Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta CUSTOMER ENGAGEMENT. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 11 de agosto de 2009

AT THE SPEED OF TRUST

I attended the Franklin Covey certification in this programme in Argentina last year and found it a very powerful tool for those managers who are really prepared to pay the price to improve their personal levels of trustworthiness in order to impact trust in their organizations. As always it is accompanied by some powerful videos, exercises and tools to reinforce the FC "SEE - DO - GET" personal change process.

However, I have to agree with some of the Amazon reviewers that the book, at 322 pages, is a long read. It ocurred to me that a useful and cheap alternative to get a good feel for the concepts could be the audio download with a total investment of US$7.35 and just 75 minutes... and no long wait for the order to arrive. However, in all my ignorance - I didn't realize I needed a KINDLE for this.... or sign up for a year with Audbible.com... guaranteed to increase the number of books you will read per year!!!!
Anyway.....rather than exposing you to my view of products in which I may be accused of having a vested interest I invite you to read the Amazon Reviews and draw your own conclusions.

Here is the editorial blurb followed by a link to download the condensed audio version of the book:

"A groundbreaking and paradigm-shifting book, The Speed of Trust challenges our age-old assumption that trust is merely a soft, social virtue. Instead, it demonstrates that trust is a hard-edged, economic driver -- a learnable and measurable skill that makes organizations more profitable, people more promotable, and relationships more energizing.

Written from his informed perspective as the former CEO of a $100 million enterprise, Covey draws on his pragmatic experience growing the Covey Leadership Center (founded by his father, Dr. Stephen R. Covey) from a shareholder value of less than $3 million to a value of more than $160 million.

Covey articulates why trust has become the key leadership competency of the new global economy. He eloquently informs readers of how to inspire lasting trust in their personal and professional relationships, and in so doing to create unparalleled success and sustainable prosperity in every dimension of life. He shows business, government, and education leaders how to quickly and permanently gain the trust of clients, coworkers, partners, and constituents. The author convincingly makes the case that trust is a measurable performance accelerator, and that when trust goes up, speed also goes up while cost comes down, producing what Covey calls a "trust dividend".

This powerful new audiobook reveals the 13 behaviors common to high-trust leaders throughout the world and demonstrates actionable insights that will enable you to increase and inspire trust in your important
relationships."©2006 CoveyLink. All rights reserved; (P)2006 Simon and Schuster Inc. All rights reserved.

miércoles, 1 de abril de 2009

¿Cómo construir el éxito sostenido en la competitiva industria hotelera?

La revista Consumer Reports califica la cadena de hoteles Ritz-Carlton como la que ofrece el mejor valor sobre cada dólar, de todos los hoteles en Estados Unidos. La compañía Ritz-Carlton Hotel LLC es la única cadena hotelera en la historia que ha ganado el famoso Premio Nacional de la Calidad Malcom Baldridge, establecido por el Congreso Norteamericano en 1987 para promover y reconocer los logros de calidad en las compañías norteamericanas.

El Director Corporativo de Recursos Humanos, Theo Gilbert, insiste en que “la capacitación de FranklinCovey penetra profundamente al formar empleados leales y con un sentido de misión, lo que a su vez influye grandemente en la satisfacción de los clientes.”

Con el lema de nuestra compañía "Somos Damas y Caballeros Sirviendo a Damas y Caballeros” , los gerentes y empleados de Ritz-Carlton están comprometidos con la meta de lograr un grado de servicio superior a las expectativas del cliente.

El inicio

En 1983, Horst Schulze fue nombrado Presidente y CEO de Ritz-Carlton Hotel Co. Desde un principio había decidido llevar a la compañía a un nivel de competitividad financiera sin comprometer la legendaria reputación de servicio al cliente de la que ya gozaba Ritz-Carlton. Schulze sabía que tanto los sólidos cimientos de excelencia de la organización como la lealtad incuestionable y el sentido de misión de los empleados debían ser encaminados a largo plazo. "Yo sabía que podía haber efectuado cambios radicales y asegurar grandes ganancias; pero también sabía que eso hubiera destruido a largo plazo la esencia de la compañía”.
Schulze escogió el camino más largo hacia la calidad total, y ofreció al Comité Directivo, a los jefes de los departamentos y a los gerentes el programa de "Los Siete Hábios de Las Personas Altamente Efectivas" "Si hubiesemos escogido cualquier otra ruta, no estaríamos hoy a la cabeza de las compañías hoteleras en el mercado de alto nivel al que pertenecemos".

