As the world starts to reopen, consumers will slowly return to traveling in a world that may be waiting for a vaccine for some time yet. Managing the threat of local outbreaks is ever-present. It is now becoming each hotels' worst nightmare that a guest may be able to prove that an infection was contracted in the hotel and worse still - that a hotel will become associated and identified with an outbreak or a hotspot. 

While clean rooms have emerged as a competitive advantage, managing the perception that rooms are clean and sterilized has emerged as even more important than the actual quality of cleaning itself. 

While room attendants and supervisors have traditionally moved around discreetly to be as invisible as possible, is it time that they now become frontline public relations ambassadors to proudly show off the cleaning effort and visibly engage with guests (at a 6-foot distance) on the floors?

Optii Solutions Pty Ltd

This viewpoint is co-created with Optii Solutions Inc.
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Christoph Hoffmann
Christoph Hoffmann
Owner & Editor of hsk-knowledge.com UG

Housekeeping professionals always played an important role in delivering the guest journey: behind the scene [Heart (not Back!) of House] and guest-facing.

While the service delivered by housekeeping professionals in hotels is designed to be invisible - just as cleaning happens by magic, the presence of the housekeeping team as ambassadors of the hotel was always part of the role. Most hotel guests interact with the housekeeping team on a regular basis.

Housekeeping usually only gets noticed when the service delivery goes wrong - despite attempts to make it visible and give it a 'name' by e.g. providing cards stating who took care of the cleaning activities. In light of the pandemic, hotels are making an effort to highlight their housekeeping activities, which hopefully leads to giving the housekeeping department the attention it always supposed to get.

For housekeeping professionals, it is important to be equipped with the right tools and knowledge to deliver (enhanced) cleaning routines. Not to forget the additional training requirements needed to ensure the team members can deliver the right (marketing) message consistently to the guests. It's a great opportunity to review risk assessments, training documentation, and methods to ensure the housekeeping operation can firstly operate safely for guests and employees alike, and secondly, the communication is spot on delivering key messages managing the guests' perceptions.

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