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Miami Conference Blog 2008

2 Posts tagged with the denise tag

Four Seasons: Impeccable. Deluxe. Personal. In Touch.

 

Those are words that loyal guests use on a regular basis to describe the Four Seasons. All hotels experience glitches. The water gets turned off, the fire alarm accidentally goes off at 2:00 am, light bulbs burn out, shower curtains fall down. At Four Seasons, they are crazy devoted to glitches. Employees report each and every one and they are rigorously monitored to make sure they are resolved in a timely manner. Ahhhh... sounds lovely.

 

Deborah Carlisle, Manager of Marketing Planning for 74 Four Seasons in 31 countries, has the best job. She sells experience. By listening to their loyal customers they are able to distinguish themselves among a very competitive market. Hotels are always in danger of becoming a commodity. Websites like Hotels.com perpetuate that. The Ritz Carlton, Hotel Intercontinental, and Four Seasons are all within $100 in their price range for a standard room. Word-of-mouth among the high end business traveler is especially valuable. And Four Seasons gets that.

 

Ricardo Acevedo, General Manager for the Miami Four Seasons knows the secret sauce in their culture is the people. Can you imagine that every position you have open in your company must go through a minimum of 5 interviews? Every job candidate from the maids to management eventually will be interviewed by Ricardo. He is the final test, and uses his intuition and sense of humor to see if they are Four Seasons material. "If I can't make them smile, they are probably not a good fit" explains Ricardo.

 

Dignity.

 

"I will not allow a manager to mistreat employees. If they do, they will be dismissed," Ricardo said emphatically.

 

Dignity can come in the form of a free meal, clean pressed uniforms that fit nicely and are fashionable, and an employee locker room complete with a hot shower. These are not just employee perks; in some countries these are luxuries that provide dignity and instill pride. It's nice to hear of a North American company that doesn't take advantage of the work pool in less developed nations.

 

Employees are asked to rank their feelings towards Four Seasons in an annual survey.

 

#1 - I am proud to work for Four Seasons

 

#2 - I have a feeling of loyalty towards Four Seasons

 

#3 - Our guests are very happy with the quality they receive.

 

Fred Reichheld was in the room during this presentation. Throughout the conference, he reminded just how simple and how hard it is to grow a business. You have to treat people so well, that they'll come back and bring their friends and family.

 

The Golden Rule is truly ingrained in the Four Seasons culture. Can you say the same of yours?

 

Click  Not authorized to view the specified document 1011 to download the presentation.

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Can I bring my dog? That's a question Amber gets asked a lot. It has nothing to do with a company that specializes in the placement and recruiting of healthcare professionals. But Amber gets that it really has EVERYTHING to do with being named one of America's fastest growing private company by INC Magazine.

 

Dwight Cooper, Co-Founder and CEO of PPR Healthcare Staffing, wowed the audience with stories of guts and glory. His goal was to be the Nordstrom or Ritz Carlton of nurse staffing, not a commodity. Nurse retention is key to their reputation, and if that means they need to find an apartment that will take a 40 pound dog, they will do it. It also means scoping out great restaurants in a new city before the nurse moves there and buying a gift certificate or having groceries delivered.

 

Training, accountability, and rewards are Dwight's secret to success.

 

In order to identify gaps between where they were and want to be, he decided to look internally at their culture. His internal NPS question was not whether or not the company was worth recommending (as an employer) but rather co-workers were asked if they could recommend each other. It clearly separated the pack from service leaders to those who needed "help moving onto another career." One of those people that rose to the top is Amber. She has a following. Serving is in her DNA. She now gets rewarded for cultivating that kind of loyalty.

 

Dwight is so serious about service as a retention tool that he has "institutionalized great service." We "met" Jenny. Her job is to look for ways to wow their client nurses and make them feel at home. She's the purveyor of all tchotckes and fun things that make people feel special. I want that job.

 

The coolest and simplest solution to creating wow experiences was what they call "Best Answers." They identified their 64 most common questions ("Can I bring my pet?" being one of them) and brainstormed on not just the right answer, but the best way to answer. With caring and enthusiasm.

 

Bigger is not better. Better is better. PPR may only own 3% of their marketplace, but the two competitors (that own 80% of the market together) cannot boast being SHRMs best places to work for four years running.

 

Click here to download the presentation.

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