Top 5 Renovation Tips to Save Time and Money Renovating a property is always a nerve-racking prospect, but it’s critical nonetheless. Essentially, if a property is not up to snuff in the digital age, it simply cannot compete against newer, or more recently renovated hotels. But in many cases, the biggest challenge is not […]
Happy 40th Anniversary to Us!
Happy New Year, and welcome to 2017. This is a very exciting year for both the hospitality industry, and us as well here at The Refinishing Touch. The lodging business is on a fantastic journey, and this year we expect the hotel industry to see more renovations than at any time in history. With so […]
Why Designers Must Consider Refinishing Furniture
We all know you designers out there love to design. It’s what you were born to do. Here in the hotel industry, you’re helping define the next generation of hotels by developing looks and feels with a distinct point of view. And we thank you for that. Without you designers, we’d still be […]
Earn Millennial Traveler Loyalty
Millennials are a fickle bunch. Partly because they’re a group still trying to figure out their likes and dislikes, and partly because the world in which they grew up is vastly different than the ones their Generation X and Baby Boomer brethren experienced in their formative years. But there are ways to better connect with […]
Save Like a Boss: Hoteliers’ Thoughts on Cost Containment
It was time for the hotel industry’s midyear check-up as the most powerful lodging industry leaders headed to New York for the annual NYU Hospitality Investment Conference. This event focuses mostly on the financial side of the business, so for two days, the NY Marriott Marquis became the epicenter of the hotel universe. If you want to get deals done this was the place to be.
It seems the predominant thought on the collective mind of attendees is how to save, save, save. Though the industry is still delivering outsized performance, smart hoteliers are already thinking about an eventual industry downturn. Not in a “Hey, let’s panic” sort of way. It was more about being smart and preparing for the future.
That’s why these folks are starting to think about how to save like a boss, and why many more realize it’s critical to find smarter, less expensive ways to renovate their hotels that also create memorable guest experiences.
Here are our top reasons shared at the NYU Hospitality Investment Conference why hoteliers are starting to think about lowering their expenses.
Zika
Irrational panic about this mosquito born virus is starting to bite into traveler’s desire to get out and explore new places. While we think most concerns are misplaced, the reality is if more people panic it could start to hurt industry profitability. Remember the Bird Flu and H1N1? They made headlines and hurt the travel economy though both were essentially imagined threats.
Isolationism
One of the ways hotels have been able to stay full and profitable is by a record number of overseas visitors coming here to spend their money. And lots of it, too. International visitors typically stay longer and spend more money per day. But with the current political climate and chatter about building walls and curtailing visa waiver programs, your hotel may suffer because of political shenanigans.
“Travel is a perception driven business. If they think it will be a hassle, they simply won’t make the trip,” said Co-Chairman of the Board and Office of the President, Loews Corporation, Chairman Loews Hotels & Resorts. “The rise of political turbulence and political rhetoric is creating the misguided idea the fortress America is one the rise. Pulling back from the rest of the world is simply not an option.”
Slowing Growth
The hotel business is enjoying its longest stretch in recorded history of increased profitability. Meaning, more money is being earned by hotels now over the previous month, on average, for the last six years.
However, rate of revenue per available room (RevPAR) growth is slowing. That’s a clear signal it’s time to figure out ways to cut back on expenses where possible. Whether it’s renegotiating vendor contracts, realigning corporate structure, or refinishing or re-engineering furniture rather than needlessly buying new pieces.
Disruption
The nerve-inducing Airbnb is still driving hoteliers nuts as they try to figure out the true impact of this encroaching disruptor.
“People are willing to accept non-traditional lodging stays more than ever. Their needs have gone beyond the typical housing product, why let them go somewhere else?” said Steve Joyce, President & CEO of Choice Hotels International.
– – –
For more information on The Refinishing Touch and how we help hotel owners, developers and designers reimagine spaces by reinventing their furnishings, contact us online, call (800) 523-9448, or email us at sales@therefinishingtouch.com.
