The Ritz Carlton Customer Service Way for Selecting, Training, and Inspiring
First-Rate Employees
Hotel Customer Service
By Bill Lampton, Ph.D.
The Ritz-Carlton does not “hire”
employees, as other organizations do. According to Gerard van Grinsven,
Vice President and Area General Manager, and Laura Gutierrez, Director of
Human Resources for the Ritz-Carlton Dearborn in Michigan, the hotel
“selects” new members for the Ritz-Carlton team.
“When I helped open the Seoul, Korea Ritz-Carlton,” van Grinsven recalled,
“we had 580 positions available—and 15,000 applications.” Even with an
existing hotel, Gutierrez stated, typically there are 5-10 applicants for
each spot.
PROCESS OF SELECTING EMPLOYEES
To choose from the numerous job aspirants, van Grinsven noted that the
Ritz-Carlton studied top performers in other organizations, to develop the
ideal “profile” for each position. “We looked at what made these employees
give exceptional performance,” he explained. “Then we developed job
descriptions, and detailed qualifications, for comparable jobs in our
properties. Some might say we ‘benchmarked’—that is, we used workers in
other high caliber companies as our models.” The result? Employee turnover
declined. The Ritz-Carlton enjoys the lowest turnover rate of any hotel in
the industry.
Additionally, for employee selection the Ritz-Carlton uses the services of
Talent+, an international human resources firm, based in Lincoln,
Nebraska. Talent+ adds objectivity to the selection process, and helps
assure that new employees will bring full commitment to the Ritz-Carlton
tradition and service.
Not all applicants obtain face-to-face interviews. “We do considerable
screening by telephone,” Gutierrez said. Phone conversations indicate
whether the applicant merits an on-site interview. She pointed to
exceptions: An applicant for the pastry division or a painting job would
get an opportunity to demonstrate those skills.
What about educational background? That differs with the position. Even
so, the hotel encourages and supports pursuit of degrees, providing
tuition reimbursement for college level work.
MEMBER OF THE VARSITY TEAM
Gutierrez emphasized that when an individual joins the Ritz-Carlton
system, “they are playing on the varsity team. This isn’t a scrimmage, or
a junior varsity game. You are in the big time now, performing at a level
far beyond your previous experience. We want the best, and only the best.”
I wondered whether the Ritz-Carlton has become more lax about enforcing
dress codes and general appearance, given the lowered standards other
establishments allow. “No,” Gutierrez replied, “we tell applicants up
front what we expect. And if someone answers that he or she will not stop
wearing body piercing jewelry, we tell them they need to look elsewhere
for work.” She added: “We maintain grooming standards, which are congruent
with our claim to be Ladies and Gentleman.” She referred to the standard
as “quiet elegance,” terminology that embodies the hotel’s image
perfectly.
HIGHLY DIVERSE WORK FORCE
Does this imply that the hotel opposes diversity? Quite the contrary. In
the Dearborn hotel’s housekeeping department, Gutierrez can identify
twenty-two nationalities. And whenever you enter a Ritz-Carlton hotel, you
see multiple examples of international and interracial employees—scattered
over a wide age range.
Gutierrez said, “We look at people for what they offer, concentrating on
their talents and abilities. We are very diverse overall.”
A CASE STUDY
Let’s assume an applicant—we will call her Katherine—makes it through the
selection (again, not hiring) process. In most other organizations, she
would sit through a day of employee training, then carry away an employee
manual—most of which had been read aloud during the mind-numbing training
session. After that, training would vary widely according to the
supervisor. Here’s where the Ritz-Carlton departs dramatically.
Yes, Katherine will attend initial orientation, for two consecutive days.
Next comes “Day 21,” when she must pass her first Certification Exam. By
now, she understands and endorses what van Grinsven and other leaders
affirm: “We are in business to wow the customers.”
THE GOLD STANDARDS
At this point, Katherine has become thoroughly familiar with the “Gold
Standards,” called “the foundation of The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company,
L.L.C. They encompass the values and philosophy by which we operate and
include The Credo, The Motto, The Three Steps of Service, The Basics, and
The Employee Promise.”
Far from being secret codes, like a fraternity ritual, the Gold Standards
appear on the hotel’s Web site, available for all viewers:
www.ritzcarlton.com/corporate/about_us/gold_standards.asp
To really grasp the hotel’s service philosophy, you will want to read this
page thoroughly.
The most easily recognized section of the Gold Standards? It’s The Motto:
“We are Ladies and Gentlemen Serving Ladies and Gentlemen.” Van Grinsven
and Gutierrez pointed out that employees use this framework for dealing
with guests and with their fellow Ritz-Carlton employees. They must treat
workplace colleagues with the same dignity they incorporate with guests.
Almost poetically, The Credo pledges “The Ritz-Carlton experience enlivens
the senses, instills well-being, and fulfills even the unexpressed wishes
and needs of our guests.”
The Three Steps of Service call for giving the guest a warm and sincere
greeting (using the guest’s name when possible), anticipating and
complying with guest needs, and saying a fond farewell, again using the
guest’s name.
The Employee Promise begins: “At The Ritz-Carlton, our Ladies & Gentlemen
are the most important resource in our service commitment to our guests.”
Take note—the hotel’s pristine reputation does not come from the opulent
surroundings, the gourmet food, the resplendent landscaping. The employees
top the list of assets.
THE LINEUP
While Katherine, our prototype new employee, learns The Credo, The Motto,
the Three Steps of Service, and The Employee Promise, she will spend every
day of her Ritz-Carlton employment discussing one of the 20 Basics.
“Every day?” you ask. Yes, every day, in what’s called “The Lineup.” When
I asked van Grinsven to tell me about this daily checkpoint, he responded,
“I’m really glad you asked that.” He called The Lineup “our most important
tool.” He elaborated: “Relationships only last if you communicate. Good
communication is the reason why things work.”
