Hotel schools, business schools and liberal arts programs produce thousands of graduates each year with all sorts of skillsets.

Hotel school students are taught from day one that their career will be to serve their guests, their employees, their employers, and their other stakeholders. Most business school graduates go into services such as banking, accounting, sales, marketing and law, but they are often not even aware that serving others is what their jobs are all about. Hotel school students do not reject service - they embrace it.

Question is whether you think that hospitality schools and universities still deliver talent with the sorts of competencies and skills you are looking for today, or whether graduates from generic business schools stand an equal chance during the hiring process.

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Michael Levie
Michael Levie
Hospitality Changemaker and Co-Founder of citizenM

Hotel or business school and academic education in conjunction with skill is a very logical discussion. Hotel and business schools differ some in education but aren't completely foreign or strangers to each other. To a certain extent, the hotel school will always prepare students better in general for the hospitality industry, due to the specialization of courses.

It is also a fact that hotel companies are moving away from generalist and focus on specialists. Some specializations currently needed in the hospitality industry are neither taught at hotels or business schools. So, hotel schools still definitely have a leg up in most positions needed for hospitality, but not all.

Where skill will always play a vital role for the hospitality, “character” might even play a bigger role. Character and skill are two very different competencies, with the clear distinction that skill can be taught where character can't.

The hospitality industry is in major need of “character”, individuals that can create/deliver/institutionalize culture. In a process-oriented industry where the majority of the jobs are executed by minimally educated labor it can't survive without character/culture.

So, possibly the real question is what is more important for the hospitality industry skill or character, I would say it is a toss-up...skill without character or character without skill, both fall way short of what is required to get the job done. Specialized skill is an answer to a small subsection of jobs, but without character will neither deliver what is needed.

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