Exploring the hospitality industry CHAPTER 1 Characteristics of the hospitality industry - Hospitality businesses are open 365 days a year‚ 24 hours a day - Constant strive for outstanding guest satisfaction - leads to guest loyalty - leads to more profit - Services are mostly intangible - the product is for the guest’s use - not possession - only - Inseparability: - characteristic of services that makes them inseparable (1) from their means of production‚ and (2) from the customer’s experience of
Premium Hotel Tourism
Business Across Culture Week 3 Learning Journal Hospitality Across Culture Hospitality is the relationship between guest and host‚ or the act or practice of being hospitable. When coming to another country‚ we always want to make a good impression to the native people like showing them our hospitality. But sometimes‚ because of different culture our hospitality is considered as offence.So what should we do in this case? In case study‚ a typical situation
Premium Sociology Socialization France
Competing values in the culinary arts and hospitality industry Leadership roles and managerial competencies Michael W. Riggs and Aaron W. Hughey Abstract: It is important that education and training programmes align with the needs of the professions they are designed to support. The culinary arts and hospitality industry is a vocational area that needs to be examined more closely to ensure that the skills and competencies taught are those that will actually be needed when students matriculate
Premium Management Leadership
Assignment 1 Burger‚ J (10406400) VDS 355 B.Consumer Science Hospitality Management 05 March 2013 Assignment 1 by J Burger Assignment handed in partial fulfillment of the requirements for VDS 355 Hospitality Management Department of Consumer Science 05 March 2013 TABLE OF CONTENT 1. INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………………..1 2. ADVERTISEMENT……………………………………………………………………...2 3.1. WHERE AND HOW I WILL ADVERTISE…………………………………….3 3. SOUTH AFRICAN LEGISLATION……………………………………………………4
Premium Health care Consumer protection Advertising
Table of content Table of content Introduction 1. Globalization and its definition 2. Globalization and Hospitality Industry 3. Challenges brought by Globalization 3.1 Globalizing marketing 3.2 Global promotion 3.3 Global advertising 3.4 Global e-marketing 3.5 Global pricing 3.6 Global ethics 4. Strategies and tends toward Globalization Conclusion References Introduction World maps define national boundaries‚ but those lines belay the increasingly clear nature of the global
Premium Globalization Marketing Tourism
of service quality The Gap model of service quality was developed by Parasuraman‚ Berry and Zeithaml (1985)‚ and more recently described in Zeithaml and Bitner (2003). It has served as a framework for research in services marketing‚ including hospitality marketing‚ for over two decades. The model identifies four specific gaps leading to a fifth overall gap between customers’ expectations and perceived service. The five gaps x Customers have expectations for service experiences and they use them
Premium Service Service system Services management and marketing
Challenges For Hospitality Industry | | 1. Shortage of skilled employees:One of the greatest challenges plaguing the hospitality industry is the unavailability of quality workforce in different skill levels. The hospitality industry has failed to retain good professionals. 2. Retaining quality workforce:Retention of the workforce through training and development in the hotel industry is a problem and attrition levels are too high. One of the reasons for this is unattractive wage packages.
Premium Hotel Hospitality industry Lodging
FOE_C02.qxd 1/15/07 14:45 Page 16 »2 The production possibility frontier (curve): the PPF or PPC The starting point in our economic analysis is to consider what an economy can produce. As consumers we may want many things‚ but there is a limit to what our economy can actually produce. This can be analysed using the production possibility frontier (PPF). In this unit we examine the factors that determine how much an economy can produce and the implications of different output decisions
Premium Economics Supply and demand Market economy
Introduction The tourism industry is rapidly becoming one of the fastest growing and successful industries‚ with revenue of recorded 693 million international tourist arrivals in 2001‚ reported by World Tourism Organization (WTO)‚ nevertheless its definition cannot be agreed on. Youell (1998; pg.9) presents a definition given by WTO in 1993 defining tourism as “activities of persons travelling to and staying in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure
Premium Tourism Amazon Rainforest World Tourism Organization
Schultz’s Growing Frustration On Schultz’s return from Italy‚ he shared his revelation and ideas for modifying the format of Starbucks stores with Baldwin and Bowker. But instead of winning their approval‚ Schultz encountered strong resistance. Baldwin and Bowker argued that Starbucks was a retailer‚ not a restaurant or bar. They feared that serving drinks would put them in the beverage business and dilute the integrity of Starbucks’ mission as a coffee store. They pointed out that Starbucks was
Premium Starbucks Coffee Espresso