Abstract

The hospitality industry is a billion dollar industry based upon customer service. Measure of quality service is an intangible concept based upon the perception of the customer. It is the industry's front-line employee that has the responsibility of fulfilling the perceived image of service the guest has envisioned. In 1991, industries throughout the U.S. budgeted 43.2 billion dollars to be spent on formal training of its employees. The dollar commitment made to training exemplifies a companies commitment to its employees and customers. The formal training of the front desk agent bares the same commitment. In this study is was assumed that through formal training the front desk agent would gain a better knowledge and confidence in their job performance and overall job satisfaction. As a result the industry would have a knowledgeable, confident and satisfied front desk agent that would provide better customer service. This descriptive study attempted to identify the status of formal training of the front desk agent, the effect formal training had on job satisfaction and retention and the differences in the perception of formal training between the front desk agent/trainee and the front desk manager /trainer in the Rochester/Monroe County, N.Y. area. The study was conducted through a 28 and a 40 item questionnaire asked of both the front desk agent/trainee and the front desk manager/trainer. The questions asked dealt with formal training, job satisfaction and demographics. It was concluded that although formal training is an important factor in the hospitality industry overall job satisfaction is an independent variable of formal training. The questionnaire did however infer that for those hotels that do provide formal training there is a difference in the perception of training between the front desk agent/trainee and the front desk manager/ trainer.

Library of Congress Subject Headings

Hotel front desk personnel--Training of--New York (State)--Rochester; Hotels--Employees--Training of--New York (State)--Rochester

Publication Date

1991

Document Type

Thesis

Department, Program, or Center

School of Food, Hotel and Tourism Management (CAST)

Advisor

Stockham, Edward

Advisor/Committee Member

Crumb, David

Advisor/Committee Member

Seelig, Michael

Comments

Note: imported from RIT’s Digital Media Library running on DSpace to RIT Scholar Works. Physical copy available through RIT's The Wallace Library at: TX911.3.F75H37 1991

Campus

RIT – Main Campus

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