Managing Hospitality Organizations

Höfundur Robert C. Ford; Michael C. Sturman

Útgefandi SAGE Publications, Inc. (US)

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781071876275

Útgáfa 3

Útgáfuár 2025

8.190 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Authors
  • Introduction
  • Section I The Hospitality Service Strategy
  • Chapter 1 The Basics of Wow! The Guest Knows Best: Hospitality Principle: Provide the Service Quality and Value That Guests Expect
  • Introduction
  • Guestology: What Is It?
  • Meeting Customer Expectations
  • Understanding the Guest
  • Serving Internal Customers
  • Service
  • Service Product
  • Service Industries
  • Goods to Services to Experiences
  • The Guest Experience
  • Product, Setting, and Delivery
  • Unique, Yet Similar
  • Components of the Guest Experience
  • The Service Product
  • The Service Setting
  • The Service Delivery System
  • Service Encounters and Moments of Truth
  • The Nature of Services
  • Services Are Partly or Wholly Intangible
  • Services Are Consumed at the Moment or during the Period of Production or Delivery
  • Services Require Interaction between the Service Provider and the Customer, Client, or Guest
  • Guest Expectations
  • Meeting Expectations
  • Do Not Provide More Hospitality than Guests Want
  • Just What Does the Guest Expect?
  • Quality, Value, and Cost Defined
  • Quality
  • Value
  • Cost
  • Cost of Quality
  • Who Defines Quality and Value?
  • The Importance of Guestology
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Study
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 2 Meeting Guest Expectations through Planning: Hospitality Principle: Focus Strategy on the Key Drivers of Guest Satisfaction
  • Introduction
  • Three Generic Strategies
  • A Lower Price
  • A Differentiated Product
  • The Brand Image
  • A Special Niche
  • Reinventing the Industry
  • No Matter the Strategy, Provide Better Service
  • The Hospitality Planning Cycle
  • Looking Around
  • Looking Within
  • The Necessity for Planning
  • Forecasting
  • Assessing The Environment
  • The Overall Environment
  • Society and Demographics
  • Changing Social and Political Expectations
  • Technology
  • Ecology
  • The Industry Environment
  • Changing Competitors
  • Changes in Other Relevant Groups
  • The Operating Environment
  • Strategic Premises
  • Predicting the Competitive Environment
  • Surprises
  • Assessing the Organization Itself: The Internal Assessment
  • Core Competencies
  • Internal Assets
  • Vision And Mission Statements
  • The Vision Statement
  • The Mission Statement
  • Developing The Service Strategy
  • Determining the Service-Product Strategy
  • Determining the Service-Setting Strategy
  • Determining the Delivery-System Strategy
  • Action Plans
  • Management Performance Plans
  • Employee Hiring, Training, and Retention Plans
  • Capacity Utilization Plans
  • The Design Day
  • Yield Management and Revenue Management
  • Financial Budget Plans
  • Marketing Plans
  • Action Plans as an Integrated Whole
  • Involve Employees in Planning
  • The Uncertain Future
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Study
  • Appendix
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 3 Setting the Scene for the Guest Experience: Hospitality Principle: Provide the Service Setting That Guests Expect
  • Introduction
  • Creating “the Show”
  • Themes Create Fantasy
  • To Theme or Not to Theme?
  • Control and Focus
  • The Architecture
  • Sights and Sounds
  • Why Is the Environment Important?
