Nienke's five-star hotel experience - CX lessons learned
Seven lessons from this not-so-good customer experience...
This is an interesting topic: how can you personalize occasions such as birthdays, anniversaries, and anniversaries? It all starts with understanding and empathizing with your customer. What are the expectations?
I had a good conversation with my friend Raymond Brunyanszki, the business owner of Camden Harbor Inn in the US. A Relais & Chateaux hotel and restaurant, where luxury and personal attention are central to keep guests coming back. He told me that they ask their customers for special days. They have found a way to systematize expectations and then translate them into solutions in business operations.
Here's what I'd recommend to the CX leader at the Waldorf Astoria:
- In the CX strategy, determine how important special moments and alignment with guest wishes actually are. In my opinion, it is extremely important in the luxury segment. Because good food or a nice wellness is only possible with personal attention. So clarity in strategy is key.
- When booking, ask guests if there are any special days or wishes. So that the staff knows this in advance. This way, they can anticipate these moments and organize some memorable experiences.
- Make sure the CRM system recognizes these special days. I'm a Hilton Honors member and they know my date of birth. So on the day itself, the system could have given a certain mention, that at least during check-out the employee would have seen that it was my birthday and congratulated me.
- Make sure you have a number of branded gifts and a manuscript ready, including what you need to do and when. This way, employees can easily grab a gift and a card from the shelf and present it to the customer. Branded, because if the customer shares a photo on social media, it is also great marketing for you as an organization.
- Train your staff to pick up on signals when special moments arise. Make them alert.
- Discuss special moments in the morning when starting up the teams on the shop floor. Do we have guests with special moments, who need extra attention today? If there is attention in the team and maybe even some game elements are added, it becomes a sport to exceed the expectations of the guests.
- What if you missed the mark? It happens. Don't just ask at check-out, "Did you have a pleasant stay?" Almost everyone says yes, and that's not how you get any valuable information. Instead, ask, "What could we have done better, what would have made your stay even more enjoyable?" That's genuine curiosity and really helps you learn where you can improve as an organization.
So plenty to learn from this. And... you might even see even more CX pro suggestions. Please share them!