"A turtle might not be what many people think of when contemplating customer
service," says Holly Stiel, who was a concierge in San Francisco for 16 years
before starting her own consulting business. Stiel believes, however, that
turtles embrace what people in the service industry need to remember: you
need to stick your neck out, learn to have a hard shell, slow down and not
react so quickly.
Being a concierge means filling just about any request. You may be asked
to buy gifts, book flights, call a doctor or recommend a good novel. "There
is no total description," says Stiel. "You just do anything that is legal
and kind."
In order to be a good concierge, it is absolutely necessary that you know
how to multi-task, says Stiel. There are many guests in the hotel. No matter
how many tasks you are working on, you can't let the guest know that you are
taxed mentally. On the surface, you should remain calm.
One example of multi-tasking is making dinner reservations over the phone
while using the computer to check on the time of the next showing of a movie.
"Multi-tasking needs to be a comfort zone for you," says Stiel. You must also
be curious, energetic and social.
Bertine Hage, a concierge, likes the variety and the challenge of being
a concierge. "You walk dogs [and you] arrange weddings," she says.
Concierges make it easier for the guest to be away from home, she says.
"Your job is to serve people and put yourself last." Anyone can build a glorious
hotel with amenities in all the rooms, says Hage. What sets hotels apart is
the service they can offer. That is why concierges are important.
Hage says many people think her job is glamorous. Certainly, there are
the lifestyle perks. Many concierges receive free meals and entertainment
so that they can make knowledgeable recommendations to guests.
Troy Glenn, a hotel concierge, gets to see his fair share of celebrities
too. He has helped the Rolling Stones, novelist John Irving, the Canadian
prime minister and Chevy Chase. Celebrities, he says, are great people. "They
are very approachable."
Beneath a concierge's calm facade, however, the brain is doing double time.
"Behind the scenes, this is a stressful, high-volume position," says Hage,
who doesn't let on when she's helping one guest that she is also working on
20 other requests.
Stamina is essential, says Stiel. "It is relentlessly busy at a concierge's
desk -- and demanding." Work doesn't stop at the end of a shift, either, says
Glenn. With the lifestyle perks comes a busy social life.
You must find time outside of work to visit galleries, see IMAX movies
and try new restaurants. "You need to stay on top of what's going on in your
city. You do a lot of work on your own time," he says.
Concierges must be the best possible resource to the guest. "You might
have to direct someone how to get across town by bus or know the hours of
operation of a retail store," explains Glenn.
"I don't think I could do any other job," says Hage. The job is challenging,
but also gratifying. "Every task is a little project in itself that you bring
to completion."
Glenn wouldn't do anything else. "The idea of being a concierge has always
intrigued me. There is a different challenge each day. I never deal with the
same request," he says.
Glenn says one skill that he thinks is invaluable is etiquette. Concierges
need to know how to address celebrities, but more importantly, diplomats.
As a hotel concierge, you will also deal with different cultures, each of
which has different sets of etiquette and protocols. What may be polite in
America could be rude in Asia, says Glenn.
Perhaps the most difficult skill to learn is controlling your emotions,
says Stiel. You must learn not to react to people. "You need to detach yourself
from the situation. You become an observer," she explains. "In the hospitality
industry, it's not about you."
In an information sheet she uses to train people to become concierges,
she identifies several personalities that a concierge will encounter. These
people manage to "push the buttons" of service people, triggering negative
emotions, which often leads to less-than-acceptable service.
The six common guest attitudes that Stiel identifies are:
- The entitled: "You owe me...I expect you to do this....No one else exists
and you have nothing else to do but to help me."
- The panicked: "What do you mean my order isn't ready...but you promised...Now
what am I going to do?"
- The high and mighty: "Don't you know who I am?...I know more about this
job than you."
- The bottom-liner: "Can you do this for me, yes or no?...Tell me exactly
when I can expect the answer."
- The clueless: "If I go outside and it is raining, will I get wet?" (This
was an actual question Stiel says a guest asked her.)
- The imprisoned: "Why does something always go wrong here?...Nothing ever
works out for me."
These attitudes are so common, Stiel says, that when she outlines them
to students, they say, "That guest was in the hotel yesterday." If you can
learn to see these personality traits as a shortcoming in the guest, you will
be able to serve people better.
"In order to do this work, there are certain pre-conditions [you must have]
to excel at it," says Stiel. Taking care of people must be one of your values,
she says. Multi-tasking is equally important. "The reality is this job is
not about procedures and functions. This job has a psychology and a spirit
and a mindset."