Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category

Technology for Inns … Tips for Making the Innkeeping Lifestyle a Bit Easier

Friday, July 16th, 2010

I received a short message from Mary and Alan Duxbury at The Carlisle House in Carlisle, PA., and Alan offers TEN time and effort-saving tips for innkeepers.  Mary makes the best quiche in the world (recipe link here) and I opted for a picture of the quiche instead of Alan (sorry, Alan!).  Many of Alan’s tips involve technology and

Mary's Kicker Quiche

how its use can be a time-saving and headache-solving alternative for some of the daily frustrations of running an inn.  Thank you, Alan…here’s your list:

    TECHNOLOGY TIP: A web-based Property Management System allows you to enter reservations from anywhere you have internet access.
    OPERATIONS TIP: Alan recommends using a credit card machine instead of an internet credit card processing service if your inn is subject to frequent power outages.  Phone lines continue to work in outages and you will still be able to do business.
    TECHNOLOGY TIP:  An iPhone or iPad-type device will give you that internet access capability.   You can take reservations from the grocery store or while away from the inn without worrying about losing a booking by not getting back to your voicemail or answering machine soon enough.
    TECHNOLOGY TIPGoogle Calendar allows you to manage your daily schedule and appointments.  If you keep your calendar on Outlook, Google Calendar can be synced with your Outlook calendar.
    SECURITY (AND TECHNOLOGY) TIP: Set your wireless network to log all MAC codes and connection times of every device that connects to your service from your account.  This will identify all users on your system and will protect you if any of your users are doing illegal activity on your network (such as downloading pornography or spamming).
    TIME-SAVING (AND TECHNOLOGY) TIP: If you use company credit cards and banks (and we all do!), set it up to have them download their monthly statements directly into your financial software package.  Saves a LOT of typing!  (Call Alan on how to do that…not me!)
    MARKETING TIP: If you want to get to the top of Google search results, when selecting important keywords, ask a friend with a similar inn that is distant from you for ideas.  Local competition may not be as friendly sharing their secrets.
    TECHNOLOGY TIP: On your wireless network, ensure it is secured with a password or phrase.  You can inform your guests of the password but it also prevents the neighbors from downloading movies on your network and slowing your network to a crawl.
    TIME-SAVING TIP: If you make a cash deposit to your bank, write the name and reservation number on the deposit slip.  you will be able to query it on the internet a year later when your accountant asks where the money came from.
    MONEY-MANAGEMENT TIP: Alan recommends having THREE bank accounts.  One is your personal account for all non-business transactions.  The second is for all deposits from sales…whether credit card deposits, cash deposits, gift shop sales, everything.  This is an INTEREST-BEARING account.  The third account is for expenditures.  Transfer money from the revenue account into the expenditure account on occasion to pay the bills.  This leaves the balance of the revenue earning interest.  A side-benefit of having these two business accounts is that you will have all deposits and all expenses on SEPARATE statements at the end of the month for easy reconciling.

Thank you, Alan.  I would be interested in other innkeepers’ thoughts on any of Alan’s ideas and feel free to send me YOUR tips for making the innkeeping lifestyle and business even more wonderful and manageable.  Scott

Please Just Touch and Go … and an Innkeeper Request

Friday, July 16th, 2010

In my consulting and real estate travels around the Mid-Atlantic region, I often pass by Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.  Four times this week.  I am often amazed by the size of the C-5A transports coming in and out of the base and look forward to driving right under the approach as the monster planes either take off or land. The roar is awe-striking as the big shadow crosses the highway I’m on.

And then my thoughts ALWAYS turn to a short prayer.  I pray that each landing I see is followed by the roar of

Please Just Touch and Go

the engines and the behemoth plane taking right back off again.  It’s called a touch and go…training for take-offs and landings. The reason for my prayer, you see, is that Dover AFB is where many of the cargo and personnel aircraft originate on their way to Baghdad or Kabul.  And, as the graves registration center on the East Coast, it is the destination of many young men and women returning to the States for the last time…on their way home to their families for the last time.

