Housekeeping Didn't Come

Kilimanjaro Doesn't Care About Your Job Title

6 min · I går
episode Kilimanjaro Doesn't Care About Your Job Title cover

Beskrivelse

Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/fan_mail/new] Your job title won’t get you to the summit, and it won’t save a shift when the lobby is full and reality blows up the forecast. From a Stonebreaker Hotel introduction in Fayetteville to a hard-earned lesson at 19,341 feet on Mount Kilimanjaro, I draw a straight line between extreme environments and everyday hospitality leadership. Kilimanjaro is the ultimate meritocracy. It doesn’t care if you’re a CEO, a general manager, or a first-time supervisor. Up there, everyone becomes equal: tired, dusty, and moving one deliberate step at a time. The guides say “slowly, slowly,” and that mindset is exactly how the best hotel operations and restaurant operations stay stable. Not panic. Not barking orders. Consistent, disciplined execution that protects the guest experience, shift after shift. We also dig into the leadership trap I see all the time: thinking authority creates capability. It doesn’t. Capability creates authority. The climb exposes it fast, and hospitality exposes it every day. Progress comes from preparation, listening, adapting, and being willing to accept help, because nobody summits alone and no guest experience is delivered by one person. Humility becomes a strength, and it keeps expertise from turning into arrogance when the plan meets real-world conditions. If you care about hospitality management, operational excellence, and building a team culture that can handle pressure without losing heart, press play. Subscribe, share this with a manager who needs it, and leave a review with your take: where does “slowly, slowly” show up in your operation? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/support]

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Alle episoder

43 Episoder

episode Kilimanjaro Doesn't Care About Your Job Title cover

Kilimanjaro Doesn't Care About Your Job Title

Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/fan_mail/new] Your job title won’t get you to the summit, and it won’t save a shift when the lobby is full and reality blows up the forecast. From a Stonebreaker Hotel introduction in Fayetteville to a hard-earned lesson at 19,341 feet on Mount Kilimanjaro, I draw a straight line between extreme environments and everyday hospitality leadership. Kilimanjaro is the ultimate meritocracy. It doesn’t care if you’re a CEO, a general manager, or a first-time supervisor. Up there, everyone becomes equal: tired, dusty, and moving one deliberate step at a time. The guides say “slowly, slowly,” and that mindset is exactly how the best hotel operations and restaurant operations stay stable. Not panic. Not barking orders. Consistent, disciplined execution that protects the guest experience, shift after shift. We also dig into the leadership trap I see all the time: thinking authority creates capability. It doesn’t. Capability creates authority. The climb exposes it fast, and hospitality exposes it every day. Progress comes from preparation, listening, adapting, and being willing to accept help, because nobody summits alone and no guest experience is delivered by one person. Humility becomes a strength, and it keeps expertise from turning into arrogance when the plan meets real-world conditions. If you care about hospitality management, operational excellence, and building a team culture that can handle pressure without losing heart, press play. Subscribe, share this with a manager who needs it, and leave a review with your take: where does “slowly, slowly” show up in your operation? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/support]

I går6 min
episode S1E39: “Middle Management: Where Strategy Meets Reality… and Reality Wins.” cover

S1E39: “Middle Management: Where Strategy Meets Reality… and Reality Wins.”

Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/fan_mail/new] Big strategies only work when someone can translate them into real shifts, real guests, and real constraints. We make the case that middle management is the leadership engine where culture, judgment, and execution actually live.  • middle management as the translation layer between strategy and operations  • “operational gravity” as a practical check on executive plans  • culture revealed through daily decisions under pressure  • hiring for judgment over pure technical skill  • calm communication upward and downward as a core leadership skill  • AI and automation as tools that support leadership, not substitutes  • guest recovery as a human moment technology cannot replicate  • why leadership inside the building beats location over time  • how strong organizations invest in, listen to, and promote managers thoughtfully  • feedback traveling upward to prevent solving the wrong problems Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/support]

8. april 20266 min
episode The Students Ran the Show… and No One Panicked (Which Was Suspicious) cover

The Students Ran the Show… and No One Panicked (Which Was Suspicious)

Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/fan_mail/new] There is a moment in hospitality when you realize you are not in charge anymore and it is the best possible outcome. I just watched it happen at Smash, a full-scale student-run event at the University of Arkansas where everything from marketing, budgeting, decor, and logistics to food and beverage execution was planned and delivered by the team on the floor. The theme was Arkansas Derby, complete with big hats, high energy, and even miniature horse racing, but the real story is what the operation proved under real guest pressure.  I break down why this kind of event management is more than a feel-good campus project. It is a live demonstration of scalable leadership in hotels, restaurants, and event spaces: service flow that stays clean, transitions that stay smooth, and decisions that get made without someone hovering. The night also includes a meaningful handoff moment that shows what mentorship looks like when it turns into ownership, not dependence.  Then I share three practical takeaways for operators and executives: how to spot when you have built a bottleneck instead of a team, why training is not the finish line if you never teach context and judgment, and how workplace culture shows up the second leadership steps away. If you care about hospitality leadership, operational excellence, and building teams that can think and adapt in real time, this one is for you. Subscribe, share it with a manager who needs it, and leave a review then tell me: what would happen in your operation if you disappeared for one night? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/support]

18. mars 20265 min
episode Just Fix It - the most terrifying phrase and the most liberating. cover

Just Fix It - the most terrifying phrase and the most liberating.

Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/fan_mail/new] “Just fix it” is one of those leadership lines that lands with a thud because it’s so plain and so loaded. When a guest problem hits, that sentence can either spark fast, confident service recovery or expose a culture where talented people are stuck waiting for permission. We talk about the difference between authority and titles, and why the best hospitality operations don’t rely on hierarchy to move decisions forward. We dig into a core idea every hotel manager, restaurant leader, and frontline supervisor should know: speed of service isn’t only about staffing levels, it’s about decision distance. How far does a choice have to travel before someone can act? If the answer is “up the ladder and back down,” your guests are paying for that delay with their patience, their reviews, and their loyalty. From there we get practical: defining decision boundaries so teams know what they can comp, fix, move, or upgrade without asking; rewarding initiative so ownership becomes normal; and tolerating reasonable mistakes so empowerment isn’t just a poster on the wall. Guests don’t experience your organizational chart, they experience your response time and that response time becomes your culture. If you want a faster, calmer, more guest-focused operation, hit play, then subscribe, share the episode with a service leader you trust, and leave a review with the one decision you’d push closer to the frontline. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/support]

18. mars 20265 min
episode You Don’t Have a Staffing Problem. You Have a Design Problem. cover

You Don’t Have a Staffing Problem. You Have a Design Problem.

Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/fan_mail/new] We challenge the comforting myth that more people and more training fix operational pain, and show why process design and culture set the real limits. Rob shares how to map friction, push authority down, audit language, and lead under stress so teams act without waiting. • the myth of understaffing as a universal fix • how rigid roles and unclear ownership create bottlenecks • why training fails without process redesign and cultural alignment • stress tests for authority, ownership, and escalation • the difference between staffing as a lever and design as architecture • four practical moves: map friction, push authority, audit language, examine culture • building operators who design better, not just hire faster Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2507287/support]

10. mars 20266 min