  • Guest Expectations
  • Guest Mood
  • Main Street, Disney
  • Employee Satisfaction
  • Setting as a Part of Service
  • The Functional Value of the Setting
  • A Model: How the Service Environment Affects the Guest
  • Environment
  • Ambient Conditions
  • Use of Space
  • Functional Congruence
  • Signs, Symbols, and Artifacts
  • Other People
  • The Servicescape
  • Individual Moderators
  • Responding to the Servicescape
  • Physiological Responses
  • Cognitive Responses
  • Emotional Responses
  • The Bottom Line: Come and Stay, or Stay Away
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 4 Developing the Hospitality Culture: Everyone Serves!: Hospitality Principle: Define and Sustain a Total Service Culture
  • Introduction
  • The Importance of Leaders
  • Culture and Reputation
  • The Manager’s Most Important Leadership Responsibility
  • The Importance of Culture
  • Strategy and Employee Commitment
  • Culture Defined
  • Culture as a Competitive Advantage
  • Management by Culture
  • An Example: The Chef
  • Culture as a Competency
  • Culture and the Outside World
  • Culture and the Internal Organization: X and Y
  • Teaching the New Values
  • Culture Fills the Gaps
  • Beliefs, Values, and Norms
  • Beliefs
  • Values
  • Norms
  • Norms in Advertising
  • Norms of Appearance
  • Folkways and Mores
  • Culture and the Environment
  • Learning the Culture, Learning from the Culture
  • Subcultures
  • Subcultures of Nations
  • Communicating the Culture
  • Laws
  • Language
  • Stories, Legends, and Heroes
  • Symbols
  • Rituals
  • Leaders Teach the Culture
  • Setting the Example
  • Guests Teach the Culture
  • Culture and the Organization Chart
  • Culture and Physical Space
  • Culture and Leadership Skills
  • At Southwest: Maintaining a Strong Culture
  • Changing the Culture
  • Denny’s Restaurants
  • What We Know about Culture
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Study
  • Further Readings
  • Section II The Hospitality Service Staff
  • Chapter 5 Staffing for Service: Hospitality Principle: Find and Hire People Who Love to Serve
  • Introduction
  • The Many Employees of the Hospitality Industry
  • Serving the Guests
  • Supporting the Service
  • The Role of the Manager
  • Managing Emotional Labor
  • Find the Service Naturals
  • The Recruitment and Selection Challenge
  • The First Step: Study the Job
  • Job Analysis: The Foundation of Human Resources
  • Study Your Best Performers
  • Develop Talent Profiles
  • Other Key Characteristics for Service Personnel
  • Human Resource Planning
  • The Second Step: Recruit a Pool of Qualified Candidates
  • Hiring Internal Candidates
  • The Known Quantity
  • Internal Equity
  • Experience
  • Knowing the Culture
  • Lower Cost
  • Recruiting Advantage
  • Internal Search Strategies
  • Hiring External Candidates
  • New Ideas and Fresh Perspectives
  • Difficulties with Internal Candidates
  • Specific Skills and Knowledge
  • Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
  • External Search Strategies
  • Casting a Broad Net
  • Focused Recruitment Efforts
  • Personal and Professional Networks
  • Student Recruiting
  • Employee Referrals
  • Employment Events, Job Fairs, and Career Fairs
  • Employers of Choice
  • Walk-Ins
  • Recruiting from the Competition
  • Call-Back File and Boomerang Employees
  • The Fully Virtual Experience
  • The Final Applicant Pool
  • The Third Step: Select the Best Candidate
  • Screening and Evaluating Applicants
  • The Application Form
  • The Interview
  • AI-Assisted Interviewing
  • Commitment to Service
  • Psychological Tests
  • Assessment Centers
  • References, Background Checks, and Drug Tests
  • New Technologies for Screening and Evaluating Applicants
  • The Fourth Step: Hire the Best Applicant
  • The Fifth Step: Make The New Hire Feel Welcome
  • The Sixth Step: Turnover—Retaining the Best and Selecting People Out of an Organization
  • Employing the Best to Serve Your Guests
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activity
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 6 Training and Developing Employees to Serve: Hospitality Principle: Train Your Employees, Then Train Them Some More
  • Introduction
  • Employee Training
  • Berry’s Five Training Principles for an Effective Training Strategy
  • Critical Skills
  • The Big Picture
  • Formalized Learning
  • Varied Approaches
  • Continuous Improvement
  • Developing a Training Program
  • What Do We Need to Improve?