"Hemos invertido miles de dólares en la capacitación de Franklin Covey”, afirma Mary Ann Ollman-Brigis, Directora Corporativa de Capacitación y Desarrollo. “Es una inversión inmensa que muestra el grado de compromiso que tenemos como organización”. La base que Los 7 Hábitos nos dan inspira interdependencia en grupos de trabajo autodirigidos, lo que es vital para lograr un nivel consistente de calidad yservicio al cliente. Cada empleado toma a pecho la esencia de la hospitalidad. “Nuestros huéspedes valoran lo que hacemos porque siempre estamos disponibles cuando se nos necesita y eso sólo se puede lograr cuando toda la fuerza laboral está alineada. Las cosas tienen que andar bien dentro para que esto suceda”, dice Schulze. Lo que “anda bien” es el aprendizaje intensivo y el sistema de “coaching” establecido por los oficiales corporativos de capacitación de Ritz-Carlton en cooperación con FranklinCovey.

Schulze ofrece extraordinarias estadísticas cuyo crédito atribuye, en gran parte, a la asociación con FranklinCovey. “En 1994, nuestros 25 hoteles dentro de los Estados Unidos lograron $75 millones más en ventas que en 1993, con 300,000 hora/hombre menos de trabajo. Al mismo tiempo aumentaron tanto los índices de satisfacción al cliente como la de los empleados. En 1995, nuestros ingresos totales aumentaron en otros $36 millones. Al mismo tiempo, la planilla se redujo en 700,000 hombres/hora. Eso es una reducción de 1,000,000 de horas/hombre en sólo dos años. Las proyecciones para 1996, fueron de cerca de $100 millones más en ventas y como 1,000,000 menos de hombre/horas trabajadas.”Mientras que en la industria hotelera la rotación anual de personal es del 100% o más, la de Ritz-Carlton es de 30% en base a los 14,000 empleados en todo el mundo. Una medida asombrosa de éxito.

Schulze también atribuye esto , mayormente a la inversión que la compañía hace en su equipo humano. Todos entendemos lo que es una inversión, pero no siempre vemos como inversión lo que gastamos en e l alineamiento de la cultura. Alineamos poco a poco a la gente, enseñándoles poco a poco. Con el tiempo, ésto crea dramáticos resultados financieros positivos. Mi trabajo consiste en obtener para los accionistas el máximo retorno sobre su inversión. Es también de vital importancia que el cliente reciba lo que él desea. Tan pronto como se disminuye la calidad o se defraude al cliente, la compañía pierde. El costo de perder a un cliente es incalculable, miles de dólares, en nuestro caso pueden ascender a $100,000 a través de la vida del cliente.
Schulze añade, “La capacitación FC es una inversión intangible pero de alto retorno. Si éste programa forma gente y equipos que están satisfechos y felices por lo que han logrado al final del día, que están en contacto con su integridad, quienes también se rejuvenecen a sí mismos activamente, lo que a su vez aumenta el trabajo personal, entonces definitivamente es una prueba palpable de que contribuye a la prosperidad general de la organización.”
Leonardo Inghilleri, Vicepresidente de Recursos Humano, comenta: “ La moral y la motivación se establecen realmente a través de la creación de un ambiente de trabajo adecuado en dónde la gente desea hacer el trabajo que está haciendo y en dónde se sienten apreciados y reconocidos por sus contribuciones. Los 7 Hábitos de FranklinCovey son ideales. Los principios constituyen la piedra angular del desarrollo de nuestro liderazgo hoy. La idea es desarrollar nuestra gente, nutrirlos y crear un ambiente en donde ellos puedan ser exitosos para que también nosotros podamos tener éxito. Usted sólo puede medir el éxito a través del éxito de su gente.

®FranklinCovey Co. Todos los derechos Reservados

miércoles, 25 de marzo de 2009

HOTELES Y SERVICIO AL CLIENTE



He tenido la oportunidad de conversar con los dueños y gerentes de varios hoteles recientemente que compartan preocupaciones similares sobre como incrementar la proactividad de los empleados en la resolución de los problemas del cliente, mejorar el trabajo en equipo y lograr una culura unificada de Servicio al Cliente. Típicamente hemos usado los Siete Hábitos para estos propósitos. Es interesante leer este caso sobre Gaylord Opryland Resort lograron soprendentes resultados a través de Los 4 Disciplinas de Ejecución y xQ (Encuesta de Ejecución).