My prayer is for each plane to be a training mission and not a part of the heart-wrenching experience it must be for a family to come to grips with the loss of a son, or daughter, or dad, or mom.  “Please, Lord, let it just be a touch and go.”

What does this have to do with innkeeping?  Probably nothing directly…it’s more of a therapeutic outlet for me, my thoughts of my fellow West Pointers, my newer role as a Poppie, and, probably less seldom seen, the softer side of an old codger.

But I would like to make this offering to any innkeeper who feels similarly.  And I know the people in this hospitality and care-giving industry are GREAT at such feelings.  I am asking that innkeepers support our troops and their families.  If you offer:

  • Military discounts
  • Comp rooms for military families…as a surprise gift, not necessarily a published rack rate
  • Other benefits or gifts of value to military families

please let me know and I will list your name and inn, with link, and the benefit you provide, along with my heartfelt thanks, in my upcoming newsletters and blog postings.  We are a great industry of professionals who understand the impact an innkeeper can have on a guest…and with the ability to send an appreciative gift to those who deserve our thanksgiving.     Scott

Do You Know What the B&B Industry’s Competition is Doing?

Friday, June 11th, 2010

On a flight to visit an inn this past week, I was reading an article in the USA Today(June 1) containing some interesting information about the big guys…the hotels…with information that also applies to the B and B industry.  In his article “Hotels try to woo leisure travelers” Roger Yu relates some concepts of the changing travel marketplace and the evolution of the hotels (and WE should listen too!) to meet the change challenge.

First a few facts:  According to D.K. Shifflet & Associates, a travel and research consulting firm:

  • Leisure travel surpassed business travel for the hotel industry in 2004
  • That gap has widened and by 2009, 54% of hotel travel volume is now leisure travel.
  • Corporate travel has been slowly declining, and “it’s not going back” according to Shifflet.
  • The Gen X (late 20’s to early 40’s) travelers are replacing the Baby Boomers and are traveling with their young families.

The hotels are watching the changing demographics and evolving to meet the new market.  To entice the leisure traveler to their properties, focus is strengthening on FAMILY travel.  Marriott is:

  • Offering a Nickelodeon package to the kids with activity books and Nick bracelets

    This is Spongebob for those of you without kids around!

  • Toddler care packages are awaiting the arriving family with squirting bath toys, fitted crib sheets, baby shampoos and nightlights.
  • Spongebob backpacks with matching sheets and pillowcases are for sale in the gift shop.

The younger demographic is also demanding VALUE, a concept more wide-spread than just the Gen X-ers.  Homewood Suites by Hilton (typically a corporate traveler mecca has seen a 50% increase in its leisure travel this past year) is revising its free meals program, and Kimpton Hotels will give away free sangria drinks and Wii video games in the lobby this summer…something for the parents AND the kids.

So what does that have to do with US in the Bed and Breakfast Industry?

Everything, if you are ready to keep your business growing!

B and B owners often cater to only a certain slice of the traveling market.  They rely on the romance getaway, or traveling couple, typically Baby Boomers, to fill rooms.  But this AGE-SEGMENT of the traveling market is declining and we must target the NEXT generation as well…and they’re traveling with their kids. Some target the corporate traveler if the inn is fortunate enough to have several large businesses or a college within a mile or two.  But this segment is also in decline, and mid-week rooms are going to go empty.

Some ACTION Items for your Next Planning Meeting

  • Is your Inn ready for a Tune-Up? Do your rooms and bathrooms appeal to the NEW demographic of the traveling public?  Do you have Ipod docking stations, and have you replaced gramma’s old furniture with clean lines and Pottery Barn-type styling?  People want to visit museums, not stay in one.
  • Is your website ready for updating?  Anything 2 years or older is a dinosaur that won’t be found by the new search engine algorithms.  Do you have video of area attractions, or still relying on static photography of a bed?  The next generation is ultra techno-savvy and will find you in ways OTHER than your organic website, IF you embrace social media (May 7 posting) marketing and email marketing.
  • Are you still illegally restricting kids to age 12 or older?  Talk to those inns who willingly accept children and find out what they do to make the family experience memorable.
  • If all the inns in your area still restrict children, think of the ADVANTAGE you will have when they send all their family-travel referrals to you!
  • Targeting and marketing for mid-week bookings in addition to your current corporate travelers will prepare to replace those declining mid-week business guests with others…such as quilting groups, elder travel with grandkids, or scrapbookers.  I’ll bet there’s an inn in your area already capitalizing on this new trend.