  • Solving the Guest’s Problem
  • Data-Driven Approaches to Identifying Training Needs
  • Types of Training
  • Internal Training
  • External Training
  • Skills Training
  • Training the Very Basics
  • Using Training to Refresh Employee Skills
  • Training Methods
  • On-the-Job Training
  • Coaching
  • Apprenticeships
  • Internships
  • Cross-Functional Training
  • Classroom Training
  • Simulation
  • Online and Electronic Learning
  • Training with Collaboration Platforms
  • Executive Education
  • Mentoring
  • Challenges and Pitfalls of Training
  • Know Your Training Objectives
  • Measuring Training Effectiveness
  • Participant Reactions
  • Content Mastery
  • Behavioral Change
  • Organizational Performance
  • When a Great Training Program Can Hurt You
  • Training Costs
  • Training Return on Investment
  • Employee Development
  • Career Paths and the Right Experience
  • Preparing for Organizational Needs
  • Giving Employees the Chance to Advance
  • Education
  • Supporting General Education
  • The Competition Is Watching
  • They Want Your Best
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 7 Serving with a Smile: Motivating Exceptional Service: Hospitality Principle: Engage, Motivate, and Empower Your Employees
  • Introduction
  • Motivating and Engaging Employees
  • The Service-Profit Chain
  • What Motivates People?
  • The Needs People Have
  • Economic Needs
  • Social Needs
  • Recognition Needs
  • Growth Needs
  • Achievement Needs
  • The Rewards Managers Can Provide
  • Financial Rewards
  • Recognizing a Job Well Done
  • Making the Job Fun
  • Minimizing the Negatives
  • Accommodating Worker Preferences
  • Empowering the Employee
  • What Is Empowerment?
  • Empowerment Implementation
  • Limitations and Potential of Empowerment
  • Degrees of Empowerment
  • Unintended Consequences of Empowerment
  • Ways Rewards Can Motivate
  • Individual, Generational, and Cultural Differences
  • The Power of Positive Reinforcement
  • At the Buffet
  • Linking Performance and Rewards
  • Managing Fairly
  • Justice in the Workplace
  • Pay Secrecy
  • Setting Goals
  • An Example: Management by Objectives
  • Working in Teams
  • Increasing Team Effectiveness
  • Self-Managed Teams
  • How Managers and Leaders Provide the Right Direction
  • Managers and Authority
  • Authority-Acceptance Theory
  • Preconditions for Employee Acceptance of Authority
  • Securing Employee Compliance with Authoritative Directives
  • Sexual Harassment in the Hospitality Industry
  • Managers and Leaders
  • Ethical Leadership
  • Leaders and the Changing Environment
  • Solving the Leadership Challenge of Motivating Exceptional Guest Service
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 8 Involving the Guest: The Co-Creation of Value: Hospitality Principle: Empower Guests to Co-Create Their Experiences
  • Introduction
  • The Guest Can Help!
  • Guests as Quasi-Employees
  • The Organization Decides
  • Strategies for Involving the Guest
  • Guests as Unpaid Consultants
  • Guests as Marketers
  • Guests as Part of Each Other’s Experience
  • Guests as Co-Producers
  • Advantages of Co-Production for the Organization
  • Advantages of Co-Production for the Guest
  • Disadvantages of Co-Production for the Organization
  • Disadvantages of Co-Production for the Guest
  • The High Cost of Failure
  • Motivating Guests to Co-Produce
  • The Guest as a Substitute for Management
  • Guests as Supervisors
  • Guests as Motivators
  • Guests as Supervisors and Trainers for Other Guests
  • Determining Where Co-Production Makes Sense
  • Enriching the Wait
  • Co-Producing Value
  • Key Factors: Time and Control
  • Cutting Costs, Increasing Capacity
  • Co-Production as a Differentiation Strategy
  • Building Commitment
  • The Bottom Line: Costs versus Benefits
  • Help Wanted: Co-Producer
  • Inviting Guests to Participate: Guidelines
  • One Last Point: Firing the Guest
  • Firing Airline Passengers
  • Abrupt Firings
  • Subtle Firings
  • Maintaining Guest Dignity
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Study
  • Further Readings
  • Section III The Hospitality Service Delivery System
  • Chapter 9 Communicating for Service: Hospitality Principle: Glue the Guest Experience Elements Together with Information
  • Introduction
  • The Challenge of Managing Information
  • Informing the Guest
  • Cues Communicate
  • Adding Quality and Value through Information
