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    he general manager also knows who Jane is. The entire operations team discussed her at the morning standup. By the second day of her stay, the entire hotel, even some other guests were keenly aware that Jane was a @#$%, a monster….the enemy. So now the general manager has to speak to her. The GM gathers her strength and returns Jane’s call. Jane goes on about how rude the hotel staff is and how she had been treated so poorly. The GM chides back and says “maybe this is not the hotel for you” and offers a one night refund. Jane accepts the refund and agrees that this is not the hotel for her. Jane never returns and neither do any of her 100 employees who travel to that city for
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    It sounds like a ridiculous statement. “The guest is not the enemy”. Of course they aren’t! But to many of us, the guest is the enemy. How quickly we can take that guest at the front desk and turn them into fire breathing dragons, monsters that have every staff member on edge and scared to death.

    Here is a scenario on how one of your guests becomes the enemy: Jane Guestarama has been bumped from two flights on the way to your hotel. She had an argument with her boyfriend about where they are going to spend the holidays while she waited for the next flight. Half of her luggage was sent to Mars. The taxi that delivered her to your front door smelled like a locker room, she has a really bad headache and now she is standing at your front desk. The standard welcome is not received well by Jane, she needs more. The front desk agent quickly categorizes Jane as “a problem” and without even thinking about it, puts up a wall of indifference to Jane’s situation. Jane checks in and heads to her room, her headache growing. The front desk agent summons a bellman to deliver her luggage, but before the bellman leaves, the front desk agent makes sure to tell him “careful, she’s a @#$%”. So the bellman, thinking that most “@#$%’s” don’t leave good tips decides to take another delivery first. Jane calls the front desk and asks where her luggage is and is told “it is on it’s way” by another front desk agent. They hang up and agree with the front desk agent who checked Jane in, “your right, she is a #$%#”. Another bellman sees the luggage and decides to deliver it. He is greeted by a not so happy Jane and is not tipped.

    He leaves and tells his friend the doorman about the rude guest who doesn’t tip.

    About this time the a supervisor inquires with the front desk about how the evening is going. She is attacked by the two front desk agents who tell the story about Jane and how rude she is and how they have to put up with so many rude guests. They elaborate on Jane and how they heard that she didn’t tip the bellman. The new supervisor agrees with her staff and tells them that they should not have to deal with rude guests like Jane. The supervisor then goes to the restaurant manager and tells them to “watch out” for Jane, this guest is a real @#$% and she won’t tip. So of course when Jane hits the restaurant for dinner she is greeted with distance and coldness. She gets a really bad table and the server, who has been instructed to “watch out” takes her time getting to Jane’s table.

    This goes on for two days. Jane’s reputation as a @#$% continues to grow like a virus. Jane gets the cold shoulder wherever she goes in the hotel. It gets so bad that she decides to call the general manager. Of course the general manager also knows who Jane is. The entire operations team discussed her at the morning standup. By the second day of her stay, the entire hotel, even some other guests were keenly aware that Jane was a @#$%, a monster….the enemy. So now the general manager has to speak to her. The GM gathers her strength and returns Jane’s call. Jane goes on about how rude the hotel staff is and how she had been treated so poorly. The GM chides back and says “maybe this is not the hotel for you” and offers a one night refund. Jane accepts the refund and agrees that this is not the hotel for her. Jane never returns and neither do any of her 100 employees who travel to that city for

    5 Reasons Why Your Potential Customers/Clients Are Just Not That Into You
    What gives? You have a stunning website with an audio intro and newsletter sign-up, but no one is buying from you. Maybe you’re wasting your time on the wrong target market or maybe you are sending the wrong message to your potential customers/clients.1. You give it up too soon and too often.Do you give away samples, freebies and more? Well, I hate to break it to you, but you’re probably just attracting “tire kickers” or “freeloaders”. There is no harm in offering a free newsletter, e-book, or audio recording, but if your website has a plethora of goodies just waiti
    e has a really bad headache and now she is standing at your front desk. The standard welcome is not received well by Jane, she needs more. The front desk agent quickly categorizes Jane as “a problem” and without even thinking about it, puts up a wall of indifference to Jane’s situation. Jane checks in and heads to her room, her headache growing. The front desk agent summons a bellman to deliver her luggage, but before the bellman leaves, the front desk agent makes sure to tell him “careful, she’s a @#$%”. So the bellman, thinking that most “@#$%’s” don’t leave good tips decides to take another delivery first. Jane calls the front desk and asks where her luggage is and is told “it is on it’s way” by another front desk agent. They hang up and agree with the front desk agent who checked Jane in, “your right, she is a #$%#”. Another bellman sees the luggage and decides to deliver it. He is greeted by a not so happy Jane and is not tipped.

    He leaves and tells his friend the doorman about the rude guest who doesn’t tip.

    About this time the a supervisor inquires with the front desk about how the evening is going. She is attacked by the two front desk agents who tell the story about Jane and how rude she is and how they have to put up with so many rude guests. They elaborate on Jane and how they heard that she didn’t tip the bellman. The new supervisor agrees with her staff and tells them that they should not have to deal with rude guests like Jane. The supervisor then goes to the restaurant manager and tells them to “watch out” for Jane, this guest is a real @#$% and she won’t tip. So of course when Jane hits the restaurant for dinner she is greeted with distance and coldness. She gets a really bad table and the server, who has been instructed to “watch out” takes her time getting to Jane’s table.

