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Monday, 20 November 2023

THE COST OF HOSPITALITY

 

Noel Moitra

Professor Trilokinath Raina

27 April 2010

 HOSPITALITY RETAIL MANAGEMENT

A Case Study Of Roles and Responsibilities of Retail Managers in Two Existing

Hospitality Business Environments

Introduction

      In today’s context, hospitality has outgrown its roots and is, in fact, representative of an industry. The definition of hospitality that perhaps suits this Paper best is, “the relationship between a guest and a host, or the act or practice of being hospitable, that is, the reception and entertainment of guests, visitors, or strangers at resorts, membership clubs, conventions, attractions, special events, and other services for travellers and tourists” (answers.com). Since the field has opened up greatly, a surmise can safely be made that there is a vast number of players involved, each with his or her own role to play, blending in the ultimate picture with the host’s averment of caring for and entertaining guests. It becomes necessary, therefore, to go down a level or two and appraise the role of a retail manager, who, as we shall see later, is very much in the forefront of the situational management arena. Thereafter, an elite restaurant will be assessed with respect to its history and current status.

Aim

       The aim of this Case Study is to evaluate the roles and responsibilities of retail managers in the Food and Beverages category at both ends of the cost scale  and appraise a renowned restaurant in relation to its historical and current perspective in a retail environment, the public sector.

Scope of Study

       Having introduced the hospitality industry and stipulated the aim, this Paper will look at the industry in greater detail, compare the role and responsibilities of retail managers in the Food and Beverages category of a high end hotel, the Park Plaza Victoria London and the low cost

fast food giant, McDonald’s. Subsequently, El Bulli of Roses, Spain will be appraised in relation

to its historical and current perspective in a retail environment, the elitist public sector.

 The Hospitality Industry

      The hospitality industry is composed of a variety of sectors within the service industry that include, among others (bhtafe.edu.au):

·       Food and beverage services, e.g. restaurants, cafes, bistros, clubs, etc.

·       Accommodation, e.g. hotels, motels, resorts, bed and breakfast, etc.

·       Entertainment, e.g. theatre, musicals, live band shows and cinema halls, etc.

·       Functions and event management, e.g. corporate functions, expos, etc.

·       Recreation services, e.g. health and fitness centres, golf clubs, theme parks, etc.

·       Gaming facilities, e.g. casino type hotels, casino type resorts, etc.

·       Additional fields within the tourism industry like transportation, cruise liners, special historic trains, etc.’

       ‘The hospitality industry is divided into two categories, the commercial and the non-commercial categories (ibid). The commercial category includes establishments that operate for profit, whereas the non-commercial category comprises establishments that operate on a not for profit basis. With the advent of government privatisation policies, commercial caterers are now replacing many of the non-commercial food operators. Thus, there is less of a distinction between non-profit organisations and profit making enterprises nowadays. Examples of the commercial category include:

·       Restaurants

·       Hotels

·       Takeaway / fast food shops

·       Motels

·       Bistros

      Examples of the non-commercial category include:

·       Hospitals (food services)

·       Relief agencies like The Salvation Army (food services)

·       School canteens

·       Prison canteens

·       Gurudwara Langars (Free meal at Sikh temple)

Note: The above list contains only the core sector within the hospitality industry’. (ibid)

      As stated, the hospitality industry offers a variety of services within several distinct sectors. ‘The quality of service on offer to guests depends on the price being charged. For example, in the food and beverage area, eating in a three- star rated restaurant will be far more expensive than eating in a one star-rated restaurant. This also applies in the accommodation sector. Staying for a weekend in a five-star international hotel will dent your wallet far more than staying for a weekend in a two-star rated hotel’ (ibid).

About the Hotel

        The hotel in question is the Park Plaza Victoria London. Part of Carlson, a global travel and hospitality company, the four star deluxe Park Plaza Victoria London hotel is centrally located just two minutes from Victoria Station and within walking distance of some of the city's main tourist attractions, including Buckingham Palace, Harrods, Westminster Abbey, etc. Apart from excellent accommodation, the hotel features a world-class, AA One Rosette award-winning restaurant, the on-site JB's Restaurant serving modern European cuisine and a comprehensive

wine list, as well as the collocated JB’s Bar (parkplaza.com).

