| By Dr. John
Hogan, CHE CHA MHS, August 13, 2009 It is common knowledge and an
undisputed fact that general managers at almost any size hotel could take over the sales efforts for that hotel and have the
occupancy and RevPAR near the capacity level within just a few weeks. Well,
"almost" common knowledge and probably highly disputable …………… Having been in both operations and sales at different points in our careers, Howard Feiertag
and I appreciate the value and contributions of each. Here is
a chance for General Managers to examine the other perspective. You are invited to take this little test (without looking
at the answers) Take a chance and think about your responses:
- List your hotel’s top 10 accounts, by individual and
company name
- How many in-house guests did you personally talk
with this past week? (more than the good morning type of greeting)
- How
many regular guests did you call on the phone last week to say “thank you for using our hotel’s services and asking
if there is anything we can do better?”
- How many local
community activities did you personally attend the past week as your hotel’s official representative?
- How many outside sales calls did you make with the sales manager last week? If you do not
have a sales manager, how many calls did you make alone?
- What
did you do between 11:30 am and 12:30 PM last Wednesday?
- When
did you personally last review sales files and call reports?
- When
was the last sales department/team meeting? Were you there?
- When
was the last time you personally called on the phone a guest who returned a comment card? (positive or negative comments)
- How many hours did sales staff spend last week in non-productive
sales activities?
Some possible responses: - Every General Managers should know the top 10. Contacts that the General Managers has may
be different from others on staff, but regular networking (at least once per month per client) pays HUGE dividends.
- Every General Managers should visit with at least five registered guests weekly, at morning
coffee, at checkout, the restaurant, the pool, etc. These guests are prime candidates for repeat business or positive word
of mouth promotion for your hotel, at virtually no cost.
- Again,
five is a workable, meaningful number for phoning regular guests.
- The
General Managers is the CEO of your hotel. Every organization, be it the Chamber of Commerce or the Kiwanis, welcomes
and values the CEO. Involved CEOs are often a hotel’s best sales person.
- With no sales staff, a General Managers must make 3-5 calls per day on average to maintain, not gain ground.
With a sales team, 8-10 calls per week can make a difference.
- If
a full service hotel, an effective General Managers will use this busy time of day to tour the restaurants, visit the kitchen,
and perhaps pour coffee in a banquet, which will shock and definitely please most meeting attendees. If a rooms-only
hotel, the General Managers should be having at least two business lunches per week. That is what your competitors are
doing.
- This one is not an open and shut case, as there
are so many variables. Regular review of sales files is an acceptable answer, but this should be at least weekly, with personal
follow-up with the sales manager.
- Sales meetings
should be before 8:30 am or after 5 PM to avoid prime contact and selling time. Successful teams value General Managers
who attend, offer support and occasional input.
- The very small
percentage of guests who take the time to tell what went well or wrong need to be TREASURED as resources by General Managers.
These people are the heart of word-of-mouth promotion. Call as many as you can – it will be worth it!
- You know the answer to this one has to be that we have sales staff selling, not going to
the bank, to the post office or the bakery. If we are going to steal market share, we need to be selling, not making change.
General Managers – how did you score today?
What are you going to do differently tomorrow?
"The
General Manager is the #1 salesperson. Take part in: - guidance
and direction of the staff
- personal involvement with guests
and personnel
- meeting clients in the hotel
- calling on at least one potential client daily ”
Bob Durbin, former Executive Vice President, Sheraton Hotels (Quote found in Educational
Institute’s HOSPITALITY FOR SALE) |
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