Showing posts with label experience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label experience. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

So You Want A Career As A Restaurant Manager

Even if you're currently a restaurant's resident dishwasher, it is still very possible for you to climb the ladder to the very top with hard work, persistence and the right set of skills. A lot of restaurant operators seek people who already have ample experience in nearly all restaurant duties, so if you've been rotating on different tasks for the past months or years, you already have one foot in the door.

However, given the present times, most owners are eyeing potential candidates who have formal qualifications to fill supervisory and managerial roles in the company. While experience also carries a lot of weight, job opportunities are likely to be more open and better if you have an associate or bachelor's degree to your name, particularly those that have something to do with restaurant and institutional food service management.

Understanding Your Work Conditions

A restaurant manager's daily life is often very hectic and subject to high levels of pressure. Thus, a considerable amount of resilience, stamina and physical, mental and emotional endurance is required of you. Since evenings and weekends are the most busy times for restaurants, you should be prepared to work during late nights and weekends. It is not uncommon for restaurant managers to work for around 50 to 60 hours per week, and you will most likely be the first to arrive and the last to leave everyday.

A restaurant manager's work hours and job nature are also highly intermittent, as you might have to fill in for an absent employee, no matter what his job designation is, at the last minute. Hence, it is very important that you know all the restaurant's operations inside out and from top to bottom, as being a restaurant manager does not just mean sitting behind a nice desk and making chitchat with customers. There will be times that you will have to perform all sorts of "dirty work".

The pressures of making sure everything is in order almost always happen simultaneously with a number of other responsibilities. Whenever there are problems, it will be your duty as restaurant manager to seek a solution with the least possible disruptions to other operations, particularly in the serving of customers. This can be further aggravated by uncooperative and stubborn staff, as well as irate clients. You have to have a lot of patience for this job if you want to pull through sanely and in one piece.

Duties of a Restaurant Manager

A restaurant manager's daily duties are not to be underestimated. Apart from the usual tasks of selecting what to place on the menu and determining each of their prices, ensuring quality service and proper food preparation and the efficient utilization of supplies, taking responsibility for the rising number of human resource and administrative tasks are also part of the job description.

Typically, the management team is composed of a general manager, one or two assistant managers (depending on the size of the place) and one executive chef, who takes charged of all kitchen operations. Often, in the case of small restaurants, the manager and the executive chef is just one person. In the case of major fast food chains, there are a number of assistant managers to supervise the different shifts.

All of the members of the managerial team should expect to be working from the moment the restaurant opens until it closes at all days of operation. Because a manager is responsible for all, he does not have the liberty to just skip work because he doesn't feel like going. Restaurant management, though accompanied by considerable perks, is a full service job that requires full time commitment.

Managing the Menu and Supplies

It is a restaurant manager's job to determine menu items. This is often doen with the help of the executive chef and will be decided on based on the past popularity of certain meals and the likely number of customers who will patronize it. Sometimes, a new dish is introduced in order to accommodate and avoid the wastage of unserved food. How the menu is arranged also depends on what raw ingredients are in season or simply for the sake of variety and novelty.

Managers also review each dish to find out how much it costs to prepare them, taking into consideration certain overhead expenses, to know what price best represents its value. Items on the meu should also be done ahead of time so managers can estimate what supplies are needed and when these should be bought and delivered. Upon delivery, it is the manager's duty to check the content and evaluate their quality, particularly the meats, fruits, vegetables, fish, baked items and poultry.

Grocery items are not the only supplies that should be monitored. Tableware, linens, cooking supplies, furniture and cleaning materials should also be checked regularly. Waste disposal and pest control should be addressed, as well.

Hiring the Right People

How smoothly a restaurant runs depends a lot on the people who work there. That's why it is important that managers hire the right people for the job. It is the manager's responsibility to explain the company's rules and regulations to all staff members and to provide the training necessary. Employee work schedules are also under his jurisdiction.

Because restaurants at peak hours are considered one of the most stressful working environments in the business world, managers should be able to exercise maximum grace under pressure and handle problems with the least disturbance.

Administrative Duties

While majority of administrative functions are handled by the bookkeeper, managers should also know how there are run, particularly for smaller restaurants where he might have to do the job himself. Issue like work hours and staff wages, tax and licensing paperwork, payroll, supply and equipment purchases and other disbursements fall under this category. Given a highly technological business environment today, managers will also need to learn how to operate computerized point of sale systems to increase productivity and efficiency. POS systems can help minimize the workload by automatically talling sales, supplies and ranking which dishes on the menu are the most popular among clients.

