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Topic Starter |
Seize life. Be an ermine.
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: My house
Casino cash: $-482449
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We need to fix hotel housekeeping. Let's brainstorm.
I've been on a long business trip, and am reminded of a longstanding problem in hotels. We need a solution to this problem.
When I'm in a hotel, I'm generally working. Mornings are great for that. Checkout is at 11 or 12, and I check out on time. But from 9 to 11 I'm on my computer or in meetings or something. But I consistently have a housekeeper knocking on my door before I check out. Then they never hear me telling them that I'm still in the room and after several knocks and me telling them at increasingly louder volumes to go away, they then open the door and I have to repeat again that the room is still mine. On this recent trip, I've had it happen as early as 8:30, and in one case they tried to come in three times while I was on business calls. I finally had to get curt with them and tell them not to come back. I understand that it's in the hotel's best interest to get rooms cleaned early. But I also figure a lot of people check out early. It seems like there should be plenty of rooms to clean without knocking on the doors of guests who are still in their rooms. Does housekeeping not know who's checked out and who hasn't? Right now, the operations model is based on disturbing people who still have a right to be in the room, and it's also probably not pleasant for the housekeeping staff who get scowled at by half-naked guests. Nobody likes this system. So how do we fix it? An easy solution is the old "make up this room/do not disturb" sign, but I've seen more hotels recently that don't offer those signs. If such a sign is available, I always put it on the door immediately and leave it there until I depart. There should be a sign that says, "checked out/still in room". But I recognize that half of guests wouldn't switch the sign out when they leave, and we have to plan for all scenarios. Maybe we have a little LED light near the door that glows red when the guest is still checked in and green when they've checked out. There's a slot in the room where you put the key when you check out that activates it. Also, do most people tell the front desk when they check out? With modern keys you don't have to return the keys, so maybe not. I always tell the front desk, but maybe this isn't universal. I've half-pondered getting my own magnetic sign that says, "When this sign is up, I'm still in the room and don't need housekeeping." But it'll cost me ten bucks to make and I figure I'll forget it at some point. So let's put our collective minds to this task. How do we solve this major first-world problem? |
Posts: 145,278
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