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  • Icon: Mark Hoplamazian, CEO, Hyatt Hotels

    Icon: Mark Hoplamazian, CEO, Hyatt Hotels
    SmartPlanet.com

    July 30, 2013
    By Heather Clancy

    Running an international hotel chain was the furthest thing from Mark
    Hoplamazian's mind when he took on a graveyard shift at a two-star
    tourist hotel on Edgware Road in London.

    The young Harvard undergraduate student just wanted to earn enough
    spending money to travel Europe after his exchange term at the London
    School of Economics. But that six-month stint as check-in
    clerk/sometime security guard/general go-fer proved invaluable 30
    years later, when Hoplamazian was tapped virtually out of nowhere by
    the Pritzker family to run the venerable Hyatt Hotels.

    `There were certain people in the hotel that were really bringing a
    lot of themselves to what they did every day, and there were a couple
    of people that I interacted with who were punching the clock and
    basically were there to get by,' Hoplamazian, now 49, recalls during
    an early evening phone call wedged into his schedule on an early July
    road trip.

    `There was a huge difference in my experience with those individuals
    and also guests' experiences with those individuals,' he continues.`
    So my own personal goal in life was that you've got to be something
    that you really have some passion for but that also makes you feel
    like you want to bring a piece of yourself to what you are doing.'

    Trained as an analyst and numbers guy, the financial whiz channeled
    that memory when he took over as Hyatt's president and CEO in
    2006. Plucked from within the Pritzker Organization, where he had
    helped manage the family's real estate portfolio and holdings since
    1989 and was considered somewhat of an honorary family member, the
    intention was for Hoplamazian to find a permanent CEO. The Pritzker
    family sought someone who could negotiate family politics and create a
    more cohesive identity across the hodgepodge of hotel brands. Six
    months into the search, Hoplamazian realized he wanted the job. `My
    primary motivator was the people,' he remembers.

    Seven years later, the Hyatt hospitality brand encompasses 508
    properties across 46 countries worldwide (as of March 2013) that cater
    to business and luxury travelers. It added 22 hotels during 2012,
    including the hip luxury property, Andaz Amsterdam Prinsengracht, in
    the Netherlands; and its first select-service hotels (that's extended
    stay for the layperson) outside the U.S. market in Costa Rica and
    India. Over the past decade, Hyatt has opened almost 200 new
    properties - an investment of close to $10 billion. There are now
    seven distinct brands under its umbrella generating $4 billion in
    annual revenue.

    For perspective, that's much smaller than the competition - Hilton
    boasts approximately 3,800 properties while Marriott International has
    around 3,700.

    But Hyatt's leadership is focused less on size than on becoming the
    `preferred brand for our colleagues, guests and owners,' as
    Hoplamazian and Hyatt Chairman Thomas Pritzker write in the company's
    2012 annual report. `We believe that our culture and the relationships
    amongst our colleagues ultimately position the Hyatt brand to
    represent human care - and to go beyond service to our guests as a
    hotel company,' they tell shareholders.

    The latest illustration of this philosophy is `Ready to Thrive,' a new
    component of the Hyatt Thrive corporate social responsibility
    program. The idea is to encourage local literacy and career
    development programs in communities where Hyatt is managing or
    developing properties. The plan will include the United States but
    emerging markets are getting the initial attention.

    During the first year, the program will focus on Brazil (among other
    places); a Grand Hyatt is scheduled to open in Rio de Janeiro in
    2015. The company has made a $750,000 commitment over the next two
    years to training. In partnership with the Youth Career Initiative,
    Hyatt has run similar programs at its hotels in Sao Paulo; Warsaw,
    Poland; Amman, Jordan; Mumbai, India; and Cancun, Mexico. So far,
    those hotels have wound up hiring 45 percent of the graduates.

    `You get amazing results when you put kids coming out of difficult
    neighborhoods or family environments and you put them together with
    people who also may have started in those same places, those
    neighborhoods,' Hoplamazian says. `It gives them an example of what it
    may look like if you can get yourself plugged into something that
    provides you a career opportunity.'

    When he isn't out-of-town visiting one of Hyatt's actual or soon-to-be
    properties, Hoplamazian and his wife Rachel Kohler (yes, the same
    Kohler family behind the well-known bath and kitchen company) are
    fixtures within the Chicago educational community. He's a trustee for
    the Chicago Latin School (where his children attend classes), a board
    member for New Schools for Chicago and an adviser to Facing History
    and Ourselves, an organization dedicated to combating racism,
    anti-Semitism and prejudice through school curriculum. The latter
    affiliation is a nod to his Armenian heritage.