  • New Information from Virtual Worlds
  • Getting Information Where It Needs to Go
  • Information and the Service Product
  • Information as Product: FreshPoint
  • Giving Employees the Information They Need
  • Information and the Service Setting
  • The Environment and the Service
  • The Environment as Information System
  • Customer-Provided Information
  • Information and the Delivery System
  • Really Knowing Your Customers
  • Delivering Freshness
  • Information on Service Quality
  • Information to the People
  • At Hyatt
  • At United
  • High Tech Becomes High Touch
  • Technology for Expertise
  • Centralized Reservations at Hyatt
  • Cross-Selling
  • The Front and the Back of the House
  • Point-of-Sale Systems
  • The Daily Count
  • The Information Flow Between Levels
  • Decision Support Systems
  • Using Data to Drive Decisions
  • Modeling Decisions
  • Statistical Analysis
  • Big Data and Data Mining
  • Using Information
  • Market Segmentation
  • Identifying and Targeting Your Best and Worst Customers
  • Collaborative Filters
  • Problems with Information Systems
  • Information Overload
  • Focusing on the Numbers
  • Bad Information
  • Maintaining Security
  • Value Versus Cost
  • Learning the System
  • The Hospitality Organization as an Information System
  • The Primacy of Information
  • Strategies for Addressing Deficiencies
  • Everybody Connected
  • Implications for Service
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 10 Planning the Service Delivery System: Hospitality Principle: Provide Seamless Service Delivery
  • Introduction
  • Planning and Designing the Service Delivery System
  • Designing and Checking the Service Delivery System
  • The Goal: Fail No Guest; Delight Every Guest
  • Some Guiding Principles
  • Developing the Service Delivery System
  • Planning the System
  • Monitoring the Service Experience
  • Assessing the Experience and Improving the System
  • The Blurred Lines
  • The Self-Healing System
  • Planning Techniques
  • Blueprinting
  • The Hot Dog Stand
  • Adding Detail to Blueprints
  • The Universal Service Map
  • The Line of Internal Interactions
  • The Line of Visibility
  • The Line of Guest Interaction
  • Fishbone Analysis
  • Late Departures at Quickconnect Airlines
  • Resource Categories
  • Airport Data
  • No More Waiting
  • PERT/CPM
  • PERT/CPM Defined
  • The Diagrams
  • Circles and Arrows
  • Tony’s Deli
  • Building the Network
  • The Big PERT/CPM Picture
  • Holding a Convention
  • Potential Disadvantages
  • Simulations
  • At Epcot
  • The Odyssey Restaurant
  • Computer Simulations for All
  • Targeting Specific Problem Areas in Service Delivery Systems
  • Forecasting Demand to Prevent Problems
  • Training
  • Quality Teams
  • Poka-Yokes
  • Types of Inspections
  • Warnings and Controls
  • Poka-Yokes for Customers
  • Speed Parking
  • Cross-Functional Project and Matrix Organizations
  • At the Ritz-Carlton
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Cross-Functional Project and Matrix Structures
  • The Real Boss
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 11 Waiting for Service: Hospitality Principle: Manage the Guest’s Wait
  • Introduction
  • Capacity and Psychology: Keys To Managing Lines
  • When the Wait Begins
  • Designing the Service to Manage the Wait
  • Capacity
  • What to Do?
  • Design Day
  • The Capacity Day
  • Queuing Theory: Managing the Reality of the Wait
  • Characteristics of Waiting Lines
  • Line Types
  • Single-Channel, Single-Phase Queue
  • Single-Channel, Multiphase Queue
  • Multichannel, Single-Phase Queue
  • Multichannel, Multiphase Queue
  • Virtual Queues
  • Which Queue to Use?
  • Line Simulation: A Gift Shop
  • Observing the Flow
  • Allocation Wheels
  • Balancing Capacity and Demand
  • Managing the Perception of the Wait
  • The Emotional Wait State
  • Crowds and Clientele
  • Waits in Contrast
  • Service Value and the Wait
  • Before Service
  • During Service
  • After Service
  • Managing Waits in an Imperfect World
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Appendix
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 12 Measuring and Managing Service Delivery: Hospitality Principle: Pursue Perfection Relentlessly
  • Introduction
  • Techniques and Methods for Assessing Service Quality
  • Process Strategies
  • Rusty Pelican Standards
  • Measures of Service Quality
  • Use Many Measures or Just One?
