October 25, 2011 - (New York, NY)
Among his many accomplishments, Steve Jobs inspired the world to live
creatively, expand boundaries, and continuously fuel the will to
succeed. His
journey—and his eagerness to share it with the public—stand as a
foundation for
all to build upon. Consistently quotable and incomparably wise, Coyle Hospitality Group presents five lessons the hotel
industry
can learn from Steve Jobs.
1. Guest experience trumps everything else. At its
core, Jobs was
about improving the user experience. That is why the guest experience
should be
the number one priority for any hotel. To optimize the guest (or user)
experience, one must break down the criteria into their simplest forms,
and
challenge its value to the guest/user. Steve Jobs held focus and
simplicity in
the highest regard; he said, “Simple can be harder than complex: You
have to
work hard to get your thinking clean to make it simple.” Jobs started
with
simplicity to improve the end-user experience, and his idea directly
translates
to hotel guest experience. With clear, straightforward standards that
are all
about guest experience—and to measure it along the way—you can
consistently
make sure your staff is always, and reflexively looking out for #1: the
guest.
2. Emphasize the importance of teamwork. Jobs said that
“great things
in business are never done by one person—they're done by a team of
people.” In
a hotel, teamwork is the backbone of the guest experience. Without
excellent
interdepartmental execution, the number of hotel incidents—from
delivering an
incorrect room service order to double-booking a room—skyrockets. Hotel
employees are also continuously in the presence of a hotel’s guest,
communicating meaningfully with them. If staff members and guest alike
act like
a team advocating for your hotel at all times, you will see
improvements in
guest loyalty, brand perception, and overall profit.
3. Details make all the difference. Jobs explained that
if he “had
never dropped in on [a calligraphy] course in college, the Mac would
have never
had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts." He was the
first
person in the computer world to care about aesthetic details—small
differences
that actually matter to the user. Hotels naturally have a very diverse
workforce, a veritable font of unique perspective and idea generation
that can
come in many forms. Additionally, a hotel guest’s experience is highly
influenced by small, subjective aspects. Ambiance, guestroom touches,
guest name
use, and smiling are all small details that significantly alter the
experience.
Deliver these things authentically, and the offering will naturally be
interesting and compelling.
4. Train employees to produce excellent quality, and hold
them
accountable for it. Jobs advised: "Be a yardstick of quality. Some
people aren't used to an environment where excellence is expected."
Define
what the superior product culture is—both tangibly and intangibly—and
inspect
it from every angle. Continuously train staff members to ensure guests
are
consistently experiencing that quality, and hold managers accountable.
Expecting excellence and then measuring your organization’s dedication
to that
standard will make it difficult to miss the mark.
5. Learn from your mistakes. Jobs admitted that
“getting fired from
Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to [him]…It
freed [him]
to enter one of the most creative periods of [his] life.” He was able
to take a
step back, analyze what went wrong, and create a plan for his future.
He
founded NeXT and bought Pixar before returning to Apple and making the
company
stronger than ever. In hotels, the mistakes are often behavioral and
affect
guests on a personal and emotional level. Quality assurance audits and
mystery
shopping will locate problem areas and provide an environment to
practice on
the evaluator. It is very hard to see oneself, and the biggest mistake
of all
is to lack a grasp of the perspective of the customer. The seemingly
simple
request at the front desk is more than likely an incredibly important
moment of
truth for the guest. See that from their perspective and it will be a
mistake
that is never repeated.
Coyle Hospitality Group is a market leader providing
mystery
shopping, quality assurance, and market research services exclusively
to
hospitality companies worldwide. For more information regarding Coyle’s
mystery shopping programs, please contact us at
212-629-2083 ext.
106 or request information online.
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