Introduction To Front Office
Introduction To Front Office
Introduction To Front Office
OFFICE OPERATIONS
When people decide that they want or might want, to stay in a hotel, they may:
o
Check out the hotels, and e-mail the reservation department to ask about room rates and availability;
Telephone the hotel or switchboard and ask to speak to someone about room rates and availability, the facilities and location of
the hotel and other information that will help them make the decision to book; or
Walk in off the street and approach the front desk to ask about room rates and availability.
When the guest make the decision on the exact room to book with the given number of nights, there may be some follow up
correspondence to confirm the booking, give extra information or make adjustments to the booking as the guests plans change.
When the guest arrives, he/she will go to a reception desk to register, be allocated a room & receive a room key (with information
about the facilities and service of the hotel). There may be a porter to help the guest with luggage or to show the room to the guest.
During the stay, the guest will come to the reception for many reasons; to collect messages, to leave and pick keys, to know some
information, to make a complaint or to get a problem solved, etc.
The hotel may offer additional service such as currency exchange facilities, or use of an in-house office facility, restaurant or spa, or
an information and reservation/ticketing service for local attraction and activities. The guest will receive theses by ringing the hotel
switchboard or approaching the front desk.
At the end of stay, guest will hand over the key to the reception and will settle the bill: help may be required with luggage or onward
transport. Even after the departure the hotel office will keep the guests registration details on file for a specific period (any other
queries or special offers), so that the guest will arrive back next time.
First impression will be the last impression
so its the job of the front office/reception to make the guest satisfied.
In a small hotel, front office functions may be carried out by a single person at a reception area or front desk: answering the
switchboard, taking bookings, welcoming and registration guests, billing and processing payment and so on. In a large hotel, there
may be separate departments dividing these responsibilities, including:
1. Switchboard: taking and routing telephone calls
2. Reservation: taking bookings
3. Reception (or front office): welcoming and registering guests at the main reception desk
4. Concierge / enquiries: answering guests and visitors questions; handling mail and guest keys; perhaps also handling car
hire, tour booking and entertainment tickets for guests
5. Billing office: preparing guests accounts and bills
6. Cashier: receiving guests payments and processing other financial transactions (currency exchange)
7. Uniform staff: luggage porters, lift attendants, doormen, cloakroom attendants, garage attendants or valet parking etc.
Front office may be the first contact a guest or prospective guest has with the hotel (in written, by telephone or in person)
o Help people decide to whether to choose the hotel or not - winning or losing a prospective customer;
o Influence everything else they think about the hotel. Due to what psychologists call the 'halo effect', a good first impression may
predispose guests to think well of their rooms, the service they are given during their stay and so on. A bad first impression may
put them on the alert for other bad 'signals', and incline them to find fault with everything else.
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Front office is the 'service hub' of the hotel: the area where most guest contacts and transactions take place throughout their stay.
Guests' experience of 'hotel service' is, therefore, mainly shaped by front office personnel and procedures. This is important because
the quality and style of service is a major factor in:
o Providing an enjoyable, relaxing, satisfying experience for guests - which is, after all, the hotel's raison d'tre;
o Helping the hotel 'stand out' from its competitors, which may have similar rooms and facilities;
o Ensuring that guests will want to return again - and meanwhile, will give a positive report of the hotel (recommend), to other
people. Hotels rely on this positive word of mouth promotion, and definitely don't want guests spreading negative reports,
especially since the Internet allows them to tell thousands of other travelers (in online hotel review sites or travel 'blogs') when
they've had a good - or bad - experience.
Front office has a special responsibility for dealing with guests' problems and complaints; the 'critical incidents' which can make all
the difference between satisfaction and dissatisfaction.
Front office is the communications hub of the hotel (information is exchanged by and with all other departments). If reception fails to
tell housekeeping to make a room ready for arriving guests; or fails to relay a guest complaint about faulty air conditioning to the
maintenance department; or fails to make a booking in the hotel restaurant for the guest the system breaks down, and the guest is
not served. Likewise, if reception fails to heed housekeeping's warning that a room needs repair or redecoration; or fails to add a
dinner charge, sent through from the restaurant, to the guest's bill the system fails.
Front office is the administrative hub of the hotel, where reservations are logged, room allocations are planned, room status is
monitored, guest bills are prepared, payments are processed, records are kept, information displays are maintained; etc. If all these
tasks aren't carried out efficiently, the hotel would simply cease to function.
