Hence, part of team empowerment means trusting that associates and managers will dutifully respond to emails addressed only to them so that colleagues or superiors don’t need to be copied to keep everyone accountable. Aside from subscribing from everything, this policy shift may be the second biggest action to reducing email volume and thereafter everyone’s stress levels.
Next, part of normalizing solo time means that managers should have the freedom to ignore their inboxes for several hours at a time to concentrate on specific assignments, like crafting a memo that articulates a topic eloquently and succinctly with clearly identifiable next steps. Of course, there are a handful of apps you can encourage your teams to use that help train one’s focus.
This is also where project management software comes in, giving any company the ability to compartmentalize any project by tasks and subtasks so that this well-written memo needn’t even generate a single email but merely uploaded it to the right thread. Such process management software is also great for tracking meeting agendas and meeting follow-up activities.
Conclusion
While it would be great to prognosticate about, for instance, how future-forward technologies like BingAI or the metaverse willimpact travel search and guest booking behavior, what’s far more important at this time is to take stock of the fundamental workflows that will liberate your teams’ time so that they can take advantage of the latest and greatest.
The world isn’t slowing down, and the only way for any hotel to keep pace is to start moving faster. From our consultancy’s TNT Audits, we know that means more efficient meetings, more efficient communications, and more efficient decision-making. While achieving this often involves tech, like nearly every other aspect of hospitality, it’s the people that ultimately matter the most.