Many people are looking for important positions in hospitality and tourism. To stand out from the rest of the candidates, future employees must highlight the skills that employers consider most important.
As a future employee, be sure to do your best to demonstrate what employers want to see in your resume and cover letter. This is a list of the top five skills that employers want to see and tips for making sure those skills stand out.
1) Build links
Success in hotel management jobs depends largely on a person’s ability to create positive connections with customers, guests, suppliers and even other employees. After all, the industry is about comfort and service. For employers to know that it’s great to create connections, use keywords, how to build relationships, supplier management, customer management, customer service and team leadership in the job description. Highlight the achievements that demonstrate how you can have positive communication in times of crisis, developing positive and lasting relationships.
2) Multifunctional
On a typical day, a hotel manager can negotiate the contract with a vacuum cleaner rental company, calm a disgruntled customer, do the paperwork for an injured employee in the kitchen, and keep a smile on his face to welcome new employees. Recruiters want to know if you can handle a fast pace and a varied workload. Remember to highlight these capabilities with keywords, such as organizational skills, proven time management experience and phrases that highlight the ability to quickly adapt to customer needs and manage simultaneous projects.
3) Attention to detail
The little things are what make the customer experience extraordinary. From making sure the flowers are fresh to getting employees to wear clean uniforms, successful hotel managers must be excellent at addressing every detail. As a future manager, use your resume and cover letter to highlight specific cases where you used these skills. Phrases like exceeding employee expectations and the ability to focus on the crucial details of guests will highlight that aptitude and show that you have worked hard for previous employers – and that you are ready to do it again.
4) Technical and linguistic skills
The computer and language skills are two areas of technical expertise that make a hotel manager stands out from the rest. Make sure to highlight any technical experience in the curriculum. Definitely, take the opportunity to mention specific programs in which you participated or special training you received in previous work. For languages, accurately present your skills and indicate whether knowledge of the language is basic, conversational or fluent.
5) Flexibility
Hotel managers often have unusual hours or long hours of work. They must be ready to change course when unexpected situations arise. Keywords such as adaptable, versatile and skilled will let employers know that you are enthusiastic about the unique opportunities presented by hospitality careers and that you are flexible to the needs of the company. In addition, it is important to provide important examples to demonstrate this flexibility.