10 (Extremely Serious) Reasons to Reinvent Your Furniture Now
At The Refinishing Touch, we take guestroom design seriously. No joke. We want your hotel to stand out from the competition. A well-constructed furniture asset management program makes all difference to your guests and your bottom line. So straight from our home office in Alpharetta, GA, here are the Top 10 reasons partnering with The […]
Counting the benefits of furniture recycling
Last week, Canada’s ‘Daily Commercial News’ wrote about the need for asset recycling to be a core practice for public organizations. This followed the publication of a report by RCCAO about asset use in Ontario titled: ‘Building new infrastructure on the foundation of existing public assets‘.
Whether you are talking about furniture assets in hotel rooms, dorm rooms, military barracks or government administration buildings, there is a strong and undeniable argument for asset recycling.
“Asset recycling is a concept that basically speaks to leveraging the existing investments that taxpayers have in public assets. It tries to find a way to make them perform better and drive more value from that past investment,” explains Michael Fenn.
And that’s exactly what it is. Asset recycling is not just about protecting existing assets; it’s about leveraging existing assets. It offers numerous benefits, although all too often its supporters claim a single one. So we thought we would share the multiple benefits we see day-in, day-out from asset management best practices:
It’s sustainable, and adds to ‘green’ credentials. In the four decades that we’ve been advising and delivering furniture asset management best practices, the need for government organizations and commercial businesses to demonstrate sustainability and to share their green credentials has certainly grown. Asset management is an undeniably sustainable practice: it slashes carbon emissions, reduces landfill waste and decreases consumption of new resources.
It drives stakeholder value. As existing assets are leveraged through recycling, re-use or remanufacturing, more value is delivered to stakeholders. This includes shareholders, taxpayers, citizens, travelers or students.
Budgets are saved. Government organizations and higher education are under budget pressure. Hotels are constantly looking for ways to reduce spend while maintaining standards. Across the board businesses and institutions need to protect the bottom line. We repeatedly see up to eighty percent of budgets saved through furniture asset management best practices.
Budgets can be re-allocated. This applies to each industry that we work with, including government, education and hospitality. The stress of prioritizing tight budgets is a headache for any general, facility or resources manager. Being able to save budget and spend it in areas that deliver greater returns, competitive differentiators and benefits to citizens, users or customers, is a sound business decision.
Want to find out more about the returns your organization could reap from furniture asset management? Then please contact us today: marketing@therefinishingtouch.com.
Furniture asset management best practices: Working onsite
In a recent post we discussed one of the cornerstones of furniture asset management; inventory management. At The Refinishing Touch we not only provide refinishing, remanufacturing and re-upholstery services, we also help our customers to manage and track those furnishings and fixtures as capital assets, using web-based asset management tools.
When TRT was founded back in 1977, we became known for providing environmentally-safe furniture refinishing services, but times have changed considerably. Today our business is about managing assets, helping our customers to manage expenditure and their business continuity needs.
What makes us different isn’t just the longevity of our materials and finishes. It’s our ability to work on-site, to ensure our customers stay open and productive. The industries in which we work: hospitality, education and government, have little tolerance for downtime and rooms cannot be out of use for days or weeks. Furniture is a vital part of these operations, and it needs refinishing, re-upholstery or remanufacturing because the organization is busy and successful. Creating downtime therefore has a direct calculable dollar cost. If a hotel, public sector organization, or educational facility has rooms of action it causes problems,so we work safely and responsibly onsite.
Our onsite approach is efficient in terms of both cost and carbon. We know that the alternative, transporting furniture offsite, is a waste of time, money and carbon dioxide. We are able to work onsite when many large refinishing companies cannot. This comes as a result of four decades of experience doing just that. We know better than anyone how to minimize disruption, move seamlessly from room to room, and how to ensure that those rooms are back in operation quickly.
Using non-toxic processes are also crucial in working onsite. We don’t use solvents in our processes and our non-toxic lacquers don’t contain dangerous Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs). They are hypoallergenic, safe and clean, because we understand how important it is to use safe, responsible products.
Our approach to furniture asset management certainly guarantees indoor air quality and safety. But in business terms, it means quicker processes, lower labor costs and a quicker turnaround on refinished rooms for everybody involved.
Contact us at marketing@thefinishingtouch.com to discuss how onsite furniture asset management can save your organization time, money and downtime.