Retail Manager

      The retail manager in any section of a hotel has an onerous job, particularly in the Food and Beverages (F&B) segment. Basically, he is responsible for ‘running the restaurant and bar to meet the hotel’s targets and policies, aiming to maximise profit whilst minimising costs. Retail managers ensure promotions are accurate and merchandised to the hotel’s standards, staff is fully versed on the target for the day and excellent customer care standards are met. Depending on the size of the establishment and structure, retail managers may also be required to deal with human resources, marketing, logistics, information technology, customer service and finance’(prospects.ac.uk). According to U.S. Lodging 1995 statistics, the F&B Department constitutes the second largest revenue generator of a typical hotel with an average of 23.1% for Food sales and 8.6 % for Beverage sales (bilkent.edu.tr). JB’s has a F&B staff of 22 under the Retail Manager.

Role of the Retail Manager

         A retail manager’s typical work activities may alter, but tasks usually involve, as listed in     

         prospects.ac.uk:

   managing and motivating a team to increase sales and ensure efficiency;

   managing stock levels and making key decisions about stock control;

   analysing sales figures and forecasting future sales volumes to maximise profits;

   analysing and interpreting trends to facilitate planning;

   using IT to record sales figures, for data analysis and forward planning;

   dealing with staffing issues such as interviewing potential staff, conducting appraisals  

    and performance reviews as well as providing or organising training and development;

   ensuring standards for quality, customer service, health and safety are met;

   resolving health and safety, legal and security issues;

   responding to customer complaints and comments;

            organising special promotions, displays and events;

·     attending and chairing meetings;

·     updating colleagues on performance, new initiatives and other pertinent issues;

·     touring the sales floor regularly, talking to colleagues and customers, and identifying or resolving urgent issues;

·     maintaining awareness of market trends in the retail industry, understanding forthcoming customer initiatives and monitoring what local competitors are doing;

·     initiating changes to improve the business, e.g. revising opening hours to ensure the store can compete effectively in the local market;

·     dealing with sales, as and when required.

·     Reporting regularly to superiors, providing feedback and, if called for, advice.

Low Entry Level

         ‘The hotel industry is characterised by a large number of employees’ (ibid). ‘Both white collar        employees and blue collar workers may find gainful employment. Entry level jobs usually require no formal education. Professionals in the sector are usually qualified with trade certificates and college degrees. Many hospitality schools offer specialised courses of study in the hotel industry. The retail manager will invariably be a degree holder in retail management; accounting/finance; business studies or marketing, and a relevant degree involving food technology’ (ibid). This leads to another important topic that is taught at diploma/degree level: Marketing Mix.

The Marketing Mix

         The marketing mix is probably the most common marketing term. Its elements are the basic tactical components of a marketing plan. Also known as the Four P's, the marketing mix elements are price, place, product, and promotion (marketingteacher.com). 

Source: Marketingteacher.com
Figure 1: THE MARKETING MIX

‘It is easy to understand by comparing it with another common mix, a cake mix, the basic ingredients of which are flour, eggs, milk and sugar. A cake is made using a certain mix. This is easily changed for the next cake. If a sweeter cake is required, more sugar is added. It is the same with the marketing mix. The offer made to the customer can be altered by varying the mix elements. So for a high profile brand, increase the focus on promotion and desensitise the weight given to price’ (marketingteacher.com).

The 7 Ps    

          Modernists have found the need to increase the number of Ps by three, people, physical evidence and process (marketingteacher.com). These attributes can be used to compare entities. How does the award-winning JB’s restaurant fare, along with JB’s Bar, as controlled by the retail manager? Gavin Fernando, the Retail Manager at JB’s restaurant, amplifies hotel procedures and policies later in a free-wheeling extempore monologue. Illustrations quoted by Gavin Fernando are used in the two succeeding paragraphs.

1.       Price: There are many ways to price a product, like Premium Pricing, using a high price where there is uniqueness about the product or service. This approach is used where a substantial competitive advantage exists, as in JB’ Restaurant.

2.       Place: Place is also known as channel, distribution, or intermediary. It is the mechanism through which goods and/or services are moved from the manufacturer/ service provider to the user or consumer. Established concerns like JB’s Restaurant and Bar have intermediaries, established over the years for optimal cost effectiveness.

