. In a service company you will have completed operations, Slip & Fall insurance and a large amount of liability insurance, you may find a rare person who thinks they can target you for a lawsuit.Having been in the mobile car wash business we had people all the time try to scout us out. You’ll be washing a car and they’ll be looking around for witnesses. As soon as they see them, they’ll try to slip on the water from your wash process. We u •receive reports on the effectiveness of your reservations department (such as turndown and conversion reports) and the quality of a guest’s stay through secret shopper calls or visits? •receive reports on industry performance in the areas of profitability, expenses, labor costs, REVPAR generation and market penetration of your hotel at least annually to compare your management company’s performance? •receive annual reports on the changes in the market such as more or fewer competitors, new or closed businesses or industries in the area? •receive an annual marketing plan with monthly or quarterly updates on progress? •receive assistance in planning and implementing capital projects? •receive an annual report on the condition of the asset and franchise compliance? As an owner the ball is on your court and many times you hire a management firm because you are too busy to involve yourself in the details needed to assure that your return on your hotel investment is maximized. Perhaps its time for you to make a little time to investigate if this is happening?
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