Training to be a Restaurant Manager

Given the multitude of responsibilities managers face each day, it is important that he is well equipped to handle the job. Colleges and universities offer two to four-year programs on restaurant related subjects like food technology, nutrition, food planning and preparation, accounting, even restaurant and hotel management itself.

The demands of the times today do not only call for a vast experience on the business, but also the adequate formal and technical know-how in order to grow safely with the changes and industry advances.

To further bolster you chances of becoming a restaurant manager, you might want to acquire a certification as a Foodservice Management Professional from the Educational Foundation of the National Restaurant Association. This can be obtained after you've successfully completed a series of food service management related courses, passed a written test, and met certain minimum requirements pertaining to performance and experience.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Making a Difference - Hospitality as a Career Option

Let’s get the facts straight. Working as a professional in the hospitality industry is no cakewalk. You are required to work long hours without the weekends off and round the clock during the holiday rush. To top it all, the guests are sometimes rude. It definitely takes nerves of steel to face all this and more. It’s a torture to see your kith and kin have the time of their life holidaying while you slog to please others’ folks. And all this with a perpetual smile on your face. But, despite all these shortcomings, the perks offered, the awesome money involved, and the benefit of working in a partially recession free industry draws potential workforce towards it.

Do you fit the bill?

Enjoying being among people is the first and foremost requirement for a person to be able to chart a course of success in the hospitality trade. The job of a person serving in this field requires one to be people friendly, flexible and adaptable. Other essential attributes include the ability to work in a team, problem solving capabilities and working in a customer centric ambience. If the smiles on your guests’ satisfied faces make you forget all your woes including the pressure of working on-your-toes for late hours without the weekends for yourself, you are probably tailor made to suit this profession. On the contrary a recluse who likes keeping to himself, working in a cubicle for a stress free job or a typical nine to fiver is a complete misfit.

Getting ready for a career

If you know your calling in life lies in the hotel and hospitality industry, you need to take a path that will provide you an edge over the others as far as employment is concerned. You could go in for any of the following to take forward your plans.

Enroll for a full time course

Identify your area of interest and enroll for a full time program affiliated to a reputed university. Choose a program depending upon the eligibility and the time you wish to spend on education.

Go for a training program

Join a program that is conducted by an employer or an agency that is associated with employers. Such programs are generally the blend of theory or off the job training at a college or institution, and practical or on the job training at affiliated joints.

Get yourself employed

Find an employer who will train you on the job and pay you a minimal stipend. It will arm you with the necessary and invaluable experience.

Opportunities in the hospitality trade

Though it has been recognized as a full fledged industry relatively late in the day, the hospitality trade is as old as Cain and Abel. The current trend of globalization, coupled with the exponentially rising spending power of people is at the core of the fillip that the hospitality trade has received in the past few years. But, people who are naïve about the nitty gritties of the trade fail to see the myriad hues that this industry offers its workforce. A mere mention of the hospitality industry brings to our mind the images of chefs with high white hats, pleasant, tidy front desk executives and alert, shipshape waiters. Few are aware of the deluge of other opportunities that await a young hospitality industry graduate.

Contrary to the common perception, hospitality definitely does not pertain merely to hotels. We conveniently overlook the fact that hospitality has entered our lives in more ways than we can think of. Small and big eateries, coffee shops, ice-cream parlors, lodges, cinema and workplace canteens, or motor way service stations and event management agencies are as much a part of the hospitality industry as hotels and restaurants.

A qualified hospitality professional has a choice of working as a hotel manager, concierge, front desk manager, food and beverage manager, housekeeping manager and sales and marketing professional. Apart from this, openings in restaurant management, catering, event planning and consulting and research firms beckon the trained graduates.

Qualification or Personality?

Since employers believe that success in the hospitality industry is regardless of the qualifications that you clutch, personality and charisma is more score over the list of qualifications of a prospective employee. Outgoing people focused on business goals are always the most watched out for. Qualifications are definitely a value addition, but not a must. Some believe in the credibility provided by these qualifications but nonetheless fervently advocate the performance oriented nature of the industry.

It is, therefore, important to get on the job training that teaches you how to interact with people from varied socio cultural backgrounds and economic strata. This is also where the internship creeps in. Though bringing about a complete change in the person you are is not possible, improvements on the front of interpersonal skills will take you a long way on the road to success.