In a larger hotel, it is possible to organize staff into more clearly defined departments, each with a supervisor or department
head (in a medium-sized hotel) or a manager (in a large hotel). There will also be more specialized staff, because the hotel can afford to
employ more people - and there will be more work for each person to do.
The main revenue-earning functions of the hotel are generally split into a Rooms Division (responsible for accommodation) and
a Food and Beverages Division (responsible for catering).
In a medium-sized hotel, there might be a manager and one or more assistant managers, who supervise operations (probably
on a shift basis, so that there is some managerial supervision seven days per week).
In a large hotel, there will be a general management team, responsible for planning and coordinating the business and
operations of the hotel. Unlike the 'hands on' manager of a small hotel, the manager here is essentially a business manager, responsible
for policy, planning and control: he/she may only rarely encounter guests or intervene in day-to-day hotel decisions. The 'duty manager'
as assistant managers at this level are often called - is the one with hands-on responsibility for dealing with guests, and resolving
problems and queries referred by front office staff. A number of duty managers may be employed to cover a 24-hour roster, so there is
always someone available to deal with guest issues.
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The connecting lines of the chart are also lines of communication and liaison. For example, it is clear from our chart that staff in
the reservations, reception and cashier sections need to communicate with each other: each contributes something to the overall
work of the Front Office. At the same time, there is a line connecting reception and maintenance: if a guest comes to reception
and says that her TV isnt working, or her window doesn't open, reception will have to liaise with maintenance to make sure it
gets fixed.
A reservations manager or supervisor will be in control of the section, organize staff duty rosters, and make decisions on
whether and which bookings should be accepted (if the hotel is fully booked, or bookings have to be 'juggled' to maximize
occupancy).
Advance reservations may be handled by the receptionist in a small hotel, but many hotels will have a separate
reservations desk or department - perhaps in a back office near reception, since most reservation requests come in by
telephone, mail, e-mail or online, rather than via 'walk ins'.
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3.2. RECEPTION
'Reception' may be an umbrella term for all front-office functions, but in larger hotels, there is likely to be a special reception desk.
The main roles of receptionists (or front desk agents) are: taking enquiries and reservation requests from 'walk in'
Visitors; preparing for the arrival of guests; greeting guests on their arrival; checking guests in (registering them, allocating
suitable rooms and checking methods of payment); selling the facilities and services of the hotel; responding to guest
problems and queries, or referring them to other departments that can do so; providing information about guests to other
front office units and departments of the hotel; and maintaining guest records.
There may be a senior receptionist in charge of each team or shift: of reception staff, who will take responsibility for staff
rosters, and the handling of more challenging tasks such as group arrivals and guest problems, requests and complaints.
There will also be a reception or front desk manager, with responsibility for the training, supervision and motivation of
reception staff; the maximization of occupancy and revenue (yield management) from the sale of hotel facilities and
services; and higher profile guest duties (e.g.. greeting VIP guests).
The posting of charges (expenses incurred by the guest for accommodation, meals and other extras) and payments (e.g..
deposits, pre-payments, staged payments and/or the final settling of the bill) to each guest's bill.
The recording of charges/sales and payments in relevant accounting records, and the 'balancing of those records.
Accepting and processing takings from other departments of the hotel (e.g.. the restaurant and bar), for account-keeping,
reporting, safe storage and banking procedures
Administering the safe custody system, whereby guests can deposit their valuables for safekeeping by the hotel
The responsibility of a night auditor, is to post the latest batch of charges/expenses to client accounts, balance guest and
hotel accounts, prepare revenue reports, and produce statistics and summaries for management.
3.5. SWITCHBOARD
In 'the old days basic telephone functions had to be handled by a central switchboard operator. However, more sophisticated
networks now allow guests to dial out direct from their rooms (to external numbers, other room extensions and selected
departments of the hotel), and to receive calls direct from other rooms and departments of the hotel. Such systems may also have
added facilities for automatic logging of guest call charges to the billing office; automated wake-up calls; and hotel and guest
'answer machine' or 'voice mail' (message taking) systems. Where such systems are in place, switchboard operators have much
less to do: mainly, directing in-coming calls to the appropriate guest rooms (consulting a guest directory) or to appropriate
departments of the hotel; and dealing with answer machine messages.
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GUEST RELATIONS
In large hotels, Guest Relations Officers (GROs) are sometimes employed to create a more personal relationship with
guests - who might otherwise have very little human contact with hotel staff.
Their main role is to make guests feel welcome and provide personalized service, by greeting guests; attending social
gatherings held by the hotel (as social 'facilitators'); and perhaps talking to those who are travelling alone.
