Opinions Create a business platform your hotel will profit from 12 JUNE 2018 7:13 AM Here’s a look at how to develop a back-of-house platform that allows hoteliers to manage their hotels in a profitable way. By JayTroutman One of my early consulting projects involved a management company with five properties and an appetite for significant growth. The owners were concerned with how to manage their business from the back of the house by the numbers. They were expert tax attorneys who were new to our industry. Our consulting assignment was to design, spec and bid a hospitality accounting system that could mix and report on accounting dollars and KPIs, on a daily basis, across multiple properties. It’s routine now, but it was not so easy in the 1970s (before spreadsheets). The two founders, Milt Fine and Ed Perlow, had a vision for their new company (Interstate Hotels) that embraced dramatic growth and sophisticated back office tools. They were pioneers. They more than achieved their vision and became a great success story. Here are some of the fundamentals of “preparing for profits” that were birthed in that era. 1. Develop standards Standards should include procedures, operating policies, a common back office platform and a hospitality chart of accounts. Standards enable rapid growth and reduce chaos. This lets management add flags, acquire portfolios, move employees between properties, analyze results and compare performance across properties uniformly. If you have your standards in place, congratulations! Many systems are dictated by the flags. Two key choices management companies and owners can make are the back office and chart of accounts. This combination spans the entire portfolio, becomes the underlying “numbers” backbone of your business. The advantages of a standard common chart and B/O system include: easy data movement, rollups and data consolidation; One caution: implementing and maintaining a standard chart that accommodates the range of property types in your portfolio (past and future) is gritty work, especially when different charts arrive with acquisitions and legacy properties. 2. Leverage technology This includes broad internet use, data integration, going paperless and mobile access. Broad internet use From a back office perspective, we came from a world where the data sat at each property. With the internet, we can centralize data and have a distributed accounting workforce. The internet brought us the best of both worlds. One of our clients leverages night auditors at distributed locations to monitor and direct the flow of each day’s numbers into a central database. Data integration |
Data can be uploaded to a central back office location without rekeying. Look to integrate with PMS, payroll, banking and other systems. Data integration minimizes human keystrokes and improves accuracy for a timely, reliable financial picture. Copyright © 2008-2018 STR, Inc. Going paperless Page 1 / 2 |
accounting workforce. The internet brought us the best of both worlds. One of our clients leverages night auditors at distributed locations to monitor and direct
the flow of each day’s numbers into a central database. Data integration |
Data can be uploaded to a central back office location without rekeying. Look to integrate with PMS, payroll, banking and other systems. Data integration minimizes human keystrokes and improves accuracy for a timely, reliable financial picture. Going paperless A robust document management system (DMS) will store, manage and track images of paper-based information captured using a document scanner. DMS efficiencies include: reduced physical storage space; Mobile Mobile-friendly accounting applications rearrange the screen for mobile access to boost staff productivity. One of our clients entered 20 to 30 invoices via his mobile phone while waiting for a doctor’s appointment. Looping back Interstate Hotels established a culture with a focus on back office technology and the numbers. They saw what was needed to prepare for profits, broke new ground to achieve dramatic growth, and the rest is history. Their many capable alumni can be found throughout our industry. Continued growth is still in the forecast for our industry. Travel well. Check in often. Jay Troutman (jayt@aptech-inc.com), a member of the International Society of Hospitality Consultants (ishc.com), is president of Aptech Computer Systems, Inc. in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He and his wife Margo have seven children and 17 grandchildren. The opinions expressed in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Hotel News Now or its parent company, STR and its affiliated companies. Columnists published on this site are given the freedom to express views that might be controversial, but our goal is to provoke thought and constructive discussion within our reader community. Please feel free to comment or contact an editor with any questions or concerns. |
Copyright © 2008-2018 STR, Inc. Page 2 / 2 |