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Now ye're talking - to a Hotelier

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,644 ✭✭✭✭punisher5112



    Suppose cause they don't flush?!

    They leave used stuff everywhere.... Sanitary towels etc....


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,012 ✭✭✭stop animal cruelty


    Suppose cause they don't flush?!

    They leave used stuff everywhere.... Sanitary towels etc....

    No I'm saying men can't flush a urinal!


  • Boards.ie Employee Posts: 12,597 ✭✭✭✭✭Boards.ie: Niamh
    Boards.ie Community Manager


    Mod note:
    I've removed a few posts that were continuing the discussion of pricing - I already asked in post #177 that we move on from that topic of discussion.

    If you want to discuss the pricing structures of hotels, the Travel forum might be a better place for it.

    Thanks.


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    What's a typical day in the life?
    Has a customer ever found something they shouldn't have?.. Was recently in a hotel and a woman found a screw in her scone


    Your days are never typical. Something new always happens and thats one of the best things about hotels.

    From my own perspective, assuming i was just on a regular day - there are core tasks that you need to oversee so you would start with making sure early reception shift is prepared for the day and see how many departures and arrivals you have which will give you a good indication for how busy the day is likely to be. You would then check on the restaurant and make sure they were ok and that breakfast service was running smoothly and slot in for a while if they needed help. I would talk to the chef and see how they were fixed, check how many people were booked in for lunch / dinner service that day and have a look at the stock levels / staff rosters and make sure they were all covered for that. I would then liaise with accommodation and see if they had any issues that might affect the operations for the day. I would then settle in, catch up on emails, take a look at the monthly figures and see how we are shaping up. I would normally have a quick 10min staff meeting with the guys around 10am and let them all tell us whats happening that day. I would meet with sales and marketing team and get an update from themselves as to what business they are chasing at the moment. I would take a look at our guest metrics, tripadvisor reviews, etc and see if they highlighted any recent issues that i may need to address with dept heads. I would have a lot of dealings with head office as we would have multiple things going on at any given time so that could take up a bit of my time. I would also have tonnes of meetings with people which may include site visits by companies to the hotels with a view to getting business from them, etc etc I would also be heavily involved in local business groups such as the chamber of commerce so this can take up some time as well. And then you would see what else the day would bring for you

    You do get mishaps from time to time. If the guys rush through cleaning rooms then you will sometimes find something there that you shouldnt. Never had anything too bad so far though thankfully


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    The most famous person that stayed in your hotel or served?


    There have been a few over the years. Bill Clinton, Lady Gaga, Bon Jovi and Posh & Becks spring to mind. Anne Charleston ( used to play madge on neighbours ) - didnt like her at all, the irish soccer and rugby teams ...


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    Really interesting thread, thanks for your answers!

    If staying in a hotel alone (e.g. business), is there any difference whether you select 1 or 2 guests staying? (Assume no breakfast included to make comparison easier).

    On some rare occasions, I've been put in a room with only 1x large towel in the bathroom - which makes me think despite being a double bed, some rooms are set up for 'single travellers' and mightn't be as nice.


    Yes there can be a difference. Hotels, certainly city centre ones, would usually have corporate floors / reserve rooms for corporate guests and would have a good idea of what type of business they can expect to get and operate accordingly. so we would have a fair idea of how many corporate rooms we would sell on sun - thurs nights. Usually corporates are single travellers so we would service a double room for single occupancy and provide one set of towels, one set of teas / coffees / shampoos / showergels to save money.

    In terms of the 1 vs 2 people and the single traveller rooms, i mentioned it earlier in the thread. I would always select 2 people so that you get a proper double room. Single rooms can be small and just shoehorned into hotels


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    Ted_YNWA wrote: »
    If guests leave things behind, what happens to them.

    Do you keep them for a while in case they make contact?

    I know it probably would depend on the items in question.

    Are 'low end' items dumped, or fair game for staff to take?


    We have a lost property procedure. If its food, drink or undergarments - we throw them out straight away. Anything else would be logged in our lost property folder with the room number and date it was found. Guests will ring up looking for stuff and we can check the log when they do and locate items for them

    If its something valuable like an ipad or a wallet then we would ring them

    Staff would not be allowed to take anything left in a room


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    Yester wrote: »
    What do you do with all the cash after a big night? Do you have a safe on the premises? Also, whereabouts in the building is that safe?