3.       Product: A product is simply the tangible, physical entity that customers may be ordering for consumption. Product Life Cycle has to be catered for, else it might go stale or get spoiled if it is a wine. JB’s caters for it, by ordering fresh vegetables every day and not storing frozen meat / meat products for more than one week.

4.       Promotion: This includes all tools available to the seller for 'marketing communication'. A restaurant may offer a glass of wine free with a particular dish, as an example. JB’s generally run promotions in the lean months of April and August, aiming to attract customers from outside, i.e. people who are not guests residing in the hotel.

5.       Physical Evidence: Physical Evidence is the material part of a service. JB’s use it in the excellent class of crockery and cutlery, layout of the menu card, décor on a dish, linen, etc. as is taught to all lesser staff on joining and clearly visible to all and sundry.

6.       People: People are the most important element of any service or experience. Services tend to be produced and consumed at the same moment, and aspects of the customer experience are tailored to meet the 'individual needs' of the consumer. JB’s customises service by reserving favourite tables, remembering favourite dishes, offering specific brands of liquor to fastidious customers, etc., using a collated database.

7.       Process:  Process is an element of service that sees the customer experiencing an organisation's offering. It's best viewed as something that the customer participates in at different points in time. For instance, JB’s maitre d’ takes the hats and coats of valued customers and ushers them to their favourite table.

Macro-environmental Factors

               The analysis of an institution is incomplete if the macro-environmental factors are not considered, to whatever end they are applicable. Used under the acronym of PESTLE in the UK, each factor will be considered in sequence (www.renewal.eu.com):

1.       Political Factors: A reflection of how government laws, which vary from country to country, affect restaurants. British laws affect JB’s and were catered for, starting at the top managerial level and percolating downwards, as reflected by the award of the coveted AA One Rosette to JB’s Restaurant (www.parkplaza.com).

2.       Economic Factors: These affect JB’s as the exchange rate of the GBP has varied to a fair extent vis-à-vis the USD, the Euro and other currencies. The currently weak USD more or less offsets the strong Euro. The weak GBP is worrisome (topequitynews.com).

3.       Social Factors include cultural aspects, health consciousness, age of staff, career attitude and understanding of safety. These fall within the ambit of a retail manager and JB’s have not faced any problem in recent times.

4.       Technological Factors include ecological aspects, such as automation, technology incentives and the rate of technological change. JB’s feature state of the art technology in the kitchen, discreet billing procedure and all-round Wi-Fi availability for guests (www.parkplaza.com).

5.       Legal Factors include discrimination law, consumer law, antitrust law, employment law, and health and safety law. These factors affect how a company operates, its costs, and the demand for its products. JB’s is fully compliant with all relevant mandates.

6.       Environmental Factors include awareness to climate change, carbon footprint and greenhouse effect and adoption of the UK's Hospitable Climates initiative (hospitableclimates.org.uk).  Though this is more of the hotel’s responsibility, JB’s does its best to stay within limits laid down by the Hotel Management.

 Tete-a-Tete with the Retail Manager at JB’s Restaurant

               Gavin Fernando, the Retail Manager at JB’s Restaurant explained Hotel procedures and policies regarding man and material management and the Marketing Mix on 15 April 2010. He said, “We are part of a 4-star hotel and there are mandatory standards and legal issues to be met and maintained. I hold degrees in both Marketing and Restaurant Management. Upkeep of the restaurant and bar is my prime responsibility and my staff of 22 helps out. Our restaurant has won the AA One Rosette; prices at JB's Restaurant are about 10% higher than in a comparable restaurant. I have delegated certain responsibilities to senior staff, i.e. my Shift Managers. They conduct short 10-minute classes for the rest three times a week on their individual as well as collective tasks. They ensure standards for quality, customer service, health and safety are met and report to me on a weekly basis. They also monitor our stock position, so that I am always forewarned.”

        “We get all our market products from our intermediaries, ASDA Groceries, on a daily basis. I visit the marketplace off and on, so I am at par with my suppliers and know what’s new. The months of April and August tend to be lean periods for both the hotel and JB’s. We run major promotions in these months, aiming to attract customers who are not residents in the hotel. Our promotion for this month is called, 'No meal, no deal.' It is an offer of a two-course meal with a half bottle of wine for £15 and is promoted through our website and leaflets in dailies, run by our print media supplier. It works well and we manage 10-15 new faces every day.”

