Deck 3: The Structure of the Hotel Industry
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Deck 3: The Structure of the Hotel Industry
1
24/7/365 is shorthand for: 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, and 365 days per year. Staying open 24/7/365 is part of the legal definition of a hotel.
True
2
Public corporations such as Marriott and Hilton issue stock, which represents ownership, numbering in the hundreds of millions of shares.
True
3
The architectural "footprint"refers to the number of housekeeping employees needed per square foot of lobby space.
False
4
Hotels have eliminated many middle management positions, which flattens the organizational chart and throws more responsibility on the remaining managers and the employees.
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5
The huge increase in cell-phone use has caused a corresponding revenue increase in the telephone departments of the world's hotels. As such, the telephone department is currently the fastest growing department in the lodging industry.
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6
Group and convention bookings for a fixed number of room nights are forgiven if the event is unexpectedly interrupted by acts of God, which are referenced in the contract as:
A) Quid pro quo
B) Concierge services
C) Force majeure
D) Ex post facto
E) Either A or C.; both are often used
A) Quid pro quo
B) Concierge services
C) Force majeure
D) Ex post facto
E) Either A or C.; both are often used
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7
Room sales:
A) Account for almost 100% of revenue for budget hotel properties
B) Are the industry's second-most profitable department
C) Produce more revenue than food, beverage, and telephone departments combined
D) Account for most of the industry's revenue
E) All of the above are true except B
A) Account for almost 100% of revenue for budget hotel properties
B) Are the industry's second-most profitable department
C) Produce more revenue than food, beverage, and telephone departments combined
D) Account for most of the industry's revenue
E) All of the above are true except B
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8
Corporations:
A) Limit the liability of investors
B) Are a common form of hotel ownership
C) Can issue hundreds of millions of stock shares
D) May be owned by other corporations
E) All of the above
A) Limit the liability of investors
B) Are a common form of hotel ownership
C) Can issue hundreds of millions of stock shares
D) May be owned by other corporations
E) All of the above
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9
Today's beds are longer than their predecessors; that length is called ________ length:
A) Japanese
B) Murphy
C) California
D) Hollywood
E) None of the above
A) Japanese
B) Murphy
C) California
D) Hollywood
E) None of the above
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10
The individual responsible for the full scope of the operation at the unit (hotel) level is generally titled the:
A) CEO (chief executive officer)
B) GM (general manager)
C) CFO (chief financial officer)
D) COO (chief operating officer)
E) MD (managing director)
A) CEO (chief executive officer)
B) GM (general manager)
C) CFO (chief financial officer)
D) COO (chief operating officer)
E) MD (managing director)
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11
Describe the organizational chart of a 68-room, economy class hotel, franchised under a major chain's logo, that has no food and beverage service, not even breakfast. OR Sketch the floor plan of the same hotel described above.
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12
The company that owns the hotel building is not likely to be the company that manages the hotel.
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13
Anti-trust laws forbid a hotel company (say, Marriott) from owning another hotel company (say, Ritz-Carlton).
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14
Public corporations may have thousands of shareholders (stockholders).
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15
Corporations are "legal persons"which can sue and be sued; buy and sell real estate; operate and manage hotels.
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16
Traditional corporations are sometimes called C-Corporations to distinguish them from REITs.
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17
To assure shareholders' interests are independently maintained, the general manager of a hotel is never an officer of the company that manages the property.
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18
Despite the title, an assistant manager is not an a direct assistant to the general manager, but is, rather, a manager in the rooms division.
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19
Large hotels such as the Las Vegas properties employ several thousand workers; perhaps as many as two employees per room.
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20
An ideal hotel organization does not allow staff members (accounting, legal, technology, etc.) to interact with guests, leaving guest contact to line members (desk personnel, food andbeverage supervisors, etc.) exclusively.
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21
The food and beverage department has become less important - not unimportant, but less important - to the lodging industry during the past three decades.
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22
Most hotels have all of the positions listed in Chapter 3's organization chart; otherwise the chapter wouldn't bother itemizing them.
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23
It's a measure of the importance - actually the unimportance - given to the hotel's housekeeping department that rating agencies such as AAA do not consider cleanliness during their inspections.
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24
The bell department (uniformed services) and the telephone department have been shrinking during the past decade as technology and lifestyle changes impact the lodging industry.
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25
A guest-room attendant can clean between 12 and 18 rooms per day depending on the number of check-out rooms versus the number of stay-over rooms.
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26
The GM's role of "greeter,"which was emphasized during the 1930s to 1950s by an organization called Hotel Greeters, has not changed much in over a half-century.
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27
Light courts are the newest theme in lobbies, bringing in outside, natural light to replace higher cost electrical connections.
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28
Hotel suites are often named, so all-suite hotels always have bridal suites, presidential suites, suites named for historical persons, and so on.