Hay un video sobre el mismo caso en inglés en el Centro de Investigación de Franklin Covey que es muy interesante: Gaylord Video .


Otro casos de estudio que recomendamos para Hoteleros :
Ritz Carlton ; Colonial Williamsburg Company

viernes, 26 de diciembre de 2008

How Employee and Customer Engagement Interact

It’s not quite as simple as “engaged employees create engaged customers.” Here’s why. Customer Engagement Employee Engagement HumanSigma
by John H. Fleming, Ph.D., and Jim Asplund
Excerpted from Human Sigma: Managing the Employee-Customer Encounter
(Gallup Press, November 2007)

Conventional views of the relationships among employee attitudes, customer requirements, and financial performance have emphasized their sequential nature. You can think of these variables as successive links in a chain, in which each variable affects the next to drive some ultimate outcome. This perspective suggests that engaged employees create engaged customers who foster organizational success by delivering positive financial outcomes. Though this perspective has some validity, we believe that it fails to convey the true multidimensional nature of the interdependencies among employee and customer engagement and overall organizational financial performance.

Employee engagement does have a direct and measurable relationship to and impact on customer engagement. But, like the ways in which heart rate and respiration interact to speed life-giving oxygen to all parts of the human body, the ways in which these organizational functions interact to enhance a company's financial vigor are more complex than a simple linear chain of factors. Integrating the vital signs of employee and customer engagement into a single performance construct supported by a single performance measure -- the HumanSigma metric -- provides a comprehensive means to capture and understand this dynamic system. This is because the combined impact of a company's human systems taken together is substantially greater than the effects of the individual systems separately.

Optimize

Our first experience with the power of this dynamic interaction of employee and customer engagement arose quite by accident. Several years ago, we were working with a large retailer to measure and improve its customer and employee relationships. As part of this process, we collected metrics on employee and customer engagement for each store in the chain. Not surprisingly, our analysis found strong linkages to financial performance for each separate measure.

Within the stores, these two performance indicators were reported and acted on independently of one another because, as with most such measurement programs, different functional groups within the company owned the individual parts. The corporate human resources department owned the employee engagement initiative, while store operations owned the customer measurement initiative. As you might expect, there was no formalized interaction between or integration of the two teams responsible for these programs. They rarely, if ever, communicated with one another.

One day, however, the corporate owner of the employee engagement program ran into his counterpart on the customer side at lunch in the company cafeteria. A lively discussion about the two programs ensued. It became clear that the top-performing stores were using some best practices that could be transferred to stores where employee and customer engagement were gaining considerably less traction.

With the best principles of the service-profit chain in mind, the two program owners decided that it might be interesting to compare notes on which stores were the best on each performance indicator. After all, if the sequential service-profit chain model was correct, we would expect there to be considerable overlap between the two groups of best-performing stores.

To perform the analysis, we first identified the 10 highest and 10 lowest performing stores based on their success in engaging employees. We then identified the 10 highest and 10 lowest performing stores based on their success in creating customer engagement. Our working assumption, given the demonstrated statistical linkages between employee and customer engagement, was that some of the top performers in creating employee engagement would also be among the group of top performers in developing engaged customers. Unfortunately, we were wrong: Just one store appeared on both lists. Somewhat nonplussed, we went back to the data in search of an explanation.

As we began to work through the implications of these findings, we made an intriguing discovery. Stores that performed well (those that scored in the top 50% of all stores on the measure) in employee and customer engagement -- even though they may not have had the highest scores on either metric -- tended to deliver considerably better financial results than those that scored poorly on the two measures. Furthermore, stores that performed well on both measures also outperformed those that scored high on one but not the other of these metrics.

Just as respiration and heart rate combine to efficiently and effectively deliver life-giving oxygen and nutrients to the entire human body, customer and employee engagement interact to promote an enhanced level of financial vigor throughout the organization. This relationship is depicted graphically by plotting individual stores' scores on these metrics along two axes representing local employee and customer engagement scores, with each dot representing an individual store in the chain. (See the graphic "Optimized.") By looking at the "scatter" of the points, it's easy to see the considerable variation in performance on employee and customer engagement at the local level.

