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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Heather McCrory
Heather McCrory
CEO of North & Central America at Accor

We recruit for roles in both the “hospitality business” and the “business of hospitality” and look to talent pools in both hospitality schools and business schools, accordingly. Candidates are always considered by their credentials, and by their likelihood to be a fit with our brands. Soft skills, such as emotional intelligence and leadership potential are also a part of that equation. As a result, the majority of our recruits come from Hospitality Schools, where guest service and emotional intelligence is a focus.

We've also done research that confirms that careers in the hospitality industry don't resonate as much with business school graduates, finding that unless the students had already worked in hospitality and understood the wide range of excellent professional opportunities, there was either a degree of trepidation or disinterest about entering into a career that can be so publicly facing.

As I moved through my career, I learned both the hard and soft skills needed in each position. Once I moved to a corporate role, I decided to go back and complete an MBA. I specifically chose a business school program for the broader scope of the curriculum.  Not surprisingly, the core business skills are transferable across all business.  We need to ensure the business schools are aware of our industry as a viable career option for their graduates.

Our mission at Accor globally is to ensure more women move into more senior roles—General Manager roles and above— through our global RiiSe program, with my personal goal of seeing 50% women GMs by 2023 in North and Central America. These candidates have to have core business knowledge, in addition to their leadership and customer service orientation, and we're encouraging more of our high potential female leaders to actively build those skills through on the job learning and formal education. 

Career paths are not always straight! Fundamentally, we will always welcome the best talent for our business, regardless of their educational stream, where there's a fit and competency.

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