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29
Corner rooms are less desirable, and therefore sell for less, because of the long walk from the elevators to the corners of the building.
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30
Floor numbering is simple and identical worldwide: The ground floor is numbered 1, the first sleeping floor is floor number 2, and so on.
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31
In an effort to save lives, most local fire departments have forced the lodging industry to adopt standardized room numbering systems.
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32
Obviously, every connecting room adjoins; and every adjoining room connects.
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33
Theft of guests' belongings is a function of opportunity as much as of temptation.
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34
Hotel security must be first a deterrent to crime before it acts to restrain, as a police force.
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35
A "last"(shorten from "at last") is a tip-earning call for the bell department.
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36
The concierge "floor"is actually a raised section of the lobby in which the concierge's desk is located.
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37
Bellpersons prefer the late-night shift because fronts are more frequent and tips larger than other times of the day.
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38
Rotating shifts should follow the clock: day, swing, graveyard and then back to days and should occur only after the employees' days off.
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39
Because there is no need to relieve staff for meals, hotel managers are scheduling split shifts at the desk more than ever before.
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40
Assigning guest complaints to the guest's "telephone mailbox"is a recent innovation in the telephone department.
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41
Hotels that have "large footprints"are those that impacts heavily on the economic and social life of the surrounding community.
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42
Sit-down registration pods are more common today than the traditional front-desk design that placed a counter between the staff and the guest.
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43
The guest-service agent is part accountant, part manager, part psychologist and part salesperson because front-office duties include all of these.
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44
Housekeeping should rotates mattresses top to bottom and head to foot according to a fixed schedule attached to the side of the mattress.
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45
"California"is the term given to any bed that has been shortened to 72- 75 inches from the more traditional length of 79 - 84 inches.
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46
The increasing cost of land and construction has forced hotel companies to build smaller and more compact rooms.
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47
It's a pretty sure bet that no modern hotel has single rooms anymore.
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48
Franchisors cannot cancel "the flag"once the franchise contract is signed even if the property deteriorates; they must simply wait until the contract period ends.
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49
Better to keep all security personnel in mufti (street clothes) rather than make their presence known by putting them in uniforms.
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50
Bed furnishings have evolved over time: Kings and queens have been replaced because guest prefer double beds or twin beds.
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51
"Family room"is the term given to double doubles or queen doubles.
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52
The appearance of the all-suite hotel can be explained in part by the disappearance of the studio room which once served the same purpose.
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53
Placing the bath on the inside corridor wall of the guest room creates a sound buffer to the hall and leaves the external wall for windows and balconies.
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54
Larger beds mean higher laundry bills because laundry costs are calculated by the weight of the linen.
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55
Tour houses, hotels that specialize in tour groups, may build separate tour lobbies to keep the heavy arrival/bus traffic away from the main registration desk.
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56
The segmentation of the lodging industry is the result of the different structures (physical and organizational) that the industry adopts.
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57
"Mine Host"was once a nickname for the head waiter in the gourmet dining room, but has fallen from favor as women moved into the job.
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58
Larger beds - queens and kings rather than doubles and twins - account, in part, for the increased size of guest rooms between mid century (1950) and today.
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59
Because public lobbies are costly real estate that require extra security measures, new hotel construction, especially of full-service hotels, has smaller lobbies and reduced services.
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60
To protect guest security and to assure the clarity of the telephone message being left for guests, good hotel managers insist that all incoming messages be taken by the hotel operator.
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61
Selling rooms and reservations to achieve maximum occupancy without overbooking is a combined effort of reservations, sales and marketing, and the front desk.
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62
Tradition has kept hotel general managers from receiving bonuses as part of their salary package.
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63
Because of the legal environment in the United States, it is unlikely that a modern hotel would be organized as a corporation although older ones hold on to that business form.
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64
Since most property is lost from guest rooms, floor housekeepers must be security conscious, even denying access to guests who have forgotten their room keys.
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65
Twisted professional language makes it possible for a single occupant to pay a double rate.
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66
An "inspector"or "inspectress"is the name given to:
A) Security officers in plain clothes
B) Staffers in charge of fire watch
C) Housekeeping employees who signs off on ready rooms
D) Franchise shoppers who approve renewal of contracts
E) Both B and D, but under different circumstances
A) Security officers in plain clothes
B) Staffers in charge of fire watch
C) Housekeeping employees who signs off on ready rooms
D) Franchise shoppers who approve renewal of contracts
E) Both B and D, but under different circumstances
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67
The approximate formula for converting square feet/square meters is:
A) Square feet and square meters are about equal
B) Square meters are smaller than square feet
C) Square meters are about 1/10 the number of square feet
D) Square feet are larger than square meters
E) Both B and D
A) Square feet and square meters are about equal
B) Square meters are smaller than square feet
C) Square meters are about 1/10 the number of square feet
D) Square feet are larger than square meters
E) Both B and D
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68
Hotels may be owned by which of the following?