Job requirements

Any field of activity demands a particular skill set of its employees. Hospitality is no exception. A job in the hospitality industry will take on your nerves if you are expecting a one shift, stress free job. Juggling numerous responsibilities without a single crease on your nose must do the trick. Holiday season might mean working overtime without cribbing about it and making no bones about being on your toes. Being able to handle certain periods of inactivity followed by a bout of frantic bustle of demanding customers is what needs to be learnt. The job requires you to experience a rush of adrenaline in your blood by simply being a part of a place buzzing with guests.

Friday, June 10, 2011

If You Want to See the World Choose the Hospitality Profession

I realize that nearly the entire planet has been discovered and we cannot turn back the clock and be like Christopher Columbus and find a new continent just like that , but working in the Hospitality Industry you can do your own exploring when it comes time to choosing your place to work. It almost always never turns out as you plan it but the experience helps you grow in so many ways. First it helps you understand how other people live and gives you a sense of accomplishment when overcoming challenges that most people would not be willing to go through. Sort of like Columbus would have gone through when he crossed the ocean back in 1492.

One example for me happened back in 1990. I had just returned from Switzerland having completed my two years there and was eager to return back to Europe any way I could. Finding out about a UK Grandparent Visa which allowed grandchildren of UK descent to work there , I mailed away for a photocopy birth certificate of one of them so I could apply for a visa. It took in all quite a bit of time to obtain the visa so when I flew to London I had only about 600 British pounds on me and three suitcases.

Brimming with confidence I thought I had it all figured out. There was a trade magazine I knew of that was packed with hotel and restaurant jobs. I figured as soon as the jet landed I would find a Bed and Breakfast in London , make a few phone calls and set up some interviews and by week's end have myself a great job. The jet landed early in the morning so when I grabbed my three heavy bags I was really in no mood to shop for the most economical place to stay nor take the Tube. A taxi would do just fine , thank you.

On the tourist board there was a list of Bed and Breakfast establishments around the Paddington station area so I jumped into a taxi and wouldn't you know it but the taxi ride cost me about 40 pounds. The one thing I should have calculated was how expensive the UK was compared to Canada! Almost a tenth of what I had gone in a taxi ride.

I cannot remember off hand what the B and B was per night but it was not Buckingham Palace. A funny thing happened one night when the inn was robbed. Someone had managed to steal and replicate the master key to all the rooms. When the robber was making the rounds he opened up my locked door and woke me up. He excused himself and said he had the wrong room and closed the door. I thought nothing of it and went back to sleep. Next morning I heard the news many rooms were robbed.

The 600 pounds went like that as England was a lot more expensive than I thought it was and the jobs were not as quickly found as I first thought they would be. I ended up working in Ashford Kent at a hotel that was opening to take advantage of the Chunnel that was being built at the time and the business it would bring. It was an exciting opportunity as an Assistant Conference and Banqueting Manager to train a new staff and help during it's launch.

Subsequently I was able to help out in the Dining Room afterwards but the real reward was having gone through something unforgettable. I only spent up to 6 months there as I was completely broke having started at the hotel living off a credit card. But to start with just a destination and not knowing what could really transpire was something that someone who is single , living out of a suitcase , and with a plane ticket could only experience.

I wouldn't recommend it for the faint of heart , or for people who need everything exactly perfect before they start something. But if you are like a Columbus and want to explore new worlds , the Hospitality Industry can provide that opportunity.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Why Talent Management Functions Like the Kidney?

Talent management functions hires the good personnel and fires the bad ones. This functions like the kidney in our body.

The two kidneys are the vital organs in the body amongst other functions cleanse the blood of toxins and keep it chemically balanced. The kidneys are sophisticated reprocessing machines and process the blood to filter out the wastes and extra water. Similarly a good talent management system will hire the good personnel, retain them and remove the bad ones.

Good management is not just about recruiting the right people to do the right jobs. This is particularly important during challenging times when staff budgets are cut to the bone. A strong management team must also have the discipline and insight to identify the dead wood in the company, and to be able to take firm action to remove them. These executives are those who have being entrenched in the system because of their job security and seniority are just cruising along and marking time. They do not have active and productive contributions as well as add value to the company. Most managers acknowledge that the most difficult task is firing of employees, particularly somebody that they have worked with closely for several years. Usually, the people that you did not fire are the ones that make your life miserable.