The B&B Team is ready to help you with your Evolution Planning when you are finally disgusted with negative growth of your inn’s performance.  The traveling market is evolving, and we BEG each of the inns in this industry to evolve with it.  And it’s fun!  And more satisfying than watching Spongebob!

Scott

B&B E-Mail Marketing does NOT conflict with Social Media Marketing

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

In the previous posting, I mentioned how effective VIDEO marketing on your website can be.  It offers an advantage to be exploited in your Search Engine Optimization (SEO) efforts to attract bookings.  This technique, and the recent bombardments from all directions and talk about Social Media and its usefulness for marketing exposure, and the typical marketing channels…the B&B directories, rack cards, websites with professional photography, blogs with links to your website and others…WOW! How does an inn do all this stuff? How much will it cost an inn when pennies count?  And does it give a return on the investment made?

Top of Mind…Top of Market: I unshamefully (is that a word?) stole that line from a friend of mine, Ted Foti, who is a marketing consultant in the Baltimore area.  Worthy of this petty theft, the concept works for our B&B industry as well.  When someone asks “Where’s a good place to stay around here?”, the answer should be on the top of the mind of your guerrilla marketer…the gas station attendant, the restauranteur, the college admissions office, your past guests.  These are the ambassadors of YOUR inn.  The goals of your marketing exposure includes the frequency and quality of your message.

Although video is an advantage to your website and can be RSS linked to Social Media networks, email is STILL the preferred media the communcating world wants.  Arlene Satchell in her article “Social Networks’ Popularity Doesn’t Hurt E-Mail Marketing’s Success”, (RISmedia, May 15), states that according to Forrester Research, “90% of online Americans currently use e-mail as a mainstream communication channel”.  And the relatively inexpensive costs, when compared to the potential results, yields a return on the investment that cannot be ignored.  E-Mail is still the central hub for pushing communications to people.

Constant Contact, among others, offers a templated service to make email marketing a snap.  I currently use this service for both Newsletters and E-Mail “blasts”…short notices going out to targeted folks.  I categorize my database by groups (e.g. aspiring  innkeepers, current innkeepers), by state, and demographic groupings.  I can send a newsletter to all, or to a select few, depending on which groups I select.  Be sure to put links in your newsletters and emails BACK to your website to encourage traffic to your online booking features.  For a couple of bucks more, I can use their survey feature.  And so can you! Imagine the worthwhile feedback you can get from your past guests by sending out a thoughtful, well-positioned survey!

The cost is almost irrelevant and can fit any budget. It starts at about $15 per month for up to 500 addresses.  And there are features to help LOAD your email database into the Constant Contact database (a typical excuse I hear for not getting started).  You can send as many emails or newsletters as you want, although being prudent is always advisable.  Your messages are more memorable , and less likely to be “opted-out”, if they are not annoyingly too frequent.  Once a quarter is a good goal.  Perhaps sending a newsletter quarterly and an email (of specials and area attractions) quarterly on off months from your newsletter.

I am not a paid sponsor of Constant Contact!  I’m just a user.  There are other services as well in about the same price range such as YMLP (Your Mailing List Provider).  My point is the ease and low-cost that this alternative offers to your marketing plan’s completeness.

Social Media offers an alternative channel, for sure.  One more technique for staying on Top of Mind.

Your quality Website is important…probably THE MOST important.  But it is passive…guests have to find YOU.  E-mail marketing offers a proactive alternative to talking to your guests…to stay on Top of Mind.

Anybody out there currently using Constant Contact?  Like it?  Like other services?

Scott

We are a Visual Society…and Your B&B Can Exploit it!