    This goes on for two days. Jane’s reputation as a @#$% continues to grow like a virus. Jane gets the cold shoulder wherever she goes in the hotel. It gets so bad that she decides to call the general manager. Of course the general manager also knows who Jane is. The entire operations team discussed her at the morning standup. By the second day of her stay, the entire hotel, even some other guests were keenly aware that Jane was a @#$%, a monster….the enemy. So now the general manager has to speak to her. The GM gathers her strength and returns Jane’s call. Jane goes on about how rude the hotel staff is and how she had been treated so poorly. The GM chides back and says “maybe this is not the hotel for you” and offers a one night refund. Jane accepts the refund and agrees that this is not the hotel for her. Jane never returns and neither do any of her 100 employees who travel to that city for

    History of Infomercials
    It all began in the 1980’s. Ronald Regan was president and one of the many controversial things he did in that office was to deregulate the TV industry. Why did he do it? Well, as a conservative Republican he lived and breathed by the “free market rule,” which stated that the government didn’t belong in business, and businesses should live and die by the success or failure of their own practices and market forces.At the same time, cable TV was just starting its expansion into the American television marketplace, and that opened up a huge broadcast venue which simply didn’t
    it is on it’s way” by another front desk agent. They hang up and agree with the front desk agent who checked Jane in, “your right, she is a #$%#”. Another bellman sees the luggage and decides to deliver it. He is greeted by a not so happy Jane and is not tipped.

    He leaves and tells his friend the doorman about the rude guest who doesn’t tip.

    About this time the a supervisor inquires with the front desk about how the evening is going. She is attacked by the two front desk agents who tell the story about Jane and how rude she is and how they have to put up with so many rude guests. They elaborate on Jane and how they heard that she didn’t tip the bellman. The new supervisor agrees with her staff and tells them that they should not have to deal with rude guests like Jane. The supervisor then goes to the restaurant manager and tells them to “watch out” for Jane, this guest is a real @#$% and she won’t tip. So of course when Jane hits the restaurant for dinner she is greeted with distance and coldness. She gets a really bad table and the server, who has been instructed to “watch out” takes her time getting to Jane’s table.

    This goes on for two days. Jane’s reputation as a @#$% continues to grow like a virus. Jane gets the cold shoulder wherever she goes in the hotel. It gets so bad that she decides to call the general manager. Of course the general manager also knows who Jane is. The entire operations team discussed her at the morning standup. By the second day of her stay, the entire hotel, even some other guests were keenly aware that Jane was a @#$%, a monster….the enemy. So now the general manager has to speak to her. The GM gathers her strength and returns Jane’s call. Jane goes on about how rude the hotel staff is and how she had been treated so poorly. The GM chides back and says “maybe this is not the hotel for you” and offers a one night refund. Jane accepts the refund and agrees that this is not the hotel for her. Jane never returns and neither do any of her 100 employees who travel to that city for

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    visor agrees with her staff and tells them that they should not have to deal with rude guests like Jane. The supervisor then goes to the restaurant manager and tells them to “watch out” for Jane, this guest is a real @#$% and she won’t tip. So of course when Jane hits the restaurant for dinner she is greeted with distance and coldness. She gets a really bad table and the server, who has been instructed to “watch out” takes her time getting to Jane’s table.

    This goes on for two days. Jane’s reputation as a @#$% continues to grow like a virus. Jane gets the cold shoulder wherever she goes in the hotel. It gets so bad that she decides to call the general manager. Of course the general manager also knows who Jane is. The entire operations team discussed her at the morning standup. By the second day of her stay, the entire hotel, even some other guests were keenly aware that Jane was a @#$%, a monster….the enemy. So now the general manager has to speak to her. The GM gathers her strength and returns Jane’s call. Jane goes on about how rude the hotel staff is and how she had been treated so poorly. The GM chides back and says “maybe this is not the hotel for you” and offers a one night refund. Jane accepts the refund and agrees that this is not the hotel for her. Jane never returns and neither do any of her 100 employees who travel to that city for

    Engineering Careers And Its Rewards
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    he general manager also knows who Jane is. The entire operations team discussed her at the morning standup. By the second day of her stay, the entire hotel, even some other guests were keenly aware that Jane was a @#$%, a monster….the enemy. So now the general manager has to speak to her. The GM gathers her strength and returns Jane’s call. Jane goes on about how rude the hotel staff is and how she had been treated so poorly. The GM chides back and says “maybe this is not the hotel for you” and offers a one night refund. Jane accepts the refund and agrees that this is not the hotel for her. Jane never returns and neither do any of her 100 employees who travel to that city for business on a regular basis.

    Do you see how quickly the staff turned a simply tired guest into the enemy? This happens every day at hotels around the world. You can’t necessarily control what happens to your guests before they arrive at your front door, but you darn better make sure that when they do arrive they are treated like your guest, not the enemy. If your front desk agent comes to your office to complain about “Jane”, stop them and ask some more questions. Instead of spreading the message that this guest is “special attention” decide right there that it is your goal and the goal of your entire team to make this guest into a raving fan. Call the guest, see what you can do for them. Make sure they feel welcome. Make sure your team does this too. Most often when a tired guest like Jane is inundated with warmth and the “servant mentality” at the beginning of their stay, they will become a loyal guest.

    So when you hear and see your staff going down the road of turning one of your guests into the enemy, make sure you stop them in their tracks. This sounds simple. I will even bet that you are thinking that “this would never happen with my team”. I bet you are wrong. Check it (and yourself) out.

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