In many organisations, the decision-making power resides at the top. Empire-building by yes-men becomes the main preoccupation of the day. In the corporate intrigue of power struggle for status and position, the good personnel who may have differing views are stifled.

In talent management, the CEO has to look beyond himself and his abilities. He is smart if he hires the right people who may be better than he in those competencies to execute tasks that he himself is unable to do. He is then able to extend 'his arms and legs' within the organisation to get things done in more efficient manner. This philosophy is shared by Jack Welch as he felt that smart people hire smart people.

He said: "Every time you hire someone that is not better than you, you have missed an opportunity, because if you got all the answers, who the hell needs anybody else." GE's core competence is the development of people and Welch's greatest legacy was to transform GE as the training ground of the world's top business honchos. For example, the other two candidates, namely Robert Nardelli and James McNerney who did not get Welch's job left GE to become CEO of The Home Depot and 3M respectively. Hiring the right person takes good skill in recruitment. Sometimes, even with good evaluation and hiring efforts, the employers do make the wrong hire. In such situation, you need to try to redeem the situation or live with it or fire the employee and start the recruitment process all over again.

However, in the situation of lean staff budget, you do not have the luxury of carrying 'dead wood'. It maybe necessary to fire the wrong recruit. Jack Welch saw nothing wrong in delayering and downsizing incompetent people. To him, downsizing and delayering were absolutely necessary, and not firing workers who were a part of a losing business would have been more heartless than letting them go past the age of 50.

Welch the self-actualizer is also Welch the pragmatist and he sees these decisions as necessary threads in the fabric of business. . "That is business," added the GE Chairman. He also explained it this way: "I think the cruelest thing you can do to somebody is give them the fake nice appraisals.. that's called false kindness. A removal should never be a surprise."

On the other hand too, retaining the people that you want to keep has become a key issue for organisations. When the key and talented people leave, there is a loss of experience and knowledge as well as continuity. Yet, companies would rather spend the valuable resources to recruit new talent from competitors than retaining the talent that they already have.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Hotel Management jobs and operations

To run a hotel successfully the hotel management plays very important role. It is important that the hotel management jobs must be good and world class.

Hotel industry provides a large number of hotel management jobs opportunities to part time an employee who after getting the pertinent and desired experience always leaves the hotel management jobs? Hotel Industry offers low salary which is also one of the main causes for the low retention rate in this industry.

Hotel management jobs should be completed in conditions of the guest attention as well for the reason that the growing anxiety over surroundings welcoming services; most of the people want an emerald and environmental surroundings. Therefore the hotel management jobs should be interested in creating their hotels more environmental and green for the reason that people are ready to pay additional if they are receiving an environmental welcoming accommodations.

Hotel operations also play a lead role for a successful business. Some hoteliers endeavor to be focused through improving specific departments operations where as some other try to improvise with a hotel-broad approach, some forms of quality assurance service has also been executed through some hotels and companies. However, two important areas that receive the attention by the bureaucrats were maintenance and the front-desk; learn shows that through improvising in the operations hotels have experienced the boost up the visitors and also providing the worker satisfaction along by the development of profit as well.

Front office hotel management is responsible for setting up reservations and handling out room assignment, and they will ensure that any customer service problems will be handled properly. Some of these professionals are called services managers, and they will have the responsibility of coordinating meetings and conventions within an establishment.

Most lodging managers will work 40 hours a week in a fairly low stress job, while managing conferences and handling difficult clients can be testing. Night and weekend work is quietly general depending on the size of lodging establishment.

Income management is also playing a lead role in the success of any hotel. Aggressive Revenue is always a good practice and it has to be balanced with how the hotels generally manage their guests. Working with loyalty is always superior to get a higher growth then charging some higher rates from certain group of customers or trying to overbook the rooms just to make sure less then full occupancy. These practices always hamper the loyalty of the customers and shame the hotel's reputation as well.

Although on the outside this might look like an easy thing to do, actually, it is truly an art form and learning to master it is key to landing a dream hotel management job. A truly great hotel manager is capable to motivate in their workers a feel great longing to do extremely well and will make them want to do their best to make the hotel where they work as a nice place to visit as possible.

Therefore, if you think that you have what it takes and have a reasonable level of requirement experience then the best time to begin looking for a great hotel management job. Of course, the best place to find a great hotel management job is in a city that is a popular visitor purpose but that does not mean that a hotel near you is not now hiring. Hotel sales can always be greater than before by a good reputation building with the customers and always being ready to help them with their issues.

 
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