Restaurants in Hotels
The restaurant business is a tough one, and the going can be even tougher for those located in hotels. This paper describes the pros and cons of operating a restaurant in a hotel. It then explains the chances of growth and profitability and makes recommendations for the types of restaurants and operations that are more likely to achieve success.
There are several benefits of having a restaurant in a hotel (Ursin, 1999). The first is having a built-in business from the hotel's guests. The restaurant may also be able to handle the hotel's room service and banquet business to drive extra revenue. A restaurant can often share kitchen facilities and banquet rooms with the hotel's food-and-beverage operation and may be able to derive discounts by ordering some of its supplies in conjunction with the hotel. Further, a restaurant can benefit from things such as a hotel's central reservation system, advertisements in the guest rooms, and joint promotional events.
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Chinese Tourism for Hotels Just as the 4ps are no longer sufficient to capture the sophisticated buyer of regular goods, the inquiring traveler is part of a larger network of service consumers who has a need more. And that's why the now recognized 7ps can play a major role in reaching out to tourist customers who come from different cultures or otherwise have an expectation of being part of something special
Kimpton Hotels and Restaurants The Kimpton Hotel chain features 65 hotels, and the company has 82 restaurants in 33 cities. Headquartered in San Francisco and known for their quality and uniqueness, these boutique hotels and restaurants are also known as excellent places to work and have taken positively open-minded positions when it comes to hiring minorities, women, and members of the LBGT community as well. Management for these hotels and restaurants
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Not surprising to see concerts by Dave Matthews, Green Day, and other top groups since Live Nation recently purchased Ticket Master. A recent article in the LA Times reports that 48% of consumers are "eating out less often now than they did six months ago" (Hallock, 2009). John Self, a professor at Cal Poly Pomona in Los Angeles County, who has published a study of why restaurants fail, estimates that
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luxury hotel brands, Starwood's W. Hotels and the flagship brand at Four Seasons. From a brand perspective, the two are actually quite different. The W. brand is positioned as modern, hip and aspirational, while Four Seasons is positioned as an older, more established luxury. W is positioned with what it terms "iconic design and contemporary luxury" -- meaning lots of neon and funky furniture designs -- with glamor at
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