Reference no: EM132254336
case study
Operations objectives at the Penang Mutiara
There are many luxurious hotels in the South-East Asia region but few can compare with the Penang Mutiara, a 440-room, top-of-the-market hotel which nestles in the lush greenery of Malaysia's Indian Ocean Coast. Owned by Pernas-OUE of Malaysia and managed by Singapore Mandairn International Hotels, the hotel’s general manager is no illusions about the importance of running an effective operation. ‘Managing a hotel of this size is an immensely complicated task,’ he says. ‘Our customer have every right to be demanding. They expect first-class service and that’s what we have to give them. If we have any problems with managing this operation, the customer sees them immediately and that’s the biggest incentive for us to take operations performance seriously. Our quality of service just has to be impeccable. This means dealing with the basics. For example, our staff must be courteous at all times and yet also friendly towards our guests. And of course they must have the knowledge to be able to answer guests’ questions. The building and equipment – in fact all the hardware of the operation – must support the luxury atmosphere which we have created in the hotel. Stylish design and top-class materials not only create the right impression but, if we choose them carefully, are also durable so the hotel still looks good over the years. Most of all, though, quality is about anticipating our guests’ needs, thinking ahead so you can identify what will delight or irritate a guest’. The hotel tries to anticipate guests needs in a number of ways. For example, if guests have been to the hotel before, staff avoid their having to repeat the information they gave on the previous visit. Reception staff simply check to see whether guests have stayed before, retrieve the information and take them straight to their room without irritating delays. Quality of service also means helping guest’s luggage en route to the hotel, for example, he or she will arrive to the hotel understandable irritated. ‘The fact that it is not us who have irritated them is not really the issue. It is our job to make them feel better.’
Speed, in terms of fast response to customers’ requests, is something else that is important. ‘A guest just should not be kept waiting. If a guest has request, he or she has that request now so it needs to be sorted out now. This is not always easy but we do our best. For example, if every guest in the hotel tonight decided to call room service and request a meal instead of going to the restaurants, our room service would obviously be grossly overloaded and customers would have to wait an unacceptably long time before the meals were brought up to their rooms. We cope with this by keeping a close watch on how demand for room service is building up. If we think it’s going to get above the level where response time to customers would become unacceptably long, we will call in staff from other restaurants in the hotel. Of course, to do this we have to make sure that our staff are multi-skilled. In fact we have a policy of making sure that restaurant staff can always do more than one job. It’s this kind of flexibility which allows us to maintain fast response to the customer.’
Dependability is also a fundamental principle of a well-managed hotel. ‘We must always keep our promises. For example, rooms must be ready on time and accounts must be ready for presentation when a guest departs. The guests expect a dependable service and anything less than full dependability is a legitimate cause for dissatisfaction.’
It is on the grand occasions, however, when dependability is particularly important in the hotel. When staging a banquet, for example, everything has to be on time.
Drinks, food, entertainment have to be available exactly as planned. Any deviation from the plan will very soon be noticed by customers. ‘It is largely a matter of planning the details and anticipating what could go wrong. Once we’ve done the planning we can anticipate possible problems and plan how to cope with them, or better still, prevent them from occurring in the first place.’
Flexibility means a number of things to the hotel. First of all it means that it should be able to meet a guest’s requests. ‘We never like to say NO. For example, if a guest asks for Camembert cheese and we don’t have it in stock, we will make sure that someone goes to the supermarket and tries to get it. If, in spit of our best efforts, we can’t get any we will negotiate an alternative solution with guest. This has an important side-effect – it greatly helps us to maintain the motivation of our staff. We are constantly being asked to do the seemingly impossible – yet we do it and our staff think it’s great. We all like to be part of an organization which is capable of achieving the very difficult, if not the impossible.’
Flexibility in the hotel also means the ability to cope with the seasonal fluctuations in demand. It achieves this partly by using temporary part-time staff. In the back-office functions of the hotel this isn’t a major problem – in the laundry, for example, it’s relatively easy to put on an extra shift in busy periods by increasing staffing levels. However, this is more of a problem in the parts of the hotel that have direct contact with the customer. ‘New temporary staff can’t be expected to have the same customer contact skills as our more regular staff.
- Explain how the relationship between some of these objectives has internal benefits.