How to Prepare Your Hospitality Business During a Crisis
How
to Prepare Your Hospitality Business During a Crisis
Every
year, major disasters affect millions of people worldwide, including businesses
that span across several different industries. Natural calamities, economic
recession, and pandemics affect international and local communities and
businesses. The hospitality industry is certainly one industry that is greatly
affected, being reliant on customers who travel and on-ground staff who provide
the services.
During
these troubling times, your business will have to brace itself and adapt to
unnatural scenarios. As a business owner, you may want to continue your
operations even under compromised or limited access to resources and your
personnel. Issues of security, travel bans, and rationing may arise and will
certainly pose complications for you and your customers.
There
is usually little time to adjust or to come up with creative solutions so that
your business can still operate effectively. But by preparing ahead of any
disaster, you and your staff can react appropriately to any dire situation
through an organised process.
Therefore,
it is necessary to delve into and create a crisis management plan.
Planning
Ahead
As
more and more business-related crisis escalated throughout the years, there has
been an increase in demand for business owners to be more knowledgeable about
crisis management. Preparing for, and handling a crisis does not only concern
operations, but your business communications as well.
It
may sound like a paradox when you realize that you are anticipating what will
happen for an unexpected event, yet it is your best measure to avert further
losses. A large part of crisis management is all about taking preventive
efforts.
Here are a few steps you
should include in your crisis management plan:
1.
Safety procedures for the business and for your customers.
Identify the hazards in
your business and create guidelines on reducing or eliminating them. This will
protect your customers and your staff and is meant to put them all at ease
inside your business's premises.
2.
Assigned roles and responsibilities.
Assign roles for critical
teams. Who are your key team players in this scenario and what roles should
they play during a crisis? Delegate their roles before a crisis, the initial
steps that they should do, how to contact them, and how they can contact you. Document
important details about your crisis management team’s action plan so you can
distribute and discuss ahead, not when the crisis is already unfolding.
3.
Train your personnel.
Allocate time and
resources for training your staff. They should know by heart or by
muscle-memory on what to do when customers require assistance, be it medical or
otherwise.
Marketing
and Communications
In
a crisis, one of the many causes of panic is misinformation as well as the lack
of any useful updates. In a business, its management must maintain
communications with their customers to keep them calm and controlled. Your
staff will look to their supervisors and managers for instructions and verification,
but they should be able to address simple questions and concerns achieved of
course through proper training.
That
is why preparing documentation (your crisis management plan) for your staff is critical
not just on how they will conduct themselves during a crisis, but also in what
they will convey to your customers.
Here
are some tips on how you can manage your crisis communications:
1.
Internal Arrangements
Brief your staff about
your intentions especially if you would want to continue business operations.
All of you should be aligned on what specific measures to take during certain
scenarios. This is where you and your staff's crisis training kicks in. Get
their commitment to stay on board but be open and be ready for any appeals that
they may not be able to work due to personal reasons. Understand them and
understand that there is still a crisis, after all.
2.
External Communications
You and your staff should
share the same unified message regarding your business's brand presence.
Whenever any of you communicate with your customers, the media, and the
authorities, you should all be reading from the same page. Always reassure your
customers of your continued services and bring them up to speed on your
preventive plans and safety guidelines.
By the way, we previously
published a blog about how to train your team about basic marketing, which you
can read here.
Aside from providing
FAQ's, relay all your updates on all your external communication channels:
·
Your business's website
·
Email communications
·
Social media
·
PR and media releases) if necessary or if
this is already part of your usual communication stream)
It
is recommended that you assign only one person or one team to handle
communications. This will provide consistency in tone and to funnel out any
unnecessary messages.
Here are some more tips
on handling sudden business disruptions:
·
Remember to prepare to waive any fees on
cancellations as these should be expected from customers with their own emergency
situations.
·
For direct bookings, add perks and highlight
them in your communication channels.
·
Direct your marketing efforts on markets that
are still open and viable.
·
Prepare offerings such as gift vouchers, discount
coupons, etc.
·
Even if you're the only business open in a
certain location, make your presence felt by giving freebies, discounts or
coming up with any strategic promos.
·
Revisit your business policies and find out
if some items apply to the current scenario and if they can address new customer
concerns and needs.
Meanwhile, you can learn how to keep track of
your marketing campaigns here.
Be
sure that your communications still carry your trademark of being a laudable business
owner. Demonstrate empathy to your customers, visitors, or anyone who may need
assistance. It is your job to be hospitable and to be of service to others.
Conclusion
They
say that you can never be prepared enough for any unprecedented disaster, no
matter how well you have planned for it. This rings true for most industries.
Hospitality business owners and staff, however, will tend to go beyond their
call of duty or will extend themselves above any ordeal. This is because people
will remember how well or how poorly your hospitality business reacted during a
time of crisis.
Comments
Post a Comment