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How To Keep Employees Engaged..An interview with Ray Warren, General Manager, San Diego Marina Marriott Hotel
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| Guest post by: Gregg Gregory |
Article Overview: What are companies successful with keeping long-term employees doing right?
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Free Download - Leaders Play a Major Role for the Employee By Gregg Gregory |
How To Keep Employees Engaged..An interview with Ray Warren, General Manager, San Diego Marina Marriott Hotel
The day Paula waited for had finally arrived. After 30
years with one company, and hardly taking a single sick day, it was time for
her to retire. She had enjoyed working, though now it was her time to enjoy
life. After all, she and Tony - her husband of more than 26 years - had raised
two beautiful children, each with a bachelor's degree and employed with great
jobs. Tony continued to work, not because he had to, rather because he still
enjoyed the idea of getting up and making a difference in his position. The
couple had just purchased a new home in a nice community, and Paula was ready
to enjoy retirement volunteering for various charities and simply puttering
around the new home and making her mark on it.
Paula spent her final day at work receiving
congratulations and reminiscing with her co-workers when Robert, a much younger
colleague, asked, "What was it like working in one place for over 30 years?"
Robert had only been with the company for a year and this position was his
third in less than six years in the workforce. Paula's response was pretty
simple: "I didn't think about it... it's just what we did."
What is the average employee tenure in your organization?
Companies today experience a much higher degree of turnover, and the idea of
one employee staying his or her entire career with one company, organization or
agency just does not happen as often as it used to. That's not to say it never
happens because it does, and those organizations that keep their employees do
something right. What is it? It's not about the mission and vision statements
hanging on the wall, or because the company values are reviewed once per year.
The secret is in how the leaders lead, managers manage and teams play: review
the points until they become second nature and the organization begins to live
the culture.
I recently spoke with Ray Warren, the General Manager of
the San Diego Marina Marriott hotel. Ray has been with Marriott for 35 years.
He moved 11 times in his first 18 years, and for the last 17 years, he has been
with this one hotel. His executive team has an average tenure of over 23 years.
I wanted to discover the secret to keeping employees, and keeping them happy.
"There is a culture that began many years ago with
Mr. Marriott's father (J. Willard Marriott) and that culture is a very thick
and very real thing," Ray said. "This is the glue that keeps many of
these people together and it is a very powerful thing. The culture is not
likely to change, as it is embedded into the various units within all of
Marriott."
When Ray speaks to new associates at the orientation
meetings every other Friday, he talks about the culture, and how amazingly well
they articulate what the culture is all about and how it is likely different
from other places they might have worked. He continues to describe it as a very
'fundamental thing.'
It all started with Mr. Marriott Sr.; he chose people he
felt had a 'Spirit to Serve' and then he treated them well. He truly cared
about them. "That old philosophy of if you take care of your people
they'll take care of the guests, and the guests will keep coming back... As
hokey as it is, it's alive in our hotels," Ray said.
One of the key ways to retain employees and keep them
happy is to continually engage them, ultimately allowing them to grow within
the company. Ray said that when looking to move an hourly employee into a
management position, technical skills represent only about 30 percent of what
he looks for. Instead, he looks at the attitude and the ability to be an
entrepreneur. He said, "They need to feel like they really own it
themselves."
At the San Diego Marina Marriott Hotel, the executive team
meets twice per year and does a human capital plan to predict which positions
they feel may open up in the next 6-12 months. In these meetings, the executive
team proactively discusses who would fit the position, and how that person can
improve and prepare himself or herself for the position before it even comes
available. This is followed up with two formal reviews per year - with every
leader - where it is determined what the employee needs, from a leadership
standpoint, to prepare himself or herself for the potential promotion.
While many organizations practice this 'succession
planning' at the senior level, very few implement the method among front line
employees who want to move into management. In the Marriott organization, the
leadership team actively observes employees to see how they take on a task as
well as how they perform at the task; Rays says you will actually see who the
natural leaders are.
One interesting way Ray's team evaluates potential
candidates is by hiring college students into hourly administrative positions
and having them work alongside specific meeting planners. This way, management
can see how well they interact with customers and, in essence, this is a
mini-leadership position where the students don't even realize they are being
interviewed.
I also asked Ray about teamwork and how he teaches the
culture of teamwork. He said, "It is a bazillion touch points of embedding
that you really care about the person next to you, whoever it is. It is done in
every imaginative way... from a simple thank you to the 'huddle meetings'
[daily team meetings] to one employee encouraging another to tell the story of
how he did something incredible for a guest."
Ray added, "People don't leave a company; they
usually leave a boss because the boss was not stimulating them or responsive to
their needs." Ray and the executive team want to know if the managers have
a relationship that goes beyond the business aspect with EVERY single one of
their team members. If the manager says yes, the family spirit is present and
that is incredibly powerful.
The concept comes down to one simple fact: Management does
not spend a lot of time making decisions as leaders, but rather asking the team
what should be done to solve the problem at hand.
On a personal note - I have spent many nights at this
property over the last several years, and the teams in every department are
powerful. Ray had been so kind on these trips that I wanted to give him a small
gift. So, on one trip I asked a bellman what Ray's favorite restaurant is, and
he knew exactly where to send me. The key point here is proof that relationship
building works in both directions.
Referred by: http://www.gci4training.com
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About the Author: Gregg Gregory RSS for Gregg's articles - Visit Gregg's website Gregg Gregory helps organizations design cooperative teams that produce results and perform at peak levels. Through his interactive workshops and consulting, Gregg's clients achieve greater team focus, cooperation, productivity, and impact. His experience includes more than two decades of human resources, real estate, mortgage banking, as well as radio and television broadcasting. Please contact Gregg at (301) 564-0908 or visit http://TeamsRock.com Click here to visit Gregg's website Hiring Right New Leadership Challenges in the Workplace Six Tips For Terrific Teamwork Getting Fired In Voicemail Dealing With Idiots At Work |
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