Final Report
Final Report
Final Report
For the first time Ritz –Carlton was opening a hotel that was a part of
multiuse facility owned by Millennium Partners located in Washington DC.
Ritz–Carlton company has also signed contracts to signed five other hotels
for millennium Partners.
Purpose Christopher Jeffries came with the idea of luxury Hotel therefore
targeting the Ritz–Carlton and Four seasons, the two recognized hotel
operators serving at the highest end of the market. . Now we are showing
you the Ritz Carlton and Millennium Partners Hierarchy Chart.
The Ritz Carlton
Horst Schulze
Leonardo Inghilleri
Jean Cohen, Bill Rhodes, Jim
Vice President, Human Veil Patrick Mene
Resources
Regional Vice Presidents Vice President, Quality
James MC Bride
General Manager
Washington, D.C
Nikheel Advani Janet Crutchfield
Marie Minarich
Executive Assistant Director of Quality
Director of Human
Manager
Resources Washington, D.C.
Food and Beverage
Washington, D.C
Washington, D.C.
Millennium Partners
Christopher Jeffries
Founding Partners
Brian Collins
Partner, COO
President
Washington, D.C.
Business Model
As Ritz –Carlton was managing properties for Millennium Partners therefore
charging management fee 3% of gross revenues, enhancing income from
revenues from the land rent, resort timesharing and franchise fees,
management incentives and profit sharing.
Guests
The Ritz –Carlton’s general manager aggressively hunt their two main
customers (1) independent travelers, and (2) meeting event planners.
Management Contracts
The strong meeting events business helped the Ritz –Carlton maintain
profitability and provided owners with good returns but unfortunately the
expense in operating the hotels often spoiled relation between the
management company and the property owners.
Warm Welcome/ Unready guest rooms: any At point of Send daily by end of
Check-In guest room that is not Check-In second shift to DOQ
immediately ready for the guest
when they arrive to register,
regardless of the time of day;
includes room re-locations
during guest Check-In
Guest Room Room changes: guest Front Office Send daily by end of
Assignment requests repairs of room after second shift to DOQ
Check-In
“Best resort”
Global Magazine
Day 21
In hotels that were up and running for at least a year, The Ritz Carlton’s
annual turnover rate was only 20%, compared with the hotel industry
average of 100%, while new hotels experienced turnover rates between
20% and 25% during the first 60 days. Inghilleri believed that it was his
company’s deep respect for its employees that led to their satisfaction
with and commitment to the organization. The Ritz Carlton was so intent
on treating their employees well that a “Day 21” event was held as a
process check three weeks after any new hire’s start date. During that
session, the company assessed the degree to which it had lived up to the
promises it made to its employees during orientation and initial training.
The Ritz Carlton has been a kind and generous employer. I have
always been treated fairly and as a gentleman, with the utmost respect
for my talents. Because this organization cared about my career path
and my goals from the outset, and because it has demonstrated
respect for my talents along the way, I have been able to grow. At The
Ritz Carlton, opportunities for advancement are everywhere. It’s up to
you how far you want to go.
Through the extensive formal and informal training offered by The Ritz
Carlton employees were prepaid to fulfill their current obligations and to
accept positions of greater responsibility and accountability in the future.
Employees with advancement ambitions were encouraged to cross train
and learn about as many different aspects of the organization as possible.
SQI
Performance at The Ritz Carlton was not only assessed against the
established Service Quality Indicators but also managed by the
employees themselves. As Inghilleri explained:
REWARDING SYSTEM
In addition to employees monitoring their own performance, individual
were recognized for outstanding work in a variety of ways, including small
awards given within departments, as well as larger rewards that occurred
at the hotel level. For instance, each year every hotel identified members
of a “Five—Star Team,” each of whom received five complimentary nights
at a Ritz Carlton hotel of their choice, $500 to spend, and round- trip
airfare for two.