       “Every time one of our regulars makes a booking, our alert system warns me. I run through our database to check on likes and dislikes, favourite table, favoured waiter/waitress, etc., and warn the Shift Head. Whenever a first-time visitor pays his bill, we inform him that he is on our database and the next time he comes, he will be treated like a Red Card Holder and get a 5% discount. After 5 visits, he is upgraded to a Silver Card Holder and gets a 10% discount. 10 more visits and he becomes a Gold Card Holder and gets a 15% discount. For guests staying in the hotel, this is done by the Hotel staff at the Billing Dept. All promos are sent by e-mail also.” 

               Having completed the review of a high-end restaurant like JB’s, a comparison could be made in the qualitative sense, using the same parameters, with the role of a retail manager in the fast food chain giant, McDonald’s. 

About McDonald’s

               When McDonald’s Corporation founder Ray Kroc’s first ‘Golden Arches’ opened for business fifty-five years ago, on April 15, 1955, little did he know that he was creating quick meal history (aboutmcdonalds.com). He had organised an operation built on taking care of the customer, providing a clean, family environment, and serving hot, fresh product, fast. With all attention on details (ibid), the McDonald’s of 1955 focussed on three foundational principles: Quality, Service, and Cleanliness (‘QSC’). An additional ‘V’—for value—was added in 1975 (ibid). They have more than 32,000 restaurants around the world in 117 countries, one of the world's largest chain of hamburger fast food eateries, catering to close to 60 million customers every day (ibid). McDonald's main products are hamburgers, cheeseburgers, chicken nuggets, egg muffins, French fries, milkshakes and desserts, sold under brand names (ibid).

The Retail Manager

                In general terms, the role of the retail manager at McDonald’s is similar to that of his counterpart at JB’s. There are, however, many differences when it comes down to the fine print. Firstly, JB’s is a 4-star rated high-end restaurant, catering to the elite and affluent.  McDonald’s is a low-cost minimum frills fast food eatery for people who either do not have the time to dawdle over a meal, or have a budget to adhere to. Generally, they are from the younger generation. Moreover, JB’s is a diner where no one can predict how many customers will turn up and what will be ordered on any specific day. All items listed on their wide menu have to be made available in a reasonable timeframe. As only fresh vegetables are served, their menu has to be seasonal. It is not so difficult at the Bar, as can be readily understood. In McDonald’s case, the only question is that of volume. The menu is fixed. Changes, if any, may be seen in different parts of a country, depending on demographics. Sometimes, competition may force a cut in prices. Pricing techniques need some flexibility. At JB’s, retention of staff is important, as considerable amounts of money and time are spent on bringing the staff up to desired standards. Staff at McDonald’s tend to be students working part-time, second jobbers, etc. Turnover is rapid for various reasons, but the cost involved in training is relatively small. So what does the Marketing Mix have in store for the retail manager at a McDonald’s outlet?

1.       Price:  As just said, pricing techniques need flexibility. McDonald’s therefore uses:

·       Penetration Pricing: When McDonald’s first began to break into the coffee market, they ran a large marketing campaign in order to gain some market share in the industry.  For a limited time frame, you could get a free small coffee every morning from 4-7 am.  This was to promote their new coffee partnership with Green Mountain Coffee and helped spread the word that McDonald’s had started offering coffee (Pappalardo, 2008).  This approach was also used by France Telecom and Sky TV (marketingteacher.com).

·       Optional Product Pricing: Companies will attempt to increase the amount customer spend once they start to buy. Optional 'extras' increase the overall price of the product or service. McDonald’s often offer a large cola for the price of a small one, if overall spend is above a certain amount. This technique is used by airlines, who now charge extra for seats that provide more leg room. On a pricier scale, corner plots of land come at a premium (bangalore.click.in).

·       Promotional Pricing:  McDonald’s, using a banner or spelled out on their sign, always offer some sort of promotional pricing.  For example, the McDonald’s in Maine is advertising “Two Sausage McMuffin’s for $3,” on a large banner draped across the building on their restaurants in Maine.  This promotion changes weekly and may consist of different menu items packaged together (Pappalardo, 2008). 

