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Hotel Front Office Management, 5th edition.pdf
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92 C H A P T E R 3 E F F E C T I V E I N T E R D E PA R T M E N TA L C O M M U N I C AT I O N S

The most important aspect of total quality management in the context of the hotel industry is the interaction between front-line employees and their supervisors. The interaction of employees in a group setting or on a one-on-one basis to determine the root of the problem and how the desired end result can be achieved thrusts them into an atmosphere of cooperation that may not have previously existed. First-shift and second-shift employees, who usually do not understand each other’s activities, find they do have common concerns about serving the guest. Housekeeping and front desk employees come to realize that a guest’s request for a late checkout plays havoc with the delivery of hospitality. Total quality management practices ensure the front office checks with housekeeping to determine room availability in such a situation. The bottom line is that interdepartmental communication is enhanced each time a team of members of various departments meet to analyze a challenge to the delivery of hospitality. Figure 3-4 provides a view of the interaction necessary to make total quality management a success.

An Example of Total Quality Management in a Hotel

Total quality management in a hotel may be applied as follows: The general manager has received numerous complaints about the messy appearance of the lobby—furniture and pillows are out of place, ashtrays are overflowing, flowers are wilted, and trash receptacles are overflowing. The front office manager recruits a total quality management team, consisting of a front desk clerk, a maid, a waiter, a cashier, and the director of marketing and sales. The team discusses how the lobby area could be better maintained. The maid says her colleagues are overworked and are allotted only 15 minutes to clean up the public areas on the day shift. The front desk clerk says he would often like to take a few minutes to go out to the lobby to straighten the furniture and pillows, but he is not allowed to leave the front desk unattended. The director of marketing and sales say she is embarrassed when a prospective client comes into the hotel and is greeted with such a mess. She has called housekeeping several times to have the lobby cleaned but is told, “It’s not in the budget to have the lobby cleaned six times a day.” All of the team members realize the untidy lobby creates a poor impression of the hotel and the situation must be remedied.

F R O N T- L I N E R E A L I T I E S

qWhile a guest in room 421 is checking out, she indicates a dripping faucet in that room. After the guest departs, the desk clerk brushes off her remark, saying to a fellow desk clerk, “There are so many dripping faucets in this hotel that one more won’t mean anything.”

If you were the front office manager and you heard this exchange, what would you do? How would you encourage better communication between the front office and maintenance?

A N A LY Z I N G T H E L I N E S O F C O M M U N I C AT I O N S 93

F I G U R E 3 - 4

Group analysis of jobs is an essential element in total quality management. Photo courtesy iStockphoto.com.

The team decides to look at the elements in the situation. The furniture is on wheels for ease of moving when the housekeeping staff cleans. The pillows add a decorative touch to the environment, but they are usually scattered about. The waiter jokingly says, “Let’s sew them to the back and arms of the sofa!” Might the ashtrays be removed and receptacles added for guests to use in extinguishing a cigarette? Could a larger waste receptacle with a swinging lid be used to avoid misplaced litter? “The fresh flowers are nice,” adds one of the team members, “but many hotels use silk flowers and plants. This must save money over the long run.”

The team discussion encourages each person to understand why the maid can’t straighten the lobby every two or three hours and why the desk clerk can’t leave his post to take care of the problem. The employees’ comments concerning furniture and appointments foster an atmosphere of understanding. Team members start looking at one another with more empathy and are slower to criticize on other matters. Was the issue of the messy lobby resolved? Yes, but more important, the team members developed a way to look at a challenge in a more constructive manner.

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