Drivers of Productivity in Tourism and Hospitality - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Drivers of Productivity in Tourism and Hospitality

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labour to sales ratio stable. except lag during times of transition ... Ensure supervisors buy into' the concept ... Best practice' is contingent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Drivers of Productivity in Tourism and Hospitality


1
Drivers of Productivity in Tourism and
Hospitality
  • Industry practice, research evidence
  • and implications for teaching
  • Prof. Peter Jones
  • University of Surrey

2
Outline of Presentation
  • The issue of industry productivity
  • What we know already
  • Multi-skilling research
  • Impact of I.T.
  • What we are currently researching
  • Web-based labour scheduling
  • So what? Implications for education

3
Importance of productivity
  • Over the long-term productivity is a key
    determinant of corporate health. As the old adage
    says "productivity isn't everything, but in the
    long run it's almost everything."
  • Hence has been the focus of the Blair government
    for 10 years
  • BUT.

4
UK performance
  • There is an enormous productivity gap between
    Britain and other developed economies. Output per
    hour worked is 13 lower than Germany, 18 below
    America and 20 below France.
  • Centre for Economic Performance
  • London School of Economics
  • July 2007

5
Productivity in hospitality
  • how efficient are hotels?
  • how efficient might they be?
  • how and why labour cost varies
  • across countries
  • within countries

6
Productivity benchmarking
7
2005 Labour percentage

Income before fixed charges per available room
8
Trend
9
McKinsey study 1998
  • UK hotel sector has labour productivity 53 of
    the US and 60 of France
  • Little has changed in ten years?

10
McKinsey study
  • reasons
  • age of hotel stock - 75 more than 40 years old
  • low chain penetration
  • service mix
  • hotel size
  • organisational learning

11
Productivity Issues 2
  • how labour cost varies over time and what drives
    this change?
  • which approaches to productivity improvement
    work?
  • what impact these have on bottom line?

12
UK Hotel Labour Cost Trends
  • UK hotel data 1980 - 1997
  • labour to sales ratio stable
  • except lag during times of transition
  • labour cost percentage from 35 to 27, but
  • some efficiency gains in London
  • wage levels in provincial hotels not increased in
    real terms at all

13
Worsening problem
  • growth in the industry
  • increased competition
  • decline in of working population
  • demographic change in profile of population

14
EU accession workforce
15
Whos fault?
  • Everyone bears some responsibility for this
  • Hospitality industry appears to be unable to
    solve the problem
  • Hospitality educators have not produced
    managers/employees that have resolved the problem
  • Hospitality researchers appear to have provided
    no insights, nor solutions
  • Maybe.

16
Industry solutions?
  • redesigning work processes (Ritz Carlton,
    LSGskychefs)
  • deploying staff more efficiently by increasing
    their functional flexibility through
    multi-skilling (Stakis, Center Parcs)

17
  • introduction of new technology, especially I.T.
    (J.D. Wetherspoons, hotel chains)
  • increasing employee output through training,
    recognition remuneration schemes, empowerment,
    coaching (McDonalds, TGIFridays)

18
PtP research evidence?
19
Supporting evidence?
  • Surrey research
  • impact of multi-skilling on industry productivity
  • workforce flexibility in UK hotels
  • impact of I.T.
  • Web-based labour scheduling

20
Case study 1 multi-skilling
  • HtF Multi-skilling Project
  • Funded by Department for Education and Employment
    through Htf (UK hospitality industry lead body)

21
Overview of Multi-Skilling
  • Multi-skilling is the selection and training of
    staff so that they are able to work in more than
    one job position within the operation.

22
Multi-skilling cases
  • Number One the Aldwych, London
  • York House Hotel, Eastbourne
  • Hilton Hotel, Sheffield
  • Center Parcs, Elveden Forest Resort
  • The White Hart Inn, Derbyshire

23
Multi-skilling methodology
  • face-to-face interviews with
  • instigator of policy
  • human resource and personnel managers
  • line managers
  • multi-skilled employees
  • company documentation

24
Reasons for multi-skilled working
  • More efficiently schedule staff, especially
    during relatively quite periods of operation.
  • Increase staff retention, especially amongst
    part-time employees.
  • Improve team working.

25
Policy Choice
  • Breadth - operation-wide or just some depts.?
  • Depth - part or fully multi-skill?
  • Flexibility - ad hoc or scheduled movement?
  • Pay - same or enhanced for multi-skilled staff?
  • Resource allocation - how to assign hours/cost?