Guests with special needs, problems or complaints may be referred to GROs by reception. GROs may also be given the
task of greeting and liaising with Very Important Persons (VIPs), Commercially Important Guests (CIGs) and Special
Attention guests (SPATTs).
GROs may support sales staff (e.g.. by escorting potential clients around the hotel, or providing guests with information
about the hotel's services and facilities), and provide non-routine guest services when required (e.g.. sending a fax for a
guest after the hotel's business center has closed).
3.8.
A 'job or role summary': a short paragraph describing the major function of the job (perhaps with an
organization chart to show where it 'fits' in the rooms division or front-office structure)
The person/or position to whom the job-holder is responsible (i.e. a manager or supervisor)
Any persons/positions for whom the job-holder is responsible, or who report to the job-holder: that is any staff he/she will
have to manage or supervise
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Where relevant, a note of other departments or roles with which the job-holder must regularly liaise, communicate or cooperate.
A large hotel, front office staff will be available to meet guest needs 24 hours per day. Most back office departments will
operate normal or extended office hours: reservations will tend to be concentrated within business hours, and billing and
cashiering activity in the early morning (posting of last-minute charges), middle of the day (lunchtime postings and banking
of takings) and evening (opening bills for new arrivals).
However, certain significant front office roles (reception, night audit, porter and switchboard) will have to be covered
overnight.
Day staff may work an early shift (say, 7.00 am to 3.00 pm) or a late shift (3.00 pm to 11.00 pm), on a rotating roster system, five
days per week (with varying days off ). The main peaks of activity at front desk will be check-out time (7.30 - 10.30 am) and arrival
time (say, 3.00 -7.00 pm).
A separate (generally smaller) night staff will usually be employed to cover the night or 'graveyard' shift (11.00pm to 7.00
am), to enable them to establish a routine of night working rather than rotating between day and night shifts.
Shift hours usually also allow 15-30 minutes for 'hand-over' between shifts, so that unresolved issues can be notified to
the incoming shift, responsibilities for the cash drawer signed over and so on.
Drawing-up and maintaining shift rosters, to ensure that all shifts are adequately covered while being flexible to the
needs of staff members - is a significant challenge for the front office manager.
less
DEPARTMENT
MAIN RESPONSIBILITIES
FOOD AND
BEVERAGE
(F & B)
HOUSEKEEPING
MAINTENANCE
ACCOUNTS
SECURITY
SALES AND
MARKETING
HUMAN
RESOURCES (HR)
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A list of guests currently in residence - or guest index - in alphabetical order, so that any member of staff can look up a guest or
locate their room number when necessary
A list of anticipated arrivals (based on reservations), group arrivals and VIP/special needs arrivals, so that departments can
prepare for them
A list of amendments to the arrivals list (e.g.. last-minute bookings and chance walk-in guests)
A list of guest amendments: changes of room number, number of guests, terms and so on, so that departments can adjust
accordingly
A list of anticipated departures (based on booked departure dates) so that departments can plan to prepare rooms for re-letting,
prepare bills for departing guests and so
A list of amendments to the departures list (e.g.. guests extending their stay)
A list of guests who have left the hotel, so that telephone calls and messages can handled accordingly, and rooms prepared for
re-letting.
Concierge/enquiries will need arrivals, departures and current guest lists, in order to sort incoming guest mail, take messages,
give the right keys to the right guests, and take the right baggage to the right rooms.
Switchboard will need the current guest list and checked-out guest list, in order to handle incoming phone calls and charge
guests calls to the right rooms.
Reception will need all the information collected by the reservation section, in order to prepare for and verify the bookings of
arriving guests, maintain room availability records and so on.
Reservations will need information on returning guests, compiled by reception, in order to offer a personalized service.
Cashier will need guests' reservation and check-in information In order to open a guest bill, charge the correct rate agreed with
the guest, confirm the guests payment details, and check corporate accounts and so on. They may also need access to guest
history records, in order to check that guests have paid their bills in the past, or to identify guests who are entitled to special
discounts.