·       Value Pricing: This approach is used where external factors such as recession or increased competition force companies to provide 'value' products and services to retain sales (marketingteacher.com). The most notable and recent example of this is McDonald’s ‘Dollar Menu’. The Dollar Menu was created because McDonald’s recognised that the economy was in a decline and that their competition was getting fiercer.  The Dollar Menu satisfies the current economy status, increasing pressure towards competitors.  The Dollar Menu is by far the most economical product line that McDonald has ever offered. (Pappalardo 2008). 

2.       Place:  Logistics is the focal point of a quick-delivery entity. It is crucial for McDonald’s, which thrives on its reputation for speed. McDonald’s invariably have more than one outlet in any city it serves, located at spots where the younger generation tend to throng, like multiplexes and malls. McDonald’s outsources most of its supplies. For instance, in India, it has outsourced most of its supplies to McCain Foods, with Cremica bakeries in Delhi and Mumbai providing the 380 sesame seed-topped buns and Dynamix Dairy the sliced cheese (economist.com). The dynamic supply chain is constantly on the go. Chicken McNuggets are made with all white meat chicken, supplied by outstanding industry suppliers like Keystone Foods and Tyson Foods, and they contain zero grams of artificial trans fat per serving (aboutmcdonalds.com).      

3.       Product: The various items from different sources meet up at the restaurant at the right time, part of the retail manager’s charter of duties.

4.       Promotion: McDonald’s uses this strategy to good effect; for instance, its Extra Value Meals offers more generous helpings of French fries and chicken nuggets and since June 1979, its Happy Meals has a toy as a gift (ibid).       

5.       Physical Evidence: In 2008, McDonald's introduced its most comprehensive global packaging design ever, to reiterate honesty and openness with customers and remind them of McDonald's food’s quality and freshness (ibid).

6.       People: At McDonald's, all customer facing personnel are trained and developed to maintain a high quality of personal service. Attention is given to personal hygiene, dress and deportment (ibid).

7.       Process: McDonald's delivers value through all elements of the marketing mix. Process, physical evidence and people enhance services.

Macro-environmental Factors

          McDonald’s operates in 117 countries, all of which have different rules and regulations, specific to the F&B industry. Some countries impose limitations, e.g. Islamic countries ban pork and pork products, India bans beef and beef products and has not permitted the company to use pork either (Jatia, 2007). That forces McDonald’s to shift to poultry and a wider range of vegetarian meals/salads. The latter category is also touted as a low-calorie meal (ibid), much required in an obese populace in the U.S., while also offsetting the high content of oil in McDonald’s products and calories in their sodas and desserts. Poultry, per se, can be a risky proposition, with the world having already experienced three Bird Flu epidemics. McDonald’s must be complimented for managing so many outlets in so wide a range of countries, with absolute standardisation insofar as uniform, products, ethics, deportment and hygiene are considered. The only weak area identified is recycling, due to the volumes involved, but the Retail Managers are doing a good job at keeping their carbon footprint down to the lowest possible. This is in keeping with the company policy of 2009, named McDonald's 2009 Global Best of Green (ibid). Progress has been demonstrated on multiple fronts - energy, packaging, anti-littering, recycling, logistics, communications, greening the restaurants, greening the workplace, sustainable food and supplier leadership. As may be expected, McDonald’s success has led to several protests about diverse issues.

The Down Side

       Paul Hawken, founder of The Natural Step (TNS) is extremely critical about McDonald's:         "The McDonald's Social Responsibility Report is a fantasy. It presupposes that we can continue to have a global chain of restaurants that serves fried, sugary junk food that is produced by an agricultural system of monocultures, monopolies, standardisation and destruction, and at the same time find a path to sustainability. As the founder of TNS in the United States, I can say that nothing could be further from the idea of sustainability than the McDonald's

Corporation" (greenyes.grrn.org).