26
Factors Affecting Choice
  • Nature of demand - seasonal, weekly, daily
    fluctuations
  • Size of operation
  • Range of activities
  • History of business
  • Employees

27
Implementation Requirements
  • Structures to avoid conflict
  • generic job categories
  • equitable reward system
  • HoDs negotiation mechanism
  • Flexible employees - voluntary scheme
  • Training - build competence and confidence

28
Potential Pitfalls
  • Stress - amongst multi-skilled staff, especially
    if moved within shift
  • Status and identity
  • Initial resistance from staff through lack of
    confidence
  • Management resistance through lack of control
  • Conflict over cost allocation to Depts.

29
Multi-skilling outcomes
  • Cost reduction
  • fewer staff per shift
  • fewer in low season
  • avoidance of paid overtime
  • lower total training (induction) costs
  • Teamwork
  • barriers broken down
  • process improvement

30
More Outcomes
  • Staff motivation
  • job satisfaction
  • more variety
  • development opportunity
  • more secure employment
  • lower staff turnover
  • Quality
  • staff more knowledgeable confident
  • more effective staff meetings

31
Virtuous Circle
32
Report Recommendations
  • Define breadth depth of scheme
  • Take into account nature of demand, size of
    operation, and range of operational activities
  • Make the scheme voluntary
  • Support with appropriate training, especially to
    build confidence

33
  • Gain management commitment
  • Ensure supervisors buy into the concept
  • Use business forecasts as basis for
    inter-departmental negotiation
  • Review scheme regularly
  • Measure performance of scheme against objectives

34
Case study 2 Impact of I.T.
  • Survey of 94 UK three star hotels
  • Data envelopment analysis used to establish
    relative levels of productivity
  • Detailed questions on hardware, software and
    usage of this

35
Sample three star hotels
36
General factors
  • Hotel design
  • Older hotels less productive
  • Ownership
  • Chain operations more productive
  • Location
  • Rural properties had greater demand variability

37
Results
38
Specific factors
  • Market productivity
  • effectiveness and implementation of the yield
    management practices, distribution and marketing
    strategies
  • Operational productivity
  • staff scheduling, information technology
    applications and paperless office strategies

39
Role of I.T. in productivity
40
I.T. implications
  • Most hotels had I.T. infrastructure
  • For majority this automated existing processes
  • Only some (in cluster 4) were fully exploiting
    its capabilities
  • Transforming processes
  • Integrating of systems
  • Utilising functions
  • Understanding and using outputs

41
Case study 3 Web scheduling
ACTUALS
SCHEDULING
HoD / Super User

EMPLOYEE DETAILS
BUDGETS FORECASTS RE-FORECASTS
Finance Manager
Payroll System
PAYROLL HOURS INFORMATION
REAL-TIME REPORTS
HR Manager
HoD / Super User
General Manager
Cluster Manager
HR / Payroll Manager
Finance Manager
Head Office Payroll Manager
42
Business Forecasting Weekly focus
View of Forecast and Actuals by day
Variances clearly shown
Auto calculation of ASPH / other key data Trend
analysis via Forecast Accuracy Report
43
FB Benchmark KPIs
Views at Forecast and Re-forecast level ensures a
match to changing business levels
View of key KPIs at the point of scheduling
Display of performance in simple excess /
shortfall hours
44
FB - Weekly Productivity
  • View mode
  • Forecast - next week
  • Re-forecast - this week
  • Actual - history

Analysis by day-part
Real time view of performance to benchmark
Focus on excess / shortfall hours
45
Housekeeping - Productivity Cost
46
Housekeeping - Productivity
47
Housekeeping - Cost per Room Cleaned
48
Research
  • Why does productivity improve more in some hotels
    than others?
  • Why does productivity improve more in some
    departments than others?
  • What drives productivity improvement?

49
Data
  • 45 hotels
  • Big small
  • Urban rural
  • Old new
  • Hours worked by every employee in every
    department
  • over a period of one year

50
Lessons from case studies
  • Multi-skilling
  • Explain the why and when not just the how
  • I.T.
  • Explain how IT can transform processes not just
    automate them
  • Labour scheduling
  • Integrates the two areas above

51
Lessons from research
  • Industry practice is diverse
  • So no such thing as best practice for everyone
  • Research explains why
  • Best practice is contingent
  • eg if you have a large (urban, old) operations do
    X, but if you have a small (rural, new) operation
    do Y

52
  • Measurement of policy implementation is typically
    measured only financially
  • soft effects not measured
  • Industry knows what to do, but not how to do it
    well

53
Role of hospitality education
  • Only educators have the time and resources to
    research
  • Industry operates on trial and error OR copycat
    basis
  • Research must inform teaching
  • Teaching, researching and practicing hospitality
    are the SAME thing
  • Just different perspectives
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