A) Partnerships
B) Corporations
C) REITS
D) Joint ventures
E) All of the above
A) Partnerships
B) Corporations
C) REITS
D) Joint ventures
E) All of the above
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69
Which of the following sections of the hotel are generally NOT cleaned by the housekeeping department?
A) Banquet floors
B) Public corridors
C) Guest rooms
D) Employee locker rooms
E) None of these; that is, housekeeping is responsible for all
A) Banquet floors
B) Public corridors
C) Guest rooms
D) Employee locker rooms
E) None of these; that is, housekeeping is responsible for all
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70
Other than general cleanliness, housekeeping also may be responsible for which of the following?
A) Reporting maintenance issues
B) Counting and weighing linens
C) Sick guests
D) Lost and found
E) All of the above
A) Reporting maintenance issues
B) Counting and weighing linens
C) Sick guests
D) Lost and found
E) All of the above
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71
The legal definition of a hotel requires it to:
A) Remain open during legal holidays (unless it is a seasonal resort)
B) Accept all who come in good condition
C) Honor at least one national credit card
D) State on signs or other advertising that it holds itself out to be a hotel
E) Both B and C
A) Remain open during legal holidays (unless it is a seasonal resort)
B) Accept all who come in good condition
C) Honor at least one national credit card
D) State on signs or other advertising that it holds itself out to be a hotel
E) Both B and C
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72
Which of the following tend(s) to make a guest room look larger?
A) Armoires to house television sets
B) Raising the bed to at least 20 inches from the floor
C) Mirrors on the wall
D) Multiple shower heads
E) All of the above
A) Armoires to house television sets
B) Raising the bed to at least 20 inches from the floor
C) Mirrors on the wall
D) Multiple shower heads
E) All of the above
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73
Which class of employee has the smallest take-home earnings?
A) Bells
B) Security
C) Housekeeping
D) Reservations
E) Telephone
A) Bells
B) Security
C) Housekeeping
D) Reservations
E) Telephone
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74
Operational changes caused in part by technological changes have restructured the hotel organizational chart causing staff:
A) Decreases in the reservations department
B) Decreases in the security department
C) Increases in the bell department
D) Increases in the telephone department
E) All of the above except B
A) Decreases in the reservations department
B) Decreases in the security department
C) Increases in the bell department
D) Increases in the telephone department
E) All of the above except B
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75
Room sales:
A) Produce more dollars than food, beverage and telephone combined
B) Are the industry's second most profitable department
C) Account for almost 100% of revenue at budget hotels
D) Account for most of the industry's revenue
E) All of the above except B
A) Produce more dollars than food, beverage and telephone combined
B) Are the industry's second most profitable department
C) Account for almost 100% of revenue at budget hotels
D) Account for most of the industry's revenue
E) All of the above except B
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76
Elevators
A) Helped speed the development of high-rise hotels
B) Were adopted by hotels only after proving successful elsewhere
C) Delayed the development of rejuvenated lobbies
D) Now account for the largest portion of the uniformed-service department
E) None of the above
A) Helped speed the development of high-rise hotels
B) Were adopted by hotels only after proving successful elsewhere
C) Delayed the development of rejuvenated lobbies
D) Now account for the largest portion of the uniformed-service department
E) None of the above
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77
The square footage of a full-service hotel can be estimated as the size of:
A) All guest rooms added together
B) Twice A above
C) Three motor hotels provided they have food-service capacity
D) x2, where x is 10 times the hotel's acreage
E) Cannot be estimated
A) All guest rooms added together
B) Twice A above
C) Three motor hotels provided they have food-service capacity
D) x2, where x is 10 times the hotel's acreage
E) Cannot be estimated
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78
Single and double refer to all the following answers except the:
A) Single housekeeper or the housekeeping team that services the room
B) Number of guests that the room could accommodate
C) Number of guests in the room
D) Size and type of bed
E) Rate charged for a room
A) Single housekeeper or the housekeeping team that services the room
B) Number of guests that the room could accommodate
C) Number of guests in the room
D) Size and type of bed
E) Rate charged for a room
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79
In addition to cash salaries, GMs may get which of the following?
A) Membership fees
B) Stock options
C) State income taxes waived
D) On-property housing
E) All of the above except C
A) Membership fees
B) Stock options
C) State income taxes waived
D) On-property housing
E) All of the above except C
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80
Management bonuses are usually computed:
A) On location, location, location
B) Based on ADR
C) Using the number of rooms in the hotel
D) By including professional courtesy from other hoteliers
E) All of the above except A
A) On location, location, location
B) Based on ADR
C) Using the number of rooms in the hotel
D) By including professional courtesy from other hoteliers
E) All of the above except A
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