Reservations and group booking applications, with up-to-date records of the status of all reservations
Computer-aided 'yield management' functions: helping reservation staff to make decisions about which reservations to accept,
and at what rate, in order to maximize revenue
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The generation of arrival and departure lists and amendment notifications (from the most up to date reservation, check-in and
check-out records)
Up-to-date records of room status and availability (automatically up-datable as rooms are reported vacant, reading to re-let,
allocated to arriving guests and so on)
Guest records (guest's reservation, stay, charges etc.), which can be used with applications for reservation handling,
registration (check-in), guest billing, check-out and so on
Electronic Point of sale (EPOS) links from the restaurant, bar and reception through to guest billing, so that sales are
automatically charged to accounts as they are processed
Itemized guest accounts (posting all deposits, prepayments, room charges and extra charges for inclusion in the final bill),
automatic generation of bills, paying processing, and automatic links through to general accounts functions
Automatic night audit functions (checking and balancing all reports and accounts)
Computer-aided housekeeping and maintenance scheduling (from centrally logged requests and arrival/departure
information), and logging of housekeeping and maintenance reports to the main room status system
Management information system - compiling forecasts, graphs, charts and statistical reports and analyses from all the other
data stored in the system
Internal and external telephone call handling (switchboard), call logging, allocation of call charges to guests' accounts and
automated early morning calls
Integration with word processing packages, in order to personalize correspondence with guests' contact details
Building management applications, such as energy monitoring and management systems (minimizing unnecessary use of
electric power); the use of electronic key coding for guest room doors; fire/intruder/theft alarm sensing systems
Marketing applications, linking the reservation system to tourist information centers, hotel booking agencies and other group
hotels.
DISADVANTAGES
Need for paper documents in any case (e.g.. for 'audit trail',
written confirmations, back-up copies): may not save on
paper/filing space
Vulnerability to technology problems and failures: loss of data
(if not properly 'backed up') and inability to maintain procedures
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Camp sites may let accommodation in the form of cabins or caravans, or may let space for guests to provide their own
accommodation (e.g.. tents or caravans). Either way, there are reservations, registrations and billing to be processed, and
facilities and services to be provided and maintained (e.g.. on-site shops, washrooms, utilities).
Ships and boats may also offer accommodation. Cruise liners are often called 'floating hotels', and have much in common with
their land-based equivalents. Smaller boats (e.g.. a yacht or canal boat) may also be chartered by customers. This is a slightly
different scenario, because the accommodation and services move off site: nevertheless, reservations, registrations and
payments (and boat cleaning and maintenance between trips) are still administered from a front office.
Size, or capacity. In the UK: a small hotel would be classed as one with 25 bedrooms or fewer; a medium-sized hotel,
one with 25-99 bedrooms; a large hotel as one with more than 100 bedrooms; and a 'major' hotel as one with more than 300
bedrooms. Small hotels might also include bed and breakfast (6&6) establishments, public house and farm-stay accommodation.
Location, influences the type of clientele and style of the hotel. (Business travelers tend to be attracted to hotel close to
transport, central business districts and conference facilities, with good communications infrastructure. Leisure travelers
attracts to more remote or exotic locations.) Hotels may be classed by location as: city center, main road (motel), airport,
suburban, resort or country hotels.
Grade depending on the hotels location, facilities/amenities and service standards, the price of accommodation may vary
widely, from budget to luxury.
Domestic tourists are local people who stay at a hotel for weekend breaks or special functions.
Foreign independent travelers (FITs) are international tourists who have made their own travel arrangements.
Group inclusive tours (GITs) are groups of tourists travelling together on a 'package' tour, with accommodation and meals
often booked in advance by the tour operator. Budget is often a consideration on such tours, because they may have limited
'spending money' on top of inclusions.
Special interest tours (SITs) are smaller groups who are visiting an area with a special interest e.g.. ecotours, adventure
tours or cultural tours, seeking particular locations, experiences or activities.
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BUSINESS TRAVELLERS
Business travelers are those who travel for the sole purpose of undertaking business: sales representatives, people attending
meetings and conferences (or on their way to them), etc. Business travelers are the largest year-round source of demand for hotel
accommodation.
Corporate business travelers represent companies which may make regular bookings. They may be sub-divided into
'negotiated contract' travelers (who have negotiated a special discounted rate and terms with the hotel, based on a guaranteed
volume of business) and 'non-negotiated travelers who may be eligible for a standard discounted corporate rate, on the
understanding that there may be repeat business available).
Conference delegates may have accommodation booked in the hotel where (or near to where) a conference is being held,
perhaps reserved by their company, or by the conference organizer.
GROUPS
A 'group' generally means five or more people travelling together, or ten or more rooms being booked together: the rooms being
booked at the same time, the members paying the same rate, and generally arriving and departing at broadly the same time. Groups
can range from five or six people on a small tour to hundreds of people attending a conference at the hotel.
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