    `[Education is] sort of the only thing that I spend my time on, other
    than my family and my work, just because I think it's the core of
    what's needed to really put this next generation in good standing,' he
    explains. `Especially, in the United States, I think there is a great
    need for maybe a different mindset with respect to school reform than
    has existed in the past. So my level of engagement on educational
    issues is quite high.'

    More than anything else, Hoplamazian wants the dialogue around reform
    to be more open-minded, an attitude shaped perhaps during his own K-12
    experience at the elite Episcopal Academy in suburban Philadelphia,
    which professes to educate the whole student. `I think in some ways,
    school reforms efforts historically have been around fixing a
    structure that dates back decades, but may not be relevant or as
    relevant to the future as it needs to be,' Hoplamazian muses.

    He is likewise open-minded about how properties should be run,
    trusting `colleagues' and guests to provide direction rather than
    dictating policies from on high. When he first became CEO, Hoplamazian
    spent nine months visiting Hyatt properties, asking `ostensibly stupid
    questions,' as he recalled in one interview. One of the first
    extensions under Hoplamazian's direction was the Andaz boutique brand,
    born in London and renowned for its hip lobby scene, which skips
    check-in lines. Arriving guests settle in the lounge, while clerks
    with iPads handle the minutiae. There's even a whole series of `salon'
    events associated with the properties, which are cropping up in China,
    India, the Caribbean, Hawaii, Costa Rica and Mexico.

    Right now, boutique hotels are the fastest growing segment of the
    global hotel industry, which Euromonitor International estimated at
    $457 billion for 2012. But what's next?

    `Our experience around the globe is that consumer tastes change
    rapidly, and in some cases, I would say in emerging markets in
    particular,' Hoplamazian says. `So if you look at buying behaviors and
    attitudes in China among consumers there, it's really evolving very,
    very quickly as those individuals get more exposure to brand and
    different inputs and stimulus from different markets. So being able to
    stay alert to that and be responsive to that in real time is really
    important.'

    Two years ago, he hired someone from outside the industry to
    institutionalize that alertness. Hyatt Chief Innovation Officer Jeff
    Semenchuk had no hotel industry credentials, but he did have plenty of
    entrepreneurial experience with the likes of Citigroup and Pfizer.

    `I recognized that we wanted to have a discipline around better
    innovation, and doing it faster and more effectively,' Hoplamazian
    explains. `And have it be a discipline that exists within the company
    but not to create an ivory tour approach to innovation where it
    happens in some office or in the corporate office somewhere and then
    is bestowed upon the hotels.'

    While Hoplamazian prefers face-to-face feedback, he is a strong
    proponent of social media as a means of gauging guest sentiment. Hyatt
    was the first to adopt a Twitter concierge service. It also uses
    another social service, called Branch, to facilitate better
    communication with its community of guests. `We wanted to actually
    begin a conversation, in this case, with travelers and understand more
    about what they are thinking and what we are getting right and wrong
    along the way. But have it be more of a two-way dialogue,' he says.

    I can't resist asking him to share his own worst hotel
    experience. Hoplamzian recalls a long-ago visit to Erfoud, a Moroccan
    oasis city on the edge of the Sahara Desert that was part of the
    location shoot for his favorite film, Lawrence of Arabia. The room was
    like an oven in the daytime heat, an icebox during the desert
    nighttime chill, and frequented by many unwelcome, multi-legged
    visitors. `We left a day earlier than [we] were supposed to, just in
    order to move on,' he says, laughing.

    Although his family doesn't typically join Hoplamazian on the frequent
    trips that are now part of his job, together they have logged
    adventure travel miles on African safari and hiking in Central
    America, among other places. One of five children, Hoplamazian's own
    father died of a heart attack when he was just 12. Accordingly, his
    meeting-packed days in Chicago typically begin early enough so he can
    end them with his three children whenever possible. The trim
    executive's daily routine usually includes three to four miles on the
    treadmill or stair machine, with some yoga mixed in, before he dons
    his habitual suit and tie for the office. Hoplamazian ran the Chicago
    Marathon back in 2005, but that was two knee operations ago, and his
    daily jogs are now `more about the head than the waist line.'

    On long cross-country or transoceanic flights, he gravitates toward
    non-fiction or biographies from which he can draw ideas that might
    benefit Hyatt. At the time of our interview, he's making his way
    through Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of
    Business, co-authored by Whole Foods Market co-founder John Mackey and
    management professor Raj Sisodia.

    But when Hoplamazian needs to recalibrate his own priorities, there's
    one author he recommends above all others, because of the heartfelt
    passion he put into his life's work: `If I need a dose of great
    inspiration in terms of prose and in terms of content, I'd say that
    Martin Luther King is second to none. His ability to express himself
    and, oftentimes in incredible circumstances, is pretty amazing.'



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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