  • Service Standards
  • Job Performance Standards
  • Managerial Observation of the Delivery Process
  • Employee Assessment of Guest Experiences
  • The Service Guarantee
  • Organizational Advantages of Guarantees
  • Potential Disadvantages of Service Guarantees
  • Asking Guests the Right Questions
  • Informal Queries by Employees
  • Formal Inquiries by Employees
  • Structured Guest Interviews
  • Measuring Service Quality After the Experience
  • Customer Rating Systems
  • Disadvantages
  • Call-in Feedback
  • Web, Tablet, and Phone App Feedback
  • Surveys
  • Web Surveys/Mail
  • Telephone Surveys and Interviews
  • Critical-Incidents Surveys
  • SERVQUAL
  • Guest Focus Groups
  • Experiments
  • Customers Evaluating Services on Their Own
  • Mystery Shoppers
  • Finding And Using The Technique That Fits
  • Your Best Evaluators: The Guests
  • The Improvement Cycle Continues
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 13 Fixing Service Failures: Hospitality Principle: Don’t Fail the Guest Twice
  • Introduction
  • Service Failures: Types, Where, and Why
  • Stuck in the Snow
  • Types of Service Failures
  • Customer Failure
  • Where Failures Happen
  • Severity of Failure and Recovery
  • The Importance of Fixing Service Failures
  • The Price of Failure
  • The Customer’s Response to Service Failure
  • Never Return
  • Complain
  • Bad-Mouth the Organization
  • Retaliate
  • Worst-Case Scenario
  • The Value of Positive Publicity: Bad-Mouth versus “Wow”
  • Credibility
  • Evangelists
  • Dealing With Service Failures
  • How the Recovery Is Handled
  • Service Recovery: A Message to Employees
  • The Yellow and Black Tags
  • Looking for Service Failures
  • The Complaint as a Monitoring Device
  • Encouraging Complaints
  • Body Language as a Complaint
  • Don’t Forget to Ask
  • Recovering from Service Failure
  • Do Something Quickly
  • Benefits of Quick Recovery
  • How Do Customers Evaluate Recovery Efforts?
  • Distributive Justice
  • Procedural Justice
  • Interactional Justice
  • How the Recovery Is Managed
  • Service-Recovery Systems Analysis
  • Characteristics of a Good Recovery Strategy
  • No Better Makes It Worse
  • Costs of Failure to Guests
  • Making It Right Is Not Enough
  • Being Wrong with Dignity
  • Matching the Recovery Strategy to the Failure
  • Learning from Failures
  • Service Recovery: Ow! to Wow!
  • Successful Service Recovery
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Chapter 14 Service Excellence: Leading the Way to Wow!: Hospitality Principle: Lead Others to Excel
  • Introduction
  • The Three Ss: Strategy, Staffing, and Systems
  • Strategy
  • The Key Drivers
  • Study, Study, Study
  • Accumulating Information
  • An Added Element: Personalization
  • Plan, Plan, Plan
  • Get Constant Feedback to Drive Innovation
  • Culture Fills the Gaps
  • Staffing
  • Getting the Right People for the Job
  • Training
  • Setting and Reinforcing the Standards
  • Satisfaction from Satisfying
  • Employ the Guest
  • Systems
  • Systems and Guestology
  • The Wait
  • Hospitality and the Future
  • Service or Price
  • People Making the Difference
  • Keeping Promises
  • Tomorrow’s “Wow”
  • Server-Customer Interactions
  • Leading the Way into the Future
  • Leading the Way through Innovation
  • Types of Innovation
  • Management Innovation: William C. Coup, Innovative Champion
  • Restaurant Incubators
  • Eco-Innovations
  • Leading and Managing
  • Servant Leadership
  • All Jobs and People Have Value
  • Leaders, Employees, Guests, and the Larger Purpose
  • The Leader’s Challenge: Blending It All Together—Seamlessly
  • It All Begins—and Ends—with the Guest
  • Lessons Learned
  • Key Terms
  • Review Questions
  • Activities
  • Ethics in Business
  • Case Studies
  • Further Readings
  • Glossary
  • Additional Readings
  • End Notes
  • Index
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