Our subsequent research has confirmed that this pattern holds true not just for the large, multi-store retailer in this example, but also for companies of different sizes and in various industries. When viewed from the perspective of local business unit performance, customer and employee engagement . . . potentiate one another, creating the opportunity for accelerated improvement and growth of overall financial performance.

John H. Fleming, Ph.D., is Principal and Chief Scientist -- Customer Engagement and HumanSigma for Gallup. He is coauthor of Human Sigma: Managing the Employee-Customer Encounter (Gallup Press, November 2007).
Learn More >>
Jim Asplund is Chief Scientist, Strengths-Based Development and Principal, Performance Impact Consulting with Gallup. He is coathor of Human Sigma: Managing the Employee-Customer Encounter (Gallup Press, November 2007).

How The Ritz-Carlton Manages the Mystique

GALLUP Management Journal
(click here for original article)

11 December 2008
by Jennifer Robison. Senior Editor for the Gallup Management Journal.

The luxury brand uses hard data on employee and customer engagement to create its image and ambience -- and to drive measurable results

Joanne Hanna recently had the pleasure of being a Ritz-Carlton guest, but only after the pain of a bad experience she had flying -- crammed into coach -- in December. "I had to get to a conference in New York, but my flights were delayed over and over. I arrived seven hours later than I meant to, and if I never see O'Hare airport again, it'll be too soon," she says. That delay meant that she missed all her meetings and had time only to check into her room, change, and race to the conference's opening-night dinner.

"The gentleman who escorted me to my room at The Ritz-Carlton asked how my day was, and I told him, the poor guy," says Hanna. "He said he'd be happy to book me into the spa, or send up a masseuse, or even have a rose-petal bath drawn for me, and I'd have loved all of that. But there was no time." So he told Hanna to wait a moment, and then he returned with a scented candle. "I was so touched, I was speechless -- it was so thoughtful and helpful, like something a friend would do," says Hanna. "So I told the people at the desk. And now whenever I check into a Ritz-Carlton, there's a candle waiting for me."

Perhaps any hotel employee could figure out that a tired and frazzled guest could use a little help. And maybe any hotel company with a global database could keep track of a candle-loving customer. But making sure that every employee notices, cares, thinks, and acts as thoughtfully as the one who served Hanna -- well, that takes something special.

The Ritz-Carlton calls that something special "The Ritz-Carlton Mystique." It's a way of conceptualizing the brand's image and the ambience of each of the company's more than 70 worldwide locations. "Mystique" sounds enigmatic, but it's achieved through the most straightforward of methods: extremely close attention to performance data collection and a broad educational platform to deliver the findings.

Of course, all companies watch standard business measures and train employees. But The Ritz-Carlton watches things that most companies ignore, then uses what they learn in a unique way to create ongoing, top-to-bottom learning. "What we get from the data is essential," says John Timmerman, The Ritz-Carlton's vice president of operations. "Everything we learn we use to set strategies, and every strategy is communicated to our people. That learning environment is how we stay agile in an ever-changing world."

Beyond the data


Agility from education is a complex thing. A company has to determine what data to collect and how to collect it, but it also has to ascertain what to do with it. Get any of those things wrong, and the company trips over its own feet. So The Ritz-Carlton concentrates solely -- but obsessively -- on the factors that support the iconic brand.

"We really wanted to make sure that we not only had a great company but that we also had a sustainable company," says Timmerman. "So we started to benchmark different business models. We had to have the right outcome measures, so we developed certain business priority measurements. We call them our key success factors."


The factors are: mystique, employee engagement, customer engagement, product service excellence, community involvement, and financial performance. Most companies start with the financials, but The Ritz-Carlton finishes with them. "Financial performance is a result of the other metrics -- our key success factors," Timmerman says. "Everything else is a diagnostic metric."


The key success factors are the business priorities, and within those factors, The Ritz-Carlton reports on absolutely everything -- from the general morale of the restaurant staff in Bahrain to the number of scuffs on an elevator door in New York. Every day, the company's staff determines whether they're meeting the key success factors -- and if not, what needs to change.
Thus, each location and every one of The Ritz-Carlton's more than 38,000 employees turn in a river of quantitative and qualitative data points. Those bits of data, filtered by the requirements of the key success factors, are examined to give the company real-time information that it uses to set and evaluate the business priority measurements that make up the key success factors. It's a feedback loop of current information, starting and ending with the priorities.