    LOL its locked away very securely !!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,201 ✭✭✭troyzer


    Yes there can be a difference. Hotels, certainly city centre ones, would usually have corporate floors / reserve rooms for corporate guests and would have a good idea of what type of business they can expect to get and operate accordingly. so we would have a fair idea of how many corporate rooms we would sell on sun - thurs nights. Usually corporates are single travellers so we would service a double room for single occupancy and provide one set of towels, one set of teas / coffees / shampoos / showergels to save money.

    In terms of the 1 vs 2 people and the single traveller rooms, i mentioned it earlier in the thread. I would always select 2 people so that you get a proper double room. Single rooms can be small and just shoehorned into hotels

    Is this why Booking.com asks if it's a business or leisure trip? To see if it can save money on providing for a single occupant?


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    troyzer wrote: »
    Is this why Booking.com asks if it's a business or leisure trip? To see if it can save money on providing for a single occupant?

    No. Booking.com do that for their own market research. They like to know what % of their business is leisure and what % is corporate


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,201 ✭✭✭troyzer


    No. Booking.com do that for their own market research. They like to know what % of their business is leisure and what % is corporate

    Fair enough. But I imagine a hotel would like that information as well?


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    troyzer wrote: »
    Fair enough. But I imagine a hotel would like that information as well?

    Yes but we have our own systems that can give us information like that as well.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,512 ✭✭✭baby and crumble


    Yes but we have our own systems that can give us information like that as well.

    I'd say it's fairly obvious too. If I'm travelling for work I look and act v different than when I'm on a holiday!!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,176 ✭✭✭✭sammyjo90


    Stolen - TV remotes

    Checked into a place last night and there is no remote!
    I asked for it about 2 hours ago...when is acceptable to go ask for it again? :D

    What time would you normally tell maintenance/builders to stop drilling?


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    sammyjo90 wrote: »
    Checked into a place last night and there is no remote!
    I asked for it about 2 hours ago...when is acceptable to go ask for it again? :D

    What time would you normally tell maintenance/builders to stop drilling?


    I think 2hours is sufficient time for them to have got their ass into gear to get you a remote so you are entitled to ask again !!

    Personally I would normally let any major noise start @ 8:30 / 9am and finish by 6pm.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,176 ✭✭✭✭sammyjo90


    I think 2hours is sufficient time for them to have got their ass into gear to get you a remote so you are entitled to ask again !!

    Personally I would normally let any major noise start @ 8:30 / 9am and finish by 6pm.

    I didnt ask for it again. Back from dinner and its still MIA. I'll survive now without it but I shall be sure to say to reception checking out tomorrow that I didnt nick it :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,453 ✭✭✭✭DrPhilG


    Have you ever been to Vegas, and if so did you try the infamous "Vegas sandwich" at check in?


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    DrPhilG wrote: »
    Have you ever been to Vegas, and if so did you try the infamous "Vegas sandwich" at check in?


    The Vegas Sandwich haha :D:D havent heard of that one in years. It does work now to be fair. America is defo the right place for that kind of thing. Key to this is to arrive just around the advertised check-in time for the hotel. The earlier you get there, the more rooms the reception team have to play with and can move you around, upgrade you, etc etc


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,453 ✭✭✭✭DrPhilG


    The Vegas Sandwich haha :D:D havent heard of that one in years. It does work now to be fair. America is defo the right place for that kind of thing. Key to this is to arrive just around the advertised check-in time for the hotel. The earlier you get there, the more rooms the reception team have to play with and can move you around, upgrade you, etc etc

    I've never tried it. Heard too many stories of clerks just saying no but pocketing the cash.

