scholarly journals Towards Qualified Human Resources in the Hospitality Industry: A Review of the Hospitality Management Competencies

2020 ◽  
pp. 153-165
Author(s):  
Rahman TEMİZKAN ◽  
Orhan YABANCI
2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Orido

The chef profession is considered a challenging career, with female chefs seeming to be most affected. As such, it is rare to find female chefs occupying the coveted executive chef positions. The aim of this research was to establish if female chefs in Kenya encounter similar challenges to those experienced by female chefs elsewhere. Previous research shows that female chefs encounter career challenges in hospitality organisations and hence they struggle to make it as chefs; for example, studies by Druckman [1] and Harris and Giuffre [2,3] in the United States, Murray-Gibbons and Gibbons [4] in the United Kingdom, as well as Zengeni et al. [5] in Zimbabwe. This article poses the important question: how can these challenges be overcome? The study sought to make sense of the lived work experiences of Kenyan female chefs. Baum [6] recommends contextualised research methodologies to explore hospitality issues in non-Western countries. Moreover, Adelowo [7] asserts that lived experiences are better expressed through stories. Therefore, a qualitative approach was employed in this study where 15 chefs working in the Kenyan hospitality industry were interviewed [8]. Ten female chefs told stories of their workplace experiences while five male executive chefs recounted their experiences of working with female chefs. Despite the different geographical, socio-cultural and economic factors between Kenya and other countries previously studied, female chefs expressed common challenges such as sexual harassment, gender discrimination, unsupportive attitudes towards pregnancy and an unhealthy work environment, as well as hierarchical kitchen structures that they believed discriminated against them. There was an indication of engrained patriarchal attitudes that limit the professional success of potential female chefs. Unfortunately, hospitality employers appeared to support the status quo; that is, a gendering of the chef’s profession that privileges men and penalises women. These findings suggest a trend that must worry hospitality employers. The highly competitive career structures and the male domination that discourages women from making a long-term career in the kitchen [2], coupled with stiff competition for scarce hospitality human resources, support the need to retain female chefs. Christensen and Rog [9] stress that employee retention strategies will only work if human resource managers are fully committed to creating a positive workplace culture that treats all employees equally, regardless of their gender or any other dimension of diversity. In his study, Orido [8] suggests that the following measures may help to attract and retain female chefs. Firstly, employers should introduce personalised career development plans. For instance, a female chef who has attained postgraduate qualifications ought to be promoted and remunerated accordingly. This will not only retain female chefs but also enable them to further their career aspirations within the hospitality industry. Secondly, female chefs should be given the opportunity to fully participate at all levels of the kitchen hierarchy, thereby acquiring the necessary skills for promotion in the future to executive chef’s positions. Additionally, it will encourage a clear career progression path within the kitchen hierarchy. Hospitality employers must ensure that employment opportunities as well as employment terms and career progression are not dependant on a chef’s gender, but on their qualifications and competencies. By investing in female chefs and, most importantly, keeping them safe from bullying at work, the hospitality industry will not only attract, but retain, these talented professionals in satisfying culinary careers. If you would like to read the PhD thesis this research is based on you can access it here: http://hdl.handle.net/10292/10626 Corresponding author Charles is a chef and lecturer at Kenya Utalii College, Nairobi, Kenya. His research interests include inhospitable hospitality, culinary arