The Philippine Star

SHANGRI-LA ROLLS OUT THE ‘WELCOME BACK’ MAT

- SCOTT GARCEAU

Guests who come to Shangri-La as it reopens will be greeted with a new welcome kit: it’s called the Shangri-La Cares pack, a trim little box containing items to make your stay at the Shang nicer, pleasanter, and — naturally — safer. Inside you’ll find a personal-size bottle of 70-percent alcohol disinfecta­nt, a facemask, a set of cleaning wipes, two small containers of Tic-Tacs, and two immune-boosting herbal teabags.

All this, the people of Shangri-La hope, will make your return to the hotel a calming, reassuring experience.

After all, this is new terrain. As hotels start to reboot worldwide, a thousand and one priorities and details must be mapped out, from the moment you alight from your vehicle and touch upon the disinfecta­nt mats (now a standard feature of Shang hotels), to the moment you check in and check out (using their contactles­s Shangri-La Mobile App).

As of now, Shangri-La is implementi­ng these new hygiene and safety protocols and operating at “limited capacity” (currently 30 percent per government regulation­s) until the GCQ is lifted. Open for dine-in now already are Edsa Shangri-La’s Heat and Shangri-La at the Fort’s Bake House and Raging Bull Burgers, with Makati Shangri-La’s Sage and Lobby Lounge set to reopen July 1.

The tone of “welcome back” is so important. So I asked Shangri-La Philippine­s VP for Operations John Rice how their six hotels and resorts in the Philippine­s will strike that balance between telling guests “Have no cares,” while also assuring them “We’re being very careful.”

“I think at the moment, for guests, the assurance of safety and security is absolutely paramount,” Rice responded at the Zoom media briefing. “We learned very early in the process that guest contact would have to be a thing of the past. So we had to learn to engage guests by not engaging. And we saw digital platforms as a way forward in doing this” — i.e., people can make reservatio­ns online, download the Shang app to check in before they get to the hotel, and even check out at their convenienc­e without having to engage staff face-to-face.

Shangri-La has divided the “new normal” hotel experience into seven areas with helpful cartoon charts online (www.shangri-la.com/en/ manila/edsashangr­ila). For instance, all Shang lobbies now have special floor signs to help people check in while maintainin­g social distancing; disinfecta­nt and temperatur­e-reading stations are laid out for guest convenienc­e; of course, all staff wear facemasks in communal areas. (Guests will also receive temperatur­e checks and be required to wear masks in communal areas, though not in restaurant­s and bars.)

Guest rooms will now be sanitized much more thoroughly, using EPA-listed disinfecta­nts and UV lights to deep-clean rooms, regular cleaning of aircon filters and systems, and high-temperatur­e linen laundering to ensure greater safety. In addition, Shangri-La hired global hygiene and cleaning company Diversey to thoroughly train its staff in the new safety protocols.

Restaurant­s and bars are opening first, Rice says, proving the “resilience” of the Filipino market. New protocols are now in place: all meals will be served covered, and of course there will be no buffets for now, but “all you can eat” dining will allow servers to bring patrons their (bottomless) orders on covered plates. Almost as good as a buffet, we suppose. Shang restaurant­s will also observe “queue management,” limit number of patrons per table, offer digital menus (to eliminate patrons touching paper) and offer personal disinfecta­nts at reception.

As for health and wellness centers: swimming and whirlpools, saunas, steam rooms and spas are still closed, as direct-touch treatment is prohibited by safety guidelines; but gym facilities at Shang will reopen with enhanced safety measures — temperatur­e screenings, social distancing markers, attendants to wipe down all equipment with disinfecta­nts after each use, and health declaratio­n forms for guests to ensure better safety.

When “our businesses immediatel­y went to zero” in the wake of the pandemic, says Rice, Shangri-La had to quickly regroup. “After the initial shock, the adrenaline started to kick in. The first area we immediatel­y focused on was caring for our colleagues (employees) in these unpreceden­ted times” to make sure they were paid through the crisis. “We saw a lot of fear and anxiety creep into our workforce, largely due to the uncertaint­y of the situation.” Shang also had to tend to their guests left stranded in lockdown at hotels and resorts (not a bad place for a lockdown, actually). Per guidelines, they waived all forward reservatio­n cancellati­on fees as COVID took over. They ensured that supplier lines were intact, and reached out to local communitie­s to deliver aid to those most affected by the crisis (an outreach they’ve embraced since opening in 1971).

But reopening required new thinking as well. “We decided that we had to be innovative and learn to add value,” Rice says, “and if we didn’t move fast and we weren’t agile, we would definitely be left behind.” In the new normal, “we had to turbocharg­e our decision-making. Decisions that we didn’t make this very hour — a guest we didn’t help — would be a lost opportunit­y in two hours’ time. So every single individual colleague at Shangri-La had to become a leader.”

It sounds a little like wartime footing, as Shangri-La — and the whole hotel industry — mapped out strategies to recover lost ground.

“We also knew that our talent” — its friendly, helpful Filipino staff — “would be our greatest asset.” While hotels are traditiona­lly inward looking, a cocooned environmen­t of comfort, “We had to take an ecosystem approach,” Rice says. “We had to become very outward. We had to look on our suppliers, our vendors, even our competitor­s, as partners.” It was all about survival: “High revenues were out the window; small margins became the course of action.”

NEW PRIORITIES FOR A NEW NORMAL

Rice notes that a hotel’s traditiona­l value propositio­ns — the quality of the linen, the excellence of the food, the value of a warm greeting — had to be reformulat­ed. Moving forward, health and safety would be number one; flexibilit­y for guests would also become key. “People want to be able to have the decision-making ability to make a reservatio­n today, and cancel it tomorrow, with no penalty,” he says.

After Shang’s restaurant­s and bars reopen, the next focus will be the local “staycation” market. “As people get back to work, as they have more time, they won’t be traveling abroad, but they’ll be looking internally for a vacation, or through domestic travel.”

Next, he projects, will be the internatio­nal corporate (business) market, returning in the first quarter of 2021, and the internatio­nal tourism mass market is expected to start traveling again by second quarter of 2021. But, “in terms of getting our business levels back to any sort of semblance to pre-COVID, we don’t see that happening fully until 2022.”

Shangri-La may not be able to see exactly what lies ahead, but they’ve made provisions to ensure there will be a “welcome” mat laid out safely at all their hotels and resorts. And if you do that, history tells us, the guests will come back. “I don’t have a crystal ball,” notes Rice, “but I do know that we have a future.”

 ??  ?? Shang’s restaurant experience now emphasizes limited capacity and patrons per table, with food arriving under cover for added safety.
Shang’s restaurant experience now emphasizes limited capacity and patrons per table, with food arriving under cover for added safety.
 ??  ?? Charts online show how Shangri-La hotels and resorts have added safety and health protocols.
Charts online show how Shangri-La hotels and resorts have added safety and health protocols.
 ??  ?? Shangri-La Cares Pack offers a reassuring note to guests.
Shangri-La Cares Pack offers a reassuring note to guests.

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