        Greenpeace (London) lists several complaints about McDonald’s, one of which deals with    their staff, termed Exploiting Workers. It says, “Workers in the fast food industry are paid low wages. McDonald's do not pay overtime rates even when employees work very long hours. Pressure to keep profits high and wage costs low results in understaffing, so staff have to work harder and faster. As a consequence, accidents (particularly burns) are common. The majority of employees are people who have few job options and are forced to accept this exploitation, and they're compelled to 'smile' too! Not surprisingly staff turnover at McDonald's is high, making it virtually impossible to unionise and fight for a better deal, which suits McDonald's who have always been opposed to Unions”(mcspotlight.org).

The El Bulli Restaurant, Roses, Girona, Spain

      El Bulli, a medium sized restaurant in the city of Roses, Spain was selected by the highly regarded gastronomic magazine ‘Restaurant’ as the best restaurant in the world in 2009 (theworlds50best.com), a distinction achieved for the fourth consecutive year (wharton.universia.net). Owned by Ferran Adrià, a Spanish culinary expert, in partnership with Juli Soler and Albert Adrià, the restaurant retained its 3 Michelin Star status since first achieving that laurel in 1997 (ibid).

      What was amazing about this restaurant is that it was open for only twenty-seven weeks in a year, from mid- June to mid- December every year. El Bulli always announced its operating schedule for the coming year. It was virtually impossible to get a reservation for a meal in El Bulli, as it received over one million requests for its seating capacity of about eight thousand a year, when open (ibid).

         Adrià was known as the ‘alchemist of the kitchen’. Both he and his restaurant were recognised “for their research in the realm of molecular gastronomy, in which his studies of the micro-properties of specific foods, species and ingredients have led to the development of unique recipes” Sandulli and Chesbrough (2009: online). The research was carried out in the six months the restaurant closed. “Studies of the micro-properties of specific foods, species and ingredients have led to the development of unique recipes. In 1999, they decided to share their knowledge about creating oils, sauces and aperitifs with Borges, the food manufacturer. Borges launched products that were co-branded by both companies. This became a new source of revenue for El Bulli, which concluded similar co-branding agreements with other companies such as NH Hotels and Nestlé. This strategy, based on a small number of close alliances, aimed to avoid any loss of control over the brand” Sandulli and Chesbrough (ibid).

       “They also aimed to find and absorb new ideas in that period. This enabled the restaurant to stay one step ahead of other restaurants that tried to copy its formula for success” Sandulli and Chesbrough (ibid). On the other hand, add the authors, “El Bulli markets its brand and its knowledge through a variety of tightly managed relationships that have enabled its brand to penetrate business sectors far beyond the typical business activities of a restaurant. So while the restaurant is not profitable, its overall group of businesses does make money” Sandulli and Chesbrough (ibid). This paragraph is a succinct summary of El Bulli’s strategy and part of its perspective of the restaurant business.

       The restaurant had a limited season: the PIXA season, for example, ran from 15 June to 20 December. Bookings for the next year were taken on a single day after the closing of the current season. It accommodated only 8,000 diners a season, but got more than two million requests. The average cost of a meal was €250 (US$325). The restaurant itself had operated at a loss since 2000, with operating profit coming from El Bulli-related books and lectures by Adrià. As of April 2008, the restaurant employed 42 chefs.

       El Bulli’s perspective was of exclusivity: to provide exotic and one-of-a-kind dishes, seeking to stay atop the lofty peak of ‘best restaurant in the world’. There are more than 10 million restaurants in the world (answers.google.com), but we can discount 99.99% of them on grounds of quality. The competition is fierce and Adrià was willing to accept financial loss on account of El Bulli, to retain top slot!

         A look at their past history (elbulli.com) will provide an idea of how the restaurant and its concepts evolved. From a minigolf installation that provided barbecues alfresco in 1961 to a beach bar in '63, the first restaurant came up as a grill in '64. Owned by a Dr. Schilling, whose hobby was gastronomy, and who spent a lot of time away in Germany studying fine restaurants and dishes, the restaurant would gain from his inputs and El Bulli went from strength to strength as a restaurant. From '70-75, many more fancy French dishes began to be served, including flambéed sea-bass with fennel, prawns in Pernod, double entrecôte with béarnaise sauce and emincé of beef Stroganoff (ibid). A new chef, Jean-Louis Neichel joined in 1975 and he was asked to study the cuisine in the most famous restaurant then, La mère Charles, whose owner was known to Dr. Schilling. By 1982, El Bulli was on its way to stardom (ibid). Ownership changed hands, with age catching up with the Schillings. Staff stayed on. El Bulli was one of the first haute cuisine restaurants in Spain to serve sea urchins. Prices went up, as did decor and style. Quality became a byword and soon, tables began to fall short. As the Michelin stars came in, the concept had already evolved (ibid). Uniqueness. One-of-a-kind. Exclusivity.

