Social Media is not a place to complain.  It is a place to resolve problems.

Oh wait.

I just had a guest that we caught mid experience through her online review… resolved and righted the entire experience on site so that the latter half of the stay was perfect.  This woman decided to go on and review it based off the first half, suggesting “had I not complained” it would have remained that way the entire stay.

Oooooh… that is so unfair.

News flash to the grumpy reviewers… *WE WANT YOU TO COMPLAIN*.  Of course we do… while you are on site, or even if we catch your review during your stay, and we see you unhappy, dissatisfied, or angry… we are going to attempt to do something about it.  It is sort of in our interest to have you pleasured, versus consternated while gritting one’s teeth.

Typically, as hoteliers, we all dream and hope of the day there is nothing to complain about.  But that day won’t come, and if we think it has it means we aren’t listening.

SO… if there *are* issues, it is our business model and in our self respecting interests to want to resolve that situation.  To have a business dialed in enough to recognize the issues with one’s experience and resolve them seems to me to be a rolemodel of a business; catering to consumers, and listening to demand. 

For someone to go home after the experience and pretend nothing had actually happened but a miserable stay seems short shrift and unfair.  Of course, I am a skeptic enough to suggest we may have failed miserably, or the gaffe was insurmountable.  I am also a realist enough to simply suggest there are some miserable people out there that don’t feel they have a voice.

But that would be wildly unfair in favour of the consumer.  The client is always right as the adage has gone from century to century.

In regards to reviews… we love them.  I am not saying they are worthless by any means.  Of course, review us!  Don’t hold back!  We take anything and everything *ANYONE* writes straight to the heart.  We think about it, talk about it, and learn from it.  We have made changes because of it.  So it is effective.

But just remember business is a two sided affair, and for it to work most efficiently we would love to know what you are having problems with, instead of waiting and venting your frustrations through a stoic keyboard.

If you do the latter, there is no guarantee that your review will ever reach us with the depth of space that is the online reviewing portal world.  Even if we do see your placid words on a lonely page, we are ill prepared to relate to the depth of sentiment or for those words to properly intone your experience.

We will try.  No doubt about it.  I am scouring the internet for people’s experiences as we speak.

But if you want a sure fire way to alert a business to a problem, get someone to listen, and resolve professional issues to your satisfaction… don’t hesitate to actually talk to a human while you are there.

Completely novel concept, to be sure.

Hell I have fun being employed to do what I do… but actually fixing the problem seems a better outcome than us retroactively realizing we had a chance to make someone happy and missing it.

It works for both sides a lot better in every possible way….

Let us know of any issues, inconveniences, thoughts, comments, etc while *AT* a property…. instead of waiting to vent your disappointment through tapping out idle words into a machine lacking listening skills.

Just a thought.

We want to be the best, and if we aren’t we want to get better.  Alerting us to problems long since passed doesn’t seem like the most efficient way of helping us to get there.

Again… some react in favour of the brand.  Others react in favour of the consumer.  This online reviewing world gets some heated opinions.

But what happened to the old days where people in business actually dealt with issues and talked face to face about things?  I am as modern as the next guy… but dammit we need professional consumers again.

Just the odd rant now and again.  Thanks for pondering along with me.  I felt those eyes shifting over the lines.  Cheers to you!

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