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Check out the statistics:

32% of all Internet activity is made up of Video
-  Consumers prefer video 6 to 1 over text
-  Facebook video viewers are up 2000% in the last year
-  It was discovered by Forrester Research that videos increase Search Engine Optimization on Google’s (and other search engine’s) algorithms by up to 53 times.
40% of Internet activity last year was on CONTENT…whereas only 20% was on search and commerce activities.

The numbers are convincing, but not surprising when you see the explosion of Social Media and technology in our industry.  These figures, presented by Stephen Schweickart, CEO of VScreen, were detailed by Stephanie Andre in an interview published in RISMedia’s April 28 Ezine.

SO WHAT DOES THIS HAVE TO DO WITH A B&B?  Everything!

Gone are the days when having a few photos on your website was all you needed.  The leaders in the inn industry recognize the power that video offers when grabbing the attention of the consumer.  Everybody has heard that you have 3 secondsto grab the attention of a web surfer once your SEO efforts brings him to your site.  If he subconsciously discovers he likes the look of the site, he gives you another 4 seconds to discover if your site can meet his needs by looking at the functionality and navigation. If you fail at either of these steps, he hits the BACK button and he’s lost.

Video, per Mr. Schweickart, extends that window of attention-span to 14 seconds.  People enjoy movies, they like the action.  We are a visual society and the days of stagnant photos of the bed in the guest room will not grab the attention of the potential booking anymore.

It’s time to update websites to meet these evolving interestsof the traveling market.  Check out the YouTube video made by Dallas and Nancy Renner of the Chocolate Turtle B&Bin Corrales, NM.  Not only do you get to see a bit of the inn and its colors, but the video takes you into the community to see the shops, the animals and the mountains, and you get to meet the innkeepers as well…always a part of the guest memories you want to create.  That’s a marketing advantage over the competition that throws water on the fiery argument that it’s the current recession that is causing business to be down.

Your breakfast presentations are fabulous.  Make your inn’s presentation on the internet fabulous too.

Here are a few ideas to consider as you work to improve your website:

  • Replace the stills of the guest bed with video of the guest rooms…panning around the room and out the windows to the scenic river below.
  • Pan across the deck or private patio with the colorful breakfast settings to the bird feeder with the orioles and bluebirds or to the water feature in the garden.
  • Film the scarecrow festival in October, the strawberry festival in June, the sleigh rides in January and the flower fairs in April in your region.  These are the places your guests are going to want to see to have the full experience.
  • Loan your digital camera to your guests heading out hiking or to the battlefield re-enactment, show them how to use the video feature, and put their live testimonial on your site and blog.
  • Link your blog with a feed to your Facebook account to have your videos shown to your fans around the world.

Grab them with your inn’s beauty, your creativity and your innovation.  You only have 3 seconds.    Scott

Another B&B Niche Market with a MOO-ving Target

Friday, April 9th, 2010

As the (dreaded) inspector for the Maryland Bed & Breakfast Association, I have the good fortune to visit the member inns all over the state.  Not only does this process support the mission of the Association, it allows me to

Curous B&B Visitors

Curous B&B Visitors

see the diverse array of inns in Maryland.  Urban inns in Baltimore, Chesapeake Bayside manors, small town inns surrounded by history, and, this past week a Farmstay…the Crow Farm B&B in Kennedyville.

On almost 400 acres of sprawling countryside peacefulness, Judy and Roy Crow raise Angus cattle and are in the process of planting a 4 acre vineyard in another venture that will produce future rewards.  But this is not just another working farm. Recently Judy and Roy opened their farm to guests, with 3 comfortable guest rooms with private baths, this inn has positioned itself for the AGRI-Tourism market.  With about 80 head of Angus cattle, and a motto to “stay original”, they also provide grass-fed (not stall force-fed) meat, sans hormonal growth injections, to the local restaurants and markets.

What a great niche for a farm only about an hour away from the mega-populations of Philly and Baltimore, where most families have never seen cattle other than on a piece of styrofoam wrapped in Saran-Wrap at the local Giant food store.