Closure:

               In 2010, Ferran Adrià announced he would close El Bulli in 2012, due to the massive monetary loss it was incurring. He was quoted by The New York Times as planning to replace it with a culinary academy. He later denied the announcement, saying that The New York Times had misquoted him, and stated that El Bulli would reopen in 2014 after a two-year hiatus, as "initially planned" and would still serve food. Adrià later confirmed, in an October 2010 Vanity Fair article, that the restaurant would be closing permanently after July 2011.

In 2011, their website stated: "On July 30th 2011 El Bulli will have completed its journey as a restaurant. We will transform into a creativity center, opening in 2014. Its main objective is to be a think-tank for creative cuisine and gastronomy and will be managed by a private foundation." Bourdain interpreted the goal of the new El Bulli Foundation to be an elite culinary and dining experience development workshop, hosting not only chefs but "architects, philosophers, [and] designers", and allowing them to "not just share [their] successes, but to share [their] mistakes or [their] process with the world as it's happening" by providing a forum to explore such concepts as "do we need a dining room?" In 2021, The Observer named the closure of El Bulli as one of the 20 "key moments in food" of the prior 20 years.

Commercial Products

The kitchen at El Bulli

Texturas is a range of products by brothers Ferran and Albert Adrià. The products include the Sferificación, Gelificación, Emulsificación, Espesantes and Surprises lines and are the result of a rigorous process of selection and experimentation. Texturas includes products such as Xanthan and Algin which are packaged and labeled as Xantana Texturas and Algin Texturas respectively.

Xanthan gum allows the user to use a very small amount to thicken soups, sauces and creams without changing the flavour. Algin is a key component of the "Spherification Kit" and is essential for every spherical preparation: caviar, raviolis, balloons, gnocchi, pellets, and mini-spheres.

Conclusion:

        In the Case Study supra, the roles and responsibilities of Retail Managers in two existing hospitality business environments, the exclusive Park Plaza Victoria London and the fast food eatery, McDonald’s, have been compared using the standard parameters so specified, i.e. the Marketing Mix with its 7Ps as also the macro-environmental factors bunched under the U.K. acronym PESTLE. Strengths and weaknesses in the organisations have been described, with McDonald’s under the hammer because of its size and diversity. The world’s best restaurant in 2003 and again from 2006 to 2009, El Bulli, has also been reviewed in relation to its historical and current perspective in a retail environment, the public domain and the factors contributing to its phenomenal overall success analysed, despite the fact that the restaurant per se is actually losing money.

Recommendations

          It is recommended that unique or standalone restaurants take a leaf out of El Bulli’s book and apply logical steps to improve their status. While a six-month layoff might not be either feasible or practical, time could certainly be taken off by the upper echelon to study workable principles.

          It is also recommended that higher-end hotels, mainly those in the 5-7 star category, enlist the aid of reputed chefs from diverse locations like Bali, Goa and Viet Nam, etc. Dishes from these countries/places have not been heard of yet and could well be a hit.  

 

 

 

Works Cited

Hawken, Paul; 03 May 2002. Critique on McDonald's, available at

               http://greenyes.grrn.org/2002/05/msg00007.html, accessed 20 April 2010. Print.

Jatia, Amit. Ban on beef and pork, as reported in CBS NEWS (online), 02 April 2007 by

               Petrun, Erin. Where’s the Beef, Meatless McDonalds Burgers in India, available at

               http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/04/02/asia_letter/main2640540.shtml

               accessed 20 April 2010.

Pappalardo, Mark. (2008) Mcdonald’s Pricing Strategies, available at

               http://markpappalardo.blogspot.com/2008/11/mcdonalds-pricing-strategies.html 

               accessed 21 April 2010.     

Sandulli and Chesbrough (2009: online), available at

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               english accessed 19 April 2010.

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