"When executives focus on the mechanics, they miss the communication," says Timmerman. The key success factors feedback loop provides the communication that prevents The Ritz-Carlton's service from being mechanical -- and keeps it personal, for every person in every location every day.


How they strategize


The Ritz-Carlton starts with a flood of data, turns it into a powerful strategy, then targets specific actions to obtain its key success factors. But creating the right strategy to achieve the factors takes as much evaluation as analyzing the data in the first place.


First, The Ritz-Carlton defines the priorities that make up the success factors so that they're actionable and applicable to all employees. To draft the actions, a cross-functional team -- including senior corporate leaders, field representatives such as human resources managers, and rank and file employees -- reviews the plan and contributes insights. The company also uses the data to perform a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) analysis to adjust to new information.


"We look at where we want to be versus where we are today -- and where we see the trends on the horizon," says Timmerman. "Then we frame the key success factors. Then we ask for input with the SWOT process. It's a very defined process because it's our opinion that if you can't define it, you can't control it, you can't measure it, and you can't improve it."


The input of frontline staff -- the people who check guests in, serve food, and occasionally present scented candles -- into the SWOT process is crucial. Their insights are loaded into a global database so leaders can identify macro-level themes, market specifics, individual functions, and even corporate blind spots. As a result, the ladies and gentlemen, as all employees of The Ritz-Carlton are called, feel integrally involved in the business.


"For us, [integrating employee feedback into the process is the] true success because employees are personally engaged, they're fulfilled, they understand their contribution, and we're maximizing their talents," says Timmerman. "Involving [employees] in the SWOT process increases their engagement. And in my opinion, employee engagement measurements are a barometer of leadership effectiveness."


Once the company has determined the actions for achieving its success factors, the next step is actually putting them into action. That's the education factor.


How it works


A strategic plan will achieve its goals only if it's understood. And no plan will achieve its ends if it isn't measured and monitored. So, before long-range plans are put in place, The Ritz-Carlton goes to great -- some might say extreme -- lengths to teach and learn from employees. "To be agile in any marketplace, especially one that changes as rapidly as ours," says Timmerman, "means being a learning organization."


The Ritz-Carlton never misses an opportunity to teach. All new employees take part in a two-day cultural orientation before they start their jobs. Then, they are certified after the first 21 days and annually thereafter to ensure that they are delivering brand standards. Every employee in every location takes part in a daily pre-shift meeting in which actions, events, issues, and most importantly, The Ritz-Carlton philosophy, are discussed. In this way, no one is left in the dark about what a priority means -- and everyone understands his or her role in shaping it. "That helps us all adjust to changes," says Timmerman. "And change is constant."

A byproduct of daily learning is that the ladies and gentlemen who actually deal with guests are reminded to, coached on how to, and have a method for relaying customers' faint signals. Even the most subtle guest reactions are noticed and fed into the river of data that is distilled into the business priorities. As a result, the hotel can pick up on information that might have been easily missed and have a built-in plan for delivering that knowledge to others.


Furthermore, every hotel, function, and division has access to the key success factors as well as very specific revenue and profitability measures. Thus, every day, those ladies and gentlemen can see how well they're performing against their targets, each of which rolls up to the company metrics. "So what you have is complete alignment, [and employees can see how] all the key success factors that are at thirty thousand feet translate down to ground level," says Timmerman.


Yet none of these approaches are very long term. Through trial and error, The Ritz-Carlton realized that unless the issue involves a capital improvement, action items should be designed to be accomplished within 90 days. Furthermore, having learned in the strategy evaluation process that hotels do very well when they focus their attention on just a few things, The Ritz-Carlton makes sure every business unit has no more than three priorities.


"[Any objective] longer than ninety days turns into ongoing committees that drink coffee and produce meeting minutes but not a lot of results. And once you go beyond the top three priorities, you start to really diffuse your resources, your bandwidth," says Timmerman. So the company set a mandate that every employee must work on something to improve customer, employee, or financial outcomes, with visible results within 90 days.


Engaging employees
"At the end of the day, our bottom line is in the hands of our front line," Timmerman says, which is why the company is meticulous in hiring and developing its staff. The Ritz-Carlton aims to hire only the very best of the very best -- they select just 1 out of every 20 applicants, and that's after applicants are pre-screened for job requirements.