    I prefer to just ask nicely with a $20 in my hand. I prefer to tip rather than bribe, lol.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,236 ✭✭✭Up Donegal


    Have you ever knowingly taken a booking for a room knowing that it was going to be used as a meeting place for an illicit encounter?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,236 ✭✭✭Up Donegal


    If someone came to your hotel at, say, 2, 3, or 4 o'clock in the morning looking for a room, would you admit them and would they have to pay the full cost of the room?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,685 ✭✭✭✭wonski


    Im not sure if we are talking about the same company. Capita Customer Solutions is the one Failte Ireland use. They are a very good operator in my experience

    Same company I worked for in the UK managing DWP files... They are everywhere and know everything about everything. Plus few scandals.

    They are good operators. And that's all :) And they are good at securing public funded contracts too somehow ;)

    While highly regarded by businesses, not so by regular Joe's...

    Some good info here, thanks for posting.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 508 ✭✭✭d8491prj5boyvg


    Im not even gonna go there with the Brennans LOL

    Ok so lets break it down. Cleaning a room costs an average of €10 euro. This cost includes the staff wages, the cost of using new linen and the cost of replenishing the Teas / Coffees / Shampoo / Shower Gel / Soap, etc ...

    So you clean the room once costing 10 euro, then you sell it for 20 euro and then you clean it again after that person leaves so it costs you another 10 euro. So .... - 10 euro cost + 20 euro revenue - 10 euro cost = zero. So you made no money on that room

    But ... if you dont sell that room that night, then its still a clean room that you will have to sell tomorrow. And say you sell that room for 70 euro and then clean it the following morning. So in this scenario - 10 euro cost + 70 euro revenue - 10 euro cost = 50 euro. So you went from selling a room and making zero profit .... to selling the same room a day later and making 50 euro profit.

    why can't you sell it both nights? And sell it for 25e the first night. 75e profit instead of 70. There is a risk to waiting last minute and very few are willing to take it so that will ensure a strong stream of reservations remains


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    Up Donegal wrote: »
    Have you ever knowingly taken a booking for a room knowing that it was going to be used as a meeting place for an illicit encounter?

    No but you get a sense for what may be transpiring by the way people book the rooms ie: comment on the reservation " can i check in early ... i have a meeting to get ready for " :D:D


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    Up Donegal wrote: »
    If someone came to your hotel at, say, 2, 3, or 4 o'clock in the morning looking for a room, would you admit them and would they have to pay the full cost of the room?


    as long as they seemed ok then yes you would sell them a room but they would still have to check-out at 12pm as normal


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  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    wonski wrote: »
    Same company I worked for in the UK managing DWP files... They are everywhere and know everything about everything. Plus few scandals.

    They are good operators. And that's all :) And they are good at securing public funded contracts too somehow ;)

    While highly regarded by businesses, not so by regular Joe's...

    Some good info here, thanks for posting.



    The people that work for them that do the grading - they are all former hoteliers so ive never had any major issues with them :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,236 ✭✭✭Up Donegal


    No but you get a sense for what may be transpiring by the way people book the rooms ie: comment on the reservation " can i check in early ... i have a meeting to get ready for " :D:D

    Further to my earlier question, would you take such a booking if, let's say, you personally knew one or both the parties and knew they were married to someone else or had partners etc?


  • Company Representative Posts: 121 Verified rep I'm a hotelier, AMA


    Up Donegal wrote: »
    Further to my earlier question, would you take such a booking if, let's say, you personally knew one or both the parties and knew they were married to someone else or had partners etc?


    I think that's more of a moral question you are asking as opposed to a hotelier one to be fair. It wouldn't be my place to judge people or question the reasons / ramifications of decisions that they make, regardless of whether they rented a hotel room from you or not


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,236 ✭✭✭Up Donegal


    I think that's more of a moral question you are asking as opposed to a hotelier one to be fair. It wouldn't be my place to judge people or question the reasons / ramifications of decisions that they make, regardless of whether they rented a hotel room from you or not

    I see where you're coming from.
    Thanks for the reply anyway.


  • Boards.ie Employee Posts: 12,597 ✭✭✭✭✭Boards.ie: Niamh
    Boards.ie Community Manager


    I want to say a huge thanks to our hotelier guest who has really given some great insights into hotel life, it's been an eye opener!

    I'll close this up now, no doubt he has a very busy weekend ahead if he's working.

    Thanks for all the questions too :)


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