The Property
LOCATION OF WASHINGTON DC
Many decisions had to be made when The Ritz Carlton set out to open any
new hotel, including site selection, concept/ new-product development,
feasibility studies, and management contract negotiation. When
explaining the importance of site selection, Mene succinctly stated, “I
mean, let’s just put it this way. What if we build a 300 room hotel where
there’s no hotel needed at all? You’re dead. It’s done. It’s over.” The new
Washington, D.C., location was desirable because of its proximity to
several sites of interest, such as the White House and Capitol Hill,
Embassy Row, and the Foggy Bottom Historic District’ Washington’s
status as a global destination’ and the potentially strong clientele base of
foreign diplomats and local residents.
MARKETING CONCEPT
Market Customization
That’s what we learned in Asia, and that’s what I’ve been doing for six
years—adapting locally to do business there.” One of the adaptations that
occurred at the new Washington, D.C., hotel involved the Secret Service
walking the site and discussing the planning of entrance and exits with
the developers. Given the likelihood of foreign diplomats and
ambassadors being guests of the hotel, security design became an issue
of potential international importance.
That was not the only aspect of the new hotel that broke with tradition’
accordint to Collins, Millennium Partners took an active role in defining the
interior spaces: We picked out all the art. You won’t see one English
hunting scene in this hotel—and it’s been painful for the Ritz. Their
competition is the Four Seasons, and the Ritz has been resting on its
laurels—‘We’re an English kind of hotel’—and that just is not going to get
it done in the 2000s. It’s just not what people want.”
I’ve got to tell you that I love James McBride. James McBride is just
fabulous. He’s successfully opened up lots of Ritz-Carltons. But a year
from now? We’ll have done it for 365 days, and the edge will be off a
little bit. The problem in the hotel business is that you have to fill it up
every single day. So somehow you have to put your game face on and
be 99% every single day. But even then, that means you’re ticking off
a customer every single day. I don’t know how you do it a year out,
two years out, five years out. I don’t know how you keep it sharp. And
that’s the trick.
As the Ritz Carlton’s president and COO, Schulze was all too aware of the
difficulty of keeping it sharp. Having worked his way from a waiters’
apprentice and dishwasher to the top of one of the world’s best hotel
companies, Schulze knew firsthand how hard it could be for employees to
maintain their motivation to deliver exceptional service to customers
every single day, and how difficult it could be for managers and leaders to
keep morale up after the fanfare of a new-hotel opening. To help minimize
failures in service delivery, Schulze focused on key human resource
practices, particularly employee recruitment, selection, and training.
Personnel recruitment
A wide variety of tools was used to attract applicants for the staff
positions at the new hotel. McBride was active in the recruitment process,
during at The Ritz Carlton’s arch competition and giving deserving servers
cards that read “The Service You Just Provided Was First Class!” on one
side and contained job application information on the other. More
traditionally, targeted ads for food and beverage personnel were run in
the newspapers of major cites (e.g., New York and San Francisco), while
the community within Washington, D.C., also provided fertile ground for
potential employees. The first hospitality high school in the United States
was located in the area, and The Ritz Carlton also interviewed individuals
in welfare-to-work programs.
In the waiting room, where beverages and snacks were available, a Ritz
Carlton video was running in which Schulze talked about his early days as
a dishwasher ad other Ritz Carlton employees described their experiences
at the company. After the applicants provided basic employment
information, they went through a standardized selection procedure that
first involved the administration of a screening questionnaire. Those who
made it past the initial screening proceeded on to a professionally
developed and validated structured interview. Each individuals was then
personally escorted to “Fond Farewell.” Where they were thanked for
applying, given miniature Ritz Carlton chocolates, and escorted out of the
building.
By 2:00 p.m. on the first day, over 400 individuals had been through the
process, and everyone, from McBride on down, pitched in to serve as
escorts, paperwork runners, and interviewers—and that was before the
local news media aired a blitz of stories about the hotel. Over 10 years
had passed since a luxury hotel opened in Washington, D.C., and
television crews swarmed the job fair.
