Equipping yourself with the right skills not only helps you prevent emotional and physical exhaustion, but also enables your business to achieve a higher standard than anywhere else, meaning people come to you over the competition. Guests may come for the food, but they’ll stay for the good customer service.Skills for the Hospitality Industry
With that in mind, here’s
the list of the top hospitality skills you should
aim to acquire and develop in your career.
Communication
Communicating clearly and professionally through your
speech, writing, and body language
is essential to good customer service in hospitality.
In a customer-facing and team-oriented role, everything you say and do
must communicate a positive, constructive message that enhances the customer’s
experience and enables your team to work together efficiently.
The most important part of communicating is listening.
Therefore, when talking to guests, you should adopt a genuine warmth and
interest in them. Ask questions, listen to what they have to say, and respond accordingly. Doing so will create
natural, spontaneous conversations that gives guests
the impression you really care about
them. This in turn lets them know
that you’re open to discussing and fulfilling their needs.
When communicating with your team, active listening makes or breaks whether work
flows smoothly and you’re all
coordinated. You should regularly talk to your colleagues about
what you need to do and what you need from them. Remember that you all need
each other to get things done, so being open, honest, respectful, and
appreciative is really in everyone’s best interest.
Resilience
The good news is that anyone can learn how to remain
optimistic and productive despite difficulties. Thickening your skin is usually
a case of experience, but it’s also about training your mind.
You need
to be at peace with any challenges you face, and in fact use them to improve yourself. You should recognise that a lot of what happens is probably out
of your control and you are not
responsible for the way others behave – you can only control your own actions.
This mindset is very freeing and in
fact improves productivity. You’ll spend less time worrying about
things you can’t control and focus on what you
can.
Resilience is not only important
for making things
easier on you, but also for
maintaining a professional image. Customers and colleagues respect those who
can remain calm and constructive during adversity.
Initiative
In hospitality, initiative means actively responding to
customer’s needs and pulling your own weight, and it’s a skill that both
impresses customers and makes work easier for everyone. You’ll need to rely on your own instincts
and knowledge to handle unfamiliar situations or tasks, rather than
depend on others or decide that you can’t help.
Responding
in this way shows willingness to go above and beyond and that you’re competent
in your role, which instills trust.
Multitasking
Whether or not you feel multitasking is your strong
suit, you’re going
to have to become proficient
at it regardless.
The best way to hone your multitasking abilities is through
practice. It’ll help you determine your limits and
understand how to divide your time wisely. However,
the way you put it into practice is up to you. You may benefit from a notepad to write things down or by
mentally visualising the order in which you’re going to do things. You should also communicate with others, as
teamwork can alleviate some of the pressure of
multitasking.
To prevent yourself from feeling
overwhelmed, you should
focus on the steps
you need to take for each task,
rather than look at them as a whole. They’ll feel much more doable this way. In
fact, you’ll feel a greater sense of accomplishment.
Adaptability
A career in hospitality often
involves dealing with unpredictability. Your shifts may regularly change, customers
may have requests or attitudes that you don’t know how to handle, and odd jobs
around the place may constantly need doing. Your
ability to adapt is closely connected to your multitasking capabilities,
resilience, and initiative, so if you work to train those up, you’ll find
yourself adapting with ease.
Most importantly, you should constantly maintain a can-do
attitude at work. Doing so will help you see unpredictable situations as
welcome challenges that are satisfying to overcome. Accept that nothing is ever
set in stone and that things do go wrong: focus less on resisting change and
wishing everything was easy, and instead on being skilled at carrying on no
matter what.
Attention to detail
Whatever role you occupy, attention to detail involves
maximising your time to make everything the best it can be. It means, whenever
you’re not doing something, you use that bit of time for small maintenance
tasks around the workplace.
This could involve
glancing around the room to see if anything is out of place
or missing. It may involve checking whether dishes or equipment need moving
elsewhere to clean and whether anything needs putting away. Be critical of everything, because customers are likely doing the same. They’ll notice crumbs
under their table,
foggy glasses, missing
cutlery, and so much
more. They also have high expectations for their meal, so whether you’re
preparing or carrying it, pay attention to how
it looks.
Good attention to detail will keep service flowing smoothly and customers pleased with the environment. Before long, it’ll
become habit for you to keep yourself busy and never
leave or enter
a room without your hands full.
Cultural Awareness
In hospitality, you’re going to have customers and
colleagues from all walks of life – people who have different beliefs, values, personalities, expectations, and more. If you’re accommodating and accepting of these differences, word will quickly spread
and your workplace’s reputation will become
exceptional. People will feel comfortable visiting or working at your
business, which in turn will make your
job much easier.
By doing this, you’ll be able to identify the different needs and approaches of others. For example, if a customer
or colleague makes requests
in a way that you’re unfamiliar or uncomfortable with, it could just be a common aspect of their
culture. This will help you relax, not take things personally, and respond
appropriately, meaning both sides are happier.
Compliance Training
No matter how skilful you are in other areas, if you want
to work in hospitality you need to receive certain types of training to comply with the law. This includes licensing law
awareness, food hygiene, basic health and safety, cellar management
and more.
The good news is that the law requires workplaces to
provide you with this training, but it’s your responsibility to learn from it
and properly apply it to your role. Doing so will not only ensure your business
meets its legal requirements, but also keeps everyone’s best interests in mind
at all times. Furthermore, you’ll
feel confident and qualified in your role, which customers and colleagues will pick up on
and respect.
Prof. Chetan Munantiwar
Date: 24/8/2020
Place: Pune