But fit to role is only part of the employee equation. The other is employee engagement, because engagement is the cornerstone of every Ritz-Carlton success factor. Employee engagement first came to the company's attention because of its correlation to performance measures that have profit consequences; Gallup research has shown that hotels with increased employee engagement scores have lower management turnover, fewer safety incidents, and higher profitability and productivity. (See "Feedback for Real" in the "See Also" area on this page.)

The Ritz-Carlton has conducted employee satisfaction measurements for years because it understood the crucial role that employees play in satisfying guests. But there's a big difference between engagement and satisfaction, so the company began using Gallup's Q12 employee engagement metric in 2006.

The Ritz-Carlton has an extraordinary number of engaged workers, with an overall engagement ranking in the upper quartile when compared to all the workgroups Gallup has studied. And its employee turnover is low enough to be legendary: a mere 18% compared to the luxury-hotel industry average of 158% for line-level workers, 136% for supervisors, and 129% for managers. "We like turnover to be between fifteen and eighteen percent," says Timmerman, "because fresh voices are valuable too."


Engaging guests


The other side of the employee engagement coin is customer engagement. Like employee engagement, customer engagement has strong linkages to important profit outcomes: Gallup research has shown that fully engaged customers deliver a 23% premium over average customers in share of wallet, profitability, revenue, and relationship growth. (See "Manage Your Human Sigma" in the "See Also" area on this page.)
When it first measured customer engagement in 2004, The Ritz-Carlton scored above the 80th percentile against business-to-consumer companies in Gallup's customer engagement database. For most companies, this would be an outstanding result, but outstanding wasn't good enough for The Ritz-Carlton -- or, frankly, for the extremely selective luxury hotel market. So the hotelier used what it learned from the success factor feedback loop to teach the ladies and gentlemen to provide the perfect, and perfectly subjective, engaging experiences. And it worked: The Ritz-Carlton's overall customer engagement score now ranks above the 90th percentile.

HumanSigma


But a few years ago, The Ritz-Carlton stopped managing customer and employee engagement separately. The company understood the dynamics and profit potential of employee engagement and customer engagement, which is why it made each a key success factor. But the performance potential of managing both factors holistically -- a process Gallup calls HumanSigma -- caused the company to reconsider its approach. "Our employee and customer engagement scores are as important as our financial data," says Timmerman.

Gallup research shows that companies that score above the 50th percentile on either employee or customer engagement tend to deliver 70% higher financial results than companies that score poorly on both measures. But companies that score above the 50th percentile on both employee and customer engagement measures outperform companies below the 50th percentile on both measures by 240%. (See "How Employee and Customer Engagement Interact" in the "See Also" area on this page.)


That's a significant performance differential, so The Ritz-Carlton leaves little to chance regarding HumanSigma. Senior leaders incorporate HumanSigma targets into their corporate strategy and action plan, and they review those targets like they review sales and financial results. "We wanted employee and customer engagement to have the same importance as sales, marketing, and financial goals, so we made it part of the senior leadership agenda," says Timmerman. "We integrate that data into our leadership performance profile, so we look at customer relationship management as part of the leadership metrics. That way, employee and customer engagement really get traction."


Candles

So leaders carefully track HumanSigma, which personally affects individual employees, so that they can perform according to the business priority measures, thus ensuring the key success factors, which maintain the world-famous brand. And all of this changes a little bit, every day, to fit the needs of customers.


It's mind-bogglingly complex, but the end result is quite simple. One cold day in December, an exhausted traveler's day was transformed by the gift of a candle from a thoughtful employee. That candle required the compassion of a single employee, but was predicted on millions of data points. That's the quintessence of business agility.

And though that candle cost very little, it's worth a fortune. Hanna was enchanted by The Ritz-Carlton Mystique, as are all people. But that candle caught her at a deeply emotional level, making her a passionately engaged customer. The hotel can count on getting all of her future business, which means several thousand dollars of extra revenue, assuming she remains as engaged as she is today (which, she says, is "a pretty safe bet").

If even a tenth of its guests experience the same sort of magic that Hanna felt, the company's careful data analysis will pay for itself. If a quarter of them do, The Ritz-Carlton's commitment to engagement will return a magical experience for its guests -- and an enormously healthy return on investment to the company.

Datos Profesionales