The aftershock was felt on the second day, when 1,500 individuals
showed up to complete for positions. By the time all was said and done,
2,300 people had been through the election process in 24 hours, while
another 1,700 had already completed the application process prior to the
job fair. These were impressive numbers, especially given the local
unemployment rate of only 5.4%. About 400 people were eventually
hired, which made getting a job at The Ritz Carlton about as likely as
being accepted as a Harvard undergraduate.
Individuals who did not make the cut were treated the same as everyone
else during the job fair, as Inghilleri explained:
We try to make sure that those we don’t hire are treated really well. They
may also be sons and daughters of our customers, we don’t know. So why
would I mistreat them? If someone is not hired and we just disregard
them, what does that accomplish? You create someone in the community
who looks at you and says, “Those guys are mororts. They are arrogant
imbeciles who don’t understand who I am, who didn’t value me as a
person.” We don’t want that.
For the new hires, The Ritz Carlton utilized a pre-employment call-back
process to reduce the attrition that often occurred during the lag between
the job offer and the start date During this phase of the employer-
employee relationship, new employees were treated as customers with
their own unique set of needs, and the hotel’s managers were
accountable for their satisfaction. As the graph shows below:
THE SEVEN DAY COUNTDOWN
The seven day countdown was a result of the revolution and refinement of
the hotel-opening process, with standardization brought greater efficiency
and relieved some of the burden placed on new managers and the leaders
responsible for ultimately running the hotel. Individuals first encounter
themselves as employees occurred over a month after they have been hired,
when they showed up for the beginning of the seven day countdown. The
first two days were devoted entirely to orienting employees to the Ritz-
Carlton environment and the remaining five days involved more specific
skills training and trial run of service delivery.
Schulze’s Address:
According to Schulze, the motto was:” a deeply believed feeling and demand
on the organization,” a promise by the organization that everyone would be
respected, and this is demand on all employees especially managers and
leaders.
Moto was the part of Gold standards. The other standards include the Credo,
the Three Steps of Service, The Motto, The Employee Promise, and the
Twenty Basics which were designed to focus employees on the core
company values. Different aspects of the Gold Standards were reinforced
daily through te departmental “lineups”. Inghilleri explained the importance
of the daily lineups:
Our employees are in on the front lines. They are always on the battlefield.
So you have got to nourish them on a daily basis- you have to heal the
wounds of being on the battlefield daily. Otherwise, they will forget the real
reasons they are there.
Service Philosophy:
Schulze explained the Ritz Carlton philosophy to the new employees during
the first day of orientation:” We are not in the hotel business. The hotel
business is about selling rooms, selling food, selling the bar. We do those
things incidentally, but our business is service. We charge for service. Our
commitment to our customers is excellence in service. Service is our
profession.”
He said that we should have a great work environment too. Besides the
physical setting, the work environment is created by you- the work
environment is the people who work here. We need to create good work
environment by respecting each other.
Leadership Orientation:
There is no one else who better know about our customers than we do. We
are able to satisfy 92% of our customers. This gives us occupancy of 80%.
Only 8% are not satisfied.
The last three days of the Seven Day Countdown was when departmental
technical training occurred. Employees learned the details involved in
performing their jobs to the standards set by the Ritz Carlton and everyone
was expected to master their department’s key production processes.
The Ritz Carlton tried to protect their employees from feeling overwhelmed
by controlling the occupancy rate. The important thing is to set the standard
immediately. The employees have to do their jobs perfectly, even if it takes
them longer; productivity will increase as they get more and more
comfortable. Flawless execution is the goal and then speed will come.
Dilemma
Collins question that whether the seven day time frame limited the hotels
ability to open at higher occupancy rate and to reach 80% occupancy in a
shorter amount of time. Since the seven day countdown was only a small
part of the pre-opening budget, the cost might well be worth the benefits.
