Just watched episode two, and enjoyed it. Didn't learn a thing about innkeeping, but enjoyed it. As Eric said, "the problem wasn't the decor or the menu... it was the owners. What are you doing to fix the owners?"
This inn will no doubt experience a short-term bump in business just from the publicity, but long-term the owners have to change, and people rarely change.
And with a tip of the hat to Silverspoon, a lot of tonight's episode seemed contrived, scripted to create more drama than was really there. Whatever. As I said, I enjoyed it...except the parts where Gordon took his shirt off. Not a pretty sight..
Arkansawyer said:
Just watched episode two, and enjoyed it. Didn't learn a thing about innkeeping, but enjoyed it. As Eric said, "the problem wasn't the decor or the menu... it was the owners. What are you doing to fix the owners?"This inn will no doubt experience a short-term bump in business just from the publicity, but long-term the owners have to change, and people rarely change.
I think you are right.
On occasion I've watched old editions of hotel inspector, and afterwards gone on ta to see how they are doing. Often they have a blip of good reviews, and then after a while all the old complaints start resurfacing.
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I went on TA last night and looked at the more recent reviews. They have done one of the social buying deals and didn't put a quantity on how many they would sell! These guys are in never never land...sold more than they could handle or afford. Doesn't surprise me. It's another case of people thinking that innkeepers are just social butterflies and have no clue about it being a business.
Oh, and the novellas that are the owner's response are priceless. This guy is already saying that they are implementing some old ways (pre Ramsey) and they are nickel and diming people to death. They even charge tax and tip on the 'free' breakfast.
I don't think you can actually 'fix' these owners. It's sad.
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Those deals are a royal pain if you don't structure them right.
Our government expects you to tax the price of the meal, so even if it is include and "free" it's taxable. So if you buy a coupon for $30 that covers a $60 meal, you pay tax on the $30. You get a bill that says $30 + $4.49 tax = $34.49 - $30 deal = $4.49 to pay. You are then supposed to tip the employee on the full value of the meal, so 15% of $60 is $9.00, so you must leave $4.49 for the tax and then you supposed to leave $9 in tip for the employee. It's confusing, but we have it down pat. Unfortanately not all the businesses have figure out how to mark it down correctly and sometimes the staff gets stiffed because of it, with people leaving them tip on the $30 only, so $4.50.
On the other hand, when it's included as part of the deal, as in room and breakfast, the whole thing is taxable, since it's part of the room rate.
But you should still tip breakfast staff if it's clearly staff and a restaurant setup, maybe a buck or two based on the work. We used to go to a place that had a $1.99 breakfast special. We tipped more than the cost of breakfast, filling the coffee cups, the running back and forth, they certainly deserved their tips.
Then again, we also tip in the rooms, which apparently this guy's friends weren't even doing. Though, I would never have the gall to call someone up like that. I would have asked them kindly to tip the staff in the first place.
In this case, the owner is just clueless and really need hospitality lessons. That's the problem with most of these business owners, they need to be fixed. In the UK they have done this with a number of businesses (retail) called
Mary Queen of Shops. In the US there is Bar Rescue, Restaurant Impossible, Hotel Impossible and Tabitha Takes Over. In Canada we have Restaurant Makeover. But the one thing they just can't fix is... the owners! It's always the owners. We get the damn AHA! moment, but it's not real. They don't get it. They don't seem to understand that it's always the owners! Fix the owners and you fix the problem. But until they get that it is them, it won't get fixed.
Go to Yelp. Go to T/A. Go to Urbanspoon and look up these businesses. About 10% seem to get it, fix it and thrive. Funny that 10%, it keeps on repeating in life