Best practices in furniture asset management: Inventory management
In previous posts we have shared our views on furniture asset management as environmental and fiscally responsible behavior. We discussed the need to maximize opportunities to reuse resources, minimize waste, and to take stock and understand the value of current furniture assets.
Which brings us to one of the cornerstones of furniture asset management; inventory management. We help our customers to gain visibility and to track furnishings, fixtures and equipment as capital assets with our Global Furniture Asset Management, or GFAM, web-based asset management tool. If you’d like to hear more about this, please contact our team.
Whichever system you use, it’s important to ensure that someone takes ownership of furniture inventory management. We typically find that this is managed by facilities management teams, but it’s important that the ownership is supported and encouraged by general management and also by finance. Furniture is a considerable investment for any college, hotel or government organization, and it’s important that it is tracked.
Establishing an inventory management system for furniture starts with an active database. Note the highlight on the word active. We talk to many organizations keen to discuss how much they can save through furniture asset management that have outdated or non-existent databases of existing furniture assets. They aren’t sure what furniture they have, where it is or what condition it is in. The old adage ‘you can’t manage what you can’t measure’ is certainly true in furniture asset management.
One obvious challenge of managing furniture is the ease with which pieces can be reconfigured and moved. This means it is important to track them and to have someone with an assigned responsibility to keep the database updated. Audits are essential. If your organization doesn’t have an updated database of its furniture, then you need to do a furniture audit. Map out, room-by-room and building-by-building, the furniture assets you have, where they are, what they are and their condition. Best practice involves associating the date and cost of acquisition, a practice which your finance team will appreciate. It shows how best furniture asset management practices such as refinishing, re-upholstery and remanufacturing can save up to 80 percent of budgets.
When tracking furniture we consider location, condition and evaluation of existing assets as three key criteria that need to be consistently tracked. There’s no need to have a complicated system as this is about simple quality control measures that will determine where money has been spent, where it can be saved and how budgets can be protected.
Finally, it’s important to consider the furniture asset management best practice of buying high-quality furniture in the first place. Increasingly we find that clients turn to us before they make new purchasing decisions, to ask us for our opinions of which product they should buy; which materials, which finish. We understand the importance of helping our clients to make a best value decision at the moment of purchase, to give then long-term investment protection.
For more details of how we approach inventory management in the real world or to hear about our Global Furniture Asset Management (GFAM) tool, please contact us atmarketing@thefinishingtouch.com.
Sector snapshot: Saving trees, money and landfill in the government sector
Government is a market we know very well. For over 37 years our government client base has comprised local and federal government and agencies – including the Executive Office of the President, U.S. Congress, the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Army, the U.S. Navy, and the U.S. Coastguard. We have applied the best practices of furniture asset management across these organizations including on-site refinishing, re-upholstery and remanufacturing at administrative buildings, offices, barracks, and housing facilities.
The U.S. Government continues to demonstrate a commitment to green and sustainable activities. In the past week the President signed an Executive Order for federal government to cut greenhouse emissions by 40 percent over the next decade compared to 2008 levels, and to increase the use of renewable energy by 30 percent.
In the announcement the federal government emphasized the executive order’s dual benefits. First the financial benefits, with the press release stating that the new initiatives will save taxpayers up to $18 billion in energy costs. Then the green benefits, with the saving an estimated 26 million metric tons of greenhouse gases – equivalent to taking 5.5 million cars off the road for a year.
We know that whether we are working with government organizations, or with hotels or college campuses, that the dual returns of financial and green benefits is a winner. This is why furniture asset management is a winning strategy. As a General Services Administration (GSA)-certified contractor we have refinished, reupholstered and remanufactured tens of thousands furniture and fittings, and shown hundreds of government organizations how to save on budgets, protect assets and reduce environmental impact. This is why we are asked to share our views with the government press, are trusted by all levels of government, and why we were awarded the Evergreen Award by the GSA.
We’ve previously calculated that the federal government, with its 500,000 buildings, could save more than $714 million through the broad and well-structured application of furniture asset management best practices and cut carbon dioxide emissions by a factor of a hundred.
For the government this isn’t just about best financial practices and demonstrable sustainability – it’s also about public accountability, leadership and setting a good example.
If you want to understand all the benefits of furniture asset management, get in touch with us today.