This is the motto of Ritz Carlton Company. Having a conversation with anyone who
works there, and you will hear this phrase. Their challenge is to remember
constantly to lift themselves up to the level at which they have placed their
customers! We serve Ladies and Gentleman; let us act like Ladies and Gentleman.
By visiting any of the Ritz Carlton locations around the world and you will sense this
treatment. Every day at the Ritz Carlton begins with the “line up.” This process is
the beginning of the shift for every employee of the organization, from the CEO on
down. The concept is very simple: About ten minutes at the beginning of the day is
spent discussing what is going to happen that day as well as discussing one of the
basics of the Ritz Carlton model of service. These basics are found on the card
described above that each employee considers being a part of his or her uniform
and that deals with everything from greeting guests to using their names. This is
why you ask any employee within the Ritz Carlton organization how often they talk
about customer’s service; the answer is going to be the same: “Every Day.”
1. The Ritz Carlton hotel is a place where genuine care and comfort of our
guests is our highest mission.
2. We pledge to provide the finest personal service and facilities for our guests,
who will always enjoy a warm, relaxed, yet refined ambience.
3. The Ritz Carlton experience enlivens the senses, in still well-being and fulfills
even the unexpressed wishes and needs of our guests.
1. Give a warm and sincere greeting. Use the guests name if and when possible.
2. Anticipate and comply with guests needs.
3. Bid a fond farewell. Give guests a warm Good-bye and use their names, if and
when possible.
The Ritz Carlton “Basics” comprise a definitive list of guidelines that provide clear
instructions for employees in dealing with their guests. For example, one of these
reads, “Be an ambassador of your hotel in and outside of the workplace.
The respect to the employees is the key factor of success as the Ritz Carlton show
to their employees and it is also reflected in their policies, their diversity, and their
understanding of the needs of the families that make up their companies. They are
indeed extensions of a family with a corporate name.
Today fifty-six hotels, scattered from San Francisco to Seoul, Korea, from Boston to
Bali, display the Ritz-Carlton logo. As every guest knows, you move from one Ritz-
Carlton hotel to another without noticing a transition. You encounter no surprises,
and certainly no disappointments. The hotel replicates its perfection, regardless of
locale, climate, or language.
QUESTION NUMBER 2
Schulze’s Address:
Schulze explained the philosophy of being a high quality service organization
where no one is servant; their profession is service so everyone should be
respected.
According to Schulze, the motto was:” a deeply believed feeling and demand
on the organization,” a promise by the organization that everyone would be
respected, and this is demand on all employees especially managers and
leaders.
Moto was the part of Gold standards. The other standards include the Credo,
the Three Steps of Service, The Motto, The Employee Promise, and the
Twenty Basics which were designed to focus employees on the core
company values. Different aspects of the Gold Standards were reinforced
daily through te departmental “lineups”. Inghilleri explained the importance
of the daily lineups:
Our employees are in on the front lines. They are always on the battlefield.
So you have got to nourish them on a daily basis- you have to heal the
wounds of being on the battlefield daily. Otherwise, they will forget the real
reasons they are there.
Service Philosophy:
Schulze explained the Ritz Carlton philosophy to the new employees during
the first day of orientation:” We are not in the hotel business. The hotel
business is about selling rooms, selling food, selling the bar. We do those
things incidentally, but our business is service. We charge for service. Our
commitment to our customers is excellence in service. Service is our
profession.”
He said that we should have a great work environment too. Besides the
physical setting, the work environment is created by you- the work
environment is the people who work here. We need to create good work
environment by respecting each other.
Leadership Orientation:
The last three days of the Seven Day Countdown was when departmental
technical training occurred. Employees learned the details involved in
performing their jobs to the standards set by the Ritz Carlton and everyone
was expected to master their department’s key production processes.
The Ritz Carlton tried to protect their employees from feeling overwhelmed
by controlling the occupancy rate. The important thing is to set the standard
immediately. The employees have to do their jobs perfectly, even if it takes
them longer; productivity will increase as they get more and more
comfortable. Flawless execution is the goal and then speed will come.