One of the keys to occupancy (and therefore, financial) success is for an inn to the BEST at what they do in comparison to other similar and nearby properties.  Finding the niche that fits YOUR inn…whether AGRI-Tourism like Crow Farm, or historical relevance and authenticity, or the finest event venue in the region, or Going Green, or soft-adventure home base… and to attract MORE than your fair share of the traveling or vacation market, it is important…NO CRITICAL… to find what your inn is BEST at, and then market it, market it, market it.

Welcome to the MBBA, Judy and Roy.  I believe you have positioned your farmstay in a way that will be rewarding for you…and Babe (the retreiver) and Curious (the calico).     Scott

What Niche Market Does Your Bed & Breakfast Target?

Friday, March 19th, 2010

To stand out from all the rest, ANY product needs its unique selling feature that will lure the shopper to its website, and ultimately make the purchase.  Bed & Breakfast Inns are no different.  Your search engine optimization efforts will get your site high on the results page of the search, and then the attractiveness, navigation, and functionality of the site will keep the surfer from hitting the back button.

But what makes your inn stand out above the rest? Professional photography is certainly a strong asset, as is the ease of providing the info the surfer is looking for…in an attractive and eye-appealing manner.  But what will

Marilyn, Floyd, Sue and Scott being daring!

Marilyn, Floyd, Sue and Scott being daring!

grab them..and then keep them searching for more info?  Whatever it is that makes you special…that which makes you different from all the other inns…should be up front and central.

But that’s not how we found this particular B & B. I can’t even say we stumbled on it.  Actually we flew (kinda) into it!  Marilyn and I, along with cousins Sue and Floyd, had some time after the PAII convention in Austin this past week.  We hooked up our harnesses, helmets, and gloves, took a couple of minutes of training, and went Zip-Lining through the tree tops of Cypress Valley Canopy Tours.  I’ve never hung in a harness on a wire over a gorge before, but we had a blast…especially for old people not used to this soft adventure stuff!

And then there it was.  Suspended in the tree-tops at the end of the 4th zip, was one of the most unique bed and breakfasts I’ve ever

Mare near B&B

Mare near B&B

seen.  Not advertised…hidden in the back pages of their website…was

Large room with queen bed

Large room with queen bed

Lofthaven.  One room, with private (although hardly ensuite!) bath.  Marilyn and I were immediately distracted from our zip lining adventures.  You can only access the tree house from the zip line from this side.  Once you check in, there is a nearby parking space and walkway past the bathroom, with its solar powered hot water heater (everything about this adventure is eco-friendly) for the shower.  The room itself was very spacious…with queen bed, canopy which could double as mosquito netting although the room is fully enclosed with screened windows.  There is a walkway around the room with a “porch”, with a bench, looking out over the peaceful gorge

The solar powered hot water heater on the bath roof

The solar powered hot water heater on the bath roof

60 feet below.  No need for a sound machine to lull you to sleep here!  The babble of the brook below in the gorge, birds everywhere, and, absolutely no sounds of people, or cars, or neighbors.

The bathroom was complete with shower supplied by the roof top solar water heater, built in sink, commode and all the fine amenities of any

Marilyn on the walkway

Marilyn on the walkway

B&B.  It is a short walk across a rope bridge from the room…but no need to wear a robe!  There’s nobody out here!

When we finished zipping, the kind folks at the nature center gave us a golf cart ride out to the B&B to take these photos.  I tried to get a feel for occupancy performance.  But I only got anecdotal info from the fellow behind the counter.  Mostly filled on the weekends during the good weather season (March-November) and some bookings during the week.  I estimate annual occupancy at about 25%.  At $300 weekdays and $325 weekends, that puts annual revenue at about $30,000…not bad for an unadvertised little surprise in the woods!  And what guest memories that can bring them back time after time and brag about it with their friends.  You can’t buy PR like that.

Imagine what it could be if people knew they were here!  If they were in the B&B directories, had B&B keywords in the right places on their website, marketed to past guests and included guest photos in their newsletters and blogs.  If they would make this unique lodging adventure a dominant feature on their website, with pages of photos, TripAdvisor testimonials, Facebook links with friends and Twitter exposure.