Picture Katherine, who works with the kitchen staff, spending the first
10-15 minutes of the day in dialogue with her counterparts. Like everyone
else in the hotel, they discuss one of the 20 Basics. For example, today’s
discussion could center on Basic 10: “Each employee is empowered. For
example, when a guest has a problem or needs something special, you should
break away from your regular duties, address and resolve the issue.”
Simultaneously, van Grinsven meets with his top executives and Gutierrez
with her Human Resources team. Dishwashers, doormen, and maintenance staff
meet in their groups. They, too, address the meaning of Basic 10. They
discuss situations, both hypothetical and actual. How does this team apply
Basic 10 today? What initiative is in order?
Remember, the Dearborn hotel isn’t observing the Lineup alone. All 25,000
Ritz-Carlton employees are doing the same thing in their locales.
EMPLOYEE EMPOWERMENT
Van Grinsven told me that the now-popular term “empowerment” originated
with the Ritz-Carlton. Gutierrez put a dollar figure on the employee’s
resources for solving a problem immediately, without checking with a
supervisor. Our new employee Katherine can commit up to $2,000 of the
hotel’s funds to bring instant resolution to a guest’s problem.
Clearly, an employee cannot evade difficult situations by uttering,
“That’s not my job.” Job descriptions become irrelevant when guest
satisfaction is at risk. Ladies and Gentleman step outside job boundaries,
and no one questions their right to act—because they have an overriding
obligation to settle issues.
Back to the Lineup: What happens when the discussion cycle finishes Basic
20? The next day, everybody starts over, with Basic 1.
DAY 365
Not surprisingly, at the end of her first year, Katherine will learn the
Gold Standards thoroughly, preparing her incrementally for her annual
Re-certification on Day 365. Unlike an average student, she doesn’t “cram”
the day before her test. She has been through 120 or more hours of
training—which will never stop.
ONGOING EMPLOYEE FEEDBACK
You might wonder whether the Ritz-Carlton relies too heavily on top-down
management, with so many repetitions of multiple regulations. Are we
dealing with autocracy? That assumption would be off base. Not only does
empowerment happen when occasional problems arise, the hotel’s executives
encourage, and reward, ongoing employee input. In van Grinsven’s words,
“If you don’t involve people, you never really get buy-in.” He adds that
employees “really know what’s happening, and management needs to listen to
them.”
So Katherine may hear this several times a month: “What’s your opinion
about how we can improve our kitchen service?” Basic 7 establishes the
framework for bilateral communication: “To create pride and joy in the
workplace, all employees have the right to be involved in the planning of
the work that affects them.”
To borrow an athletic term, many internationally known corporations “play
without a huddle.” A few at the top make decisions, then their “reports”
implement them without question. The Ritz-Carlton team—the entire
team—huddles daily, and more often when needed.
Reverting back to the selection of employees—that’s a team effort, too. A
supervisor, Gutierrez explains, won’t add an employee without seeking
opinions from the candidate’s potential colleagues. Nor will Human
Resources bring in a new person without group consultation.
UPWARD MOBILITY
Another positive point: Gutierrez said that dead-end jobs don’t exist at
the Ritz-Carlton for ambitious people. “We like to home-grow new talent. A
dedicated worker has ample opportunity for advancing within the
organization.”
Possibly the most distinctive contribution the Ritz-Carlton Hotel has made
to customer service worldwide finds expression in the second of the Three
Steps of Service, which we referred to earlier: “Anticipation and
Compliance with guest needs.” Elsewhere, a typical organization boasts
about its Complaint Department, where disgruntled customers appear after
an unpleasant situation. But Ritz-Carlton employees develop sleuthing
skills, sniffing out problems in their nascent stages, and then solving
them before dissatisfaction escalates.
EXPANSION DURING TURBULENT TIMES
When I asked van Grinsven what had been the major recent challenges for
the Ritz-Carlton—while confronting an economic downturn, international
conflict, reduction in travel, and mounting hotel vacancies—his response
was remarkable: “During the last five years, while other major hotels were
trying to maintain the status quo, we opened thirty new hotels, nearly
doubling our size.” To him, the biggest challenge was “training that many
new people that quickly,” making sure that every new employee went through
the assimilation procedures that characterize the Ritz-Carlton. It worked.
He said with obvious pride, “Our culture has kept us alive.”
SENSE OF BELONGING
With such a comprehensive training program, none of us is surprised at van
Grinsven’s view of the result: “When a customer comes in, he or she feels
a sense of belonging, a home away from home. The customer feels, ‘I’m
somebody special.’” Accordingly, when a customer leaves, even though his
hotel bill may involve several hundred dollars, one phrase permeates his
thinking: “It really was worth it.”
Bill Lampton, Ph.D., “Helps You Finish in First Place.” He spoke to
the managers of the Ritz-Carlton, Cancun when the hotel celebrated its
sixth anniversary, and he has spoken for conventions at the Ritz-Carlton
Buckhead in Atlanta and the Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island. Among his other
hospitality clients: the Radisson Diamond Cruise Ship. He wrote a popular
book, The Complete Communicator: Change Your Communication, Change Your
Life! Dr. Lampton provides leadership in communication, customer service,
sales, and motivation. Check his Web site:
www.ChampionshipCommunication.com Call 800-393-0114 or 770-534-3425,
and e-mail him:
drbill@ChampionshipCommunication.com © Copyright 2003
ExpertMagazine.com
Here are some resources to help you improve your level of customer service
Tools to hire and develop people into exceptional customer service ambassadors
Customer service training videos for front-line personnel
Complete organizational customer service training programs for front-line
and managers.
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