Hospitality is all about people. People we know and
love, people we've never seen before, even people we
hope to never see again!
I am reminded of the tasks of
the Innkeeper as my wife and I wrap up ten days with our
daughter and grandson visiting from Costa Rica. Like
all good parents expecting a rare visit from loved ones,
we planned events, meals, trips to the museum, dinners
out, family gatherings, etc., all with the idea that
Trudy and Charlie would have a wonderful trip to
Virginia. Of course, once they were here, other family
members wanted to see them, invite them over, take them
out, etc., so we did a lot of shuffling of plans and
changing of menus.
The goal, of course, was twofold. We wanted to see
them, but it was also to make sure they had a memorable
trip. Our thinking had to shift from "showing them" a
good time from our perspective to "letting them have" a
good time from theirs. Good Innkeepers do this all the
time.
A guest has answered your question about food
allergies but then neglects to show up for the specially
prepared breakfast (they were out late last night). The
guest who was going to arrive late at 8:00 calls at 9:00
to say they've been further delayed and now won't make
it before 11:00! What do you do? You adapt; you don't
get upset (or don't show it), you accommodate, and you
let them have a good time. That's what they're paying
for. It's all about the guest's experience. Your job
as an Innkeeper (or loving parent) is to help make it
happen without showing how much effort it is. That's
innkeeping...and hospitality.
For more about innkeeping, please visit
The B&B Team.
Peter