People should NOT have to stumble into this kind of adventure by happenstance.  A lesson for all of us innkeepers.  Scott

Is TRUST a Vanishing Value?

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

Marilyn and I had the opportunity to visit Corrales, New Mexico, last week when we traveled to the Chocolate Turtle Bed & Breakfast.  Dallas and Nancy Renner listed their inn for sale, a gem of a lifestyle inn that has strong business.  The village of Corrales, just outside of Albuquerque, is right out of a movie.  Although only 20 minutes from the hub of Old Town Albuquerque, there are no sidewalks, no street lights, no traffic signals, about 7000 people, about 2000 horses and loaded with unique boutiques and GREAT restaurants (that’s another posting soon!).

Pottery Store-inventory

The Pottery Inventory

Nancy took us to a small pottery shop, however, which really prompted this posting.  Hanselmann’s Pottery shop doesn’t offer anything so unusual that any pottery purveyor couldn’t provide.  It’s inventory is adequate, colorful and full of the American Southwest style and colors that Marilyn and I enjoy.  We bought a large fruit bowl and, of course, I needed two of the large beer mugs in turquoise and earth tones.

But that is not what is unusual about Hanselmann’s.  Other than us shoppers, there are no people in the shop! There may be a few out back on their pottery wheels or however they make this stuff, but nobody in the store.  Want to buy something?  The prices are well marked and you just fill out a little piece of paper and slide it into the envelope along with your cash or credit card number and slip the envelope into the slot of the cash box on the table.  Totally on the Honor System! Totally blew me away!

According to Nancy, they have been doing it this way for years.  And my mind wandered to how this has application

The "Cash Register"

The "Cash Register"

to the innkeeping industry.  No…I don’t mean putting a cash box on the check-out desk…nor do I mean ignoring the good practices we all use as we take care of the fiscal responsibilities of our businesses.  But the TRUST. What a marvelous feeling to be TRUSTED.  What a compliment Mr. Hanselmann is giving his patrons…he TRUSTS them.  My next visit to Corrales (probably when the inn transfers) will find me again in the pottery shop.  He has won my LOYALTY as a repeat customer because he TRUSTS me.

Honesty is not a novel notion to me.  As a West Pointer, we live by an Honor Code that goes way down deep into our souls.  But in this era of crime, entitlement, lack of accountability, and self-centered greed, it can be difficult to earn TRUST.  But what a marvelous reward of loyalty and repeat customers.

A few ideas that come to mind for an Inn to develop trust:

  • Do what you say you are going to do.  Did you promise to make reservations?   Did you promise the upgrade?  Don’t forget.
  • Does your website really reflect what the inn really looks like?  Surprise your guests with MORE than they expect!
  • Are there signs that say “These (robes, mugs, towels) are for sale” to prevent theft?  Are your signs sending a message of distrust?
  • Is your cancellation policy unnecessarily strict?
  • Do you NOT trust kids or pets?  Do you NOT trust their parents?
  • Do you cancel a reservation if the deposit is not received on time?

Being trusted is an important element leading to loyalty.  And we all know that loyal guests are those that return time after time to visit us.

Wow…it really felt good for a potter who has never met me to TRUST me unconditionally.      Scott

Bed & Breakfast Memory Makers

Friday, January 29th, 2010

I don’t often spend much time watching the Food Network, but Marilyn does.  And a show with an interesting topic came on that got us talking.  “What is the best food you ever ate?”

We pondered on that and then started reminiscing about some great meals we had.  One with friends of ours in Santa Barbara two years ago before the PAII convention.  Outdoors on the restaurant’s patio… propane heaters overhead in the branches to take the chill off the evening… great wine from one of the vineyards we had visited that day… laughing… upscale fare with a flavorful Spanish creativity.

And the time we were in downtown Baltimore, at Tio Pepe’s (one of Marilyn’s favorites), an underground bistro with great Sangria, and a pine nut roll dessert.  Did I mention the Sangria?  A birthday favorite for her.

Even a great pizza at John’s in Manhattan, at lunch time before we dashed off to see Mamma Mia (I must admit I was an ABBA fan before it was chic) on Broadway.  Crisp crust, served in an old church complete with stained glass and murals…a New York City landmark and favorite for us.  Took the kids there one time.

Then it struck me that while trying to recall “the best food we ever ate”, it wasn’t really the food we were remembering, but the memory of the whole experience.  The food was made even better by the excitement of the location, the folks we were with, the intriguing atmosphere, the other delicacies we tried, the laughing, the holding hands …not just the food.

Isn’t that what all us innkeepers mean when we want to give our guests the full experience?  And if we can deliver, it creates memories.  We are not just beds, not just nice looking buildings.  The warmth of the welcome, the busy day out in the vineyards or at the historical site, the sincere smile when they sneak a second brownie, the breakfast… aahhh…breakfasts!  We had a guest stand on his chair one time to take a photo of his pumpkin waffle with the toasted almonds and roasted fruit.

Pennsbury Inn approach

Pennsbury Inn

Cheryl Grono, innkeeper at  Pennsbury Inn in Chadds Ford, PA., responded to a recent post about making a small cake with a balloon for a 90 year old guest, surprising him on his return from dinner, who then hugged her because he had never had a balloon before.  He will remember that moment…and so will Cheryl.

We innkeepers are the creators of memories.  And those guest memories will last forever and result in repeat guests.  And repeat guests are the lifeblood of our industry.

Any favorite memories?  I’ll bet it’s the whole experience that creates that memory.          Scott

Great Hospitality Means Creating Memories

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

One of the most thought-provoking sessions at the  Mid-Atlantic Innkeepers Trade Show and Conference last week was the general session featuring Terrie Glass, a story-teller from Leadership Solutions of Richmond, VA.  I’ve been to a number of sessions where the speaker usually addresses the big picture or offers platitudes of advice without really giving any hands-on, practical behaviors that are actionable or useful.

Not this one! After asking, and listing on a flip chart, what a “Good” lodging experience is (e.g. fair price, clean room, nice breakfast, etc.)  and then what a “Great” lodging experience is (e.g. personal interaction with innkeeper, a sincere welcom, attention to details, etc.) ,  she then asked everyone to think of the most “memorable” stay they’ve had at an inn.  And then she listed on a flip chart the “Why’s”…Why was this so memorable for you?    The answers to the memorable question varied quite a bit from the Good and Great list.

In fact, you can stay at an Inn that did NOT have all the details in order, but still have a most memorable experience that earns repeat stays.  Making Hospitality “Memorable”  boiled down to three concepts:

  1. Making the Personal Connection:  Attending to the emotional comfort of the arriving guest, which also builds trust.  Remembering the upcoming anniversary or the kids birthdays, or when guests arrive with a level of anxiety (after a long drive, meeting strangers, not sure whether the inn they’ve chosen will be comfortable, etc.).  Offering immediate and sincerely helpful comfort, with the personal connection, gives the guest a feeling of value and welcome.
  2. Delivering Positive Emotions:  Terrie spoke of a cruise she took with her elderly mom and the clan.  For over 2 hours around the dinner table, the family (grand kids included) interacted, joked, and told stories.  Terrie’s memory, however, is the look of total pleasure on her mom’s face as she watched her family share time together.  For Terrie’s mom, the positive emotion was the love for her family.  For our guests, it is the compliment we offer, or when the guest mentions their son making the swim team, our reply of  “Wow…I would really be proud if that were my son” evokes positive emotions from them.
  3. Taking Care of What is Relevant (to the Guest…not you!):  What is relevant to the guest may be very different than what is relevant to you.  For example, if a guest is (privately) worried about being able to get a hold of the babysitter at home during the night, she doesn’t want to hear that the house phone is for local calls only or that the last guest rang up costly long distance charges.  She would rather you perceived her real concern and offer relevant options to ease her anxiety.  What you worry about does not matter since it is not relevant to the guest.

We are pretty good at the hospitality thing in our industry.  But remembering the 3 important concepts of making EACH visit memorable will pay off in repeat business.

Do any of you have examples of how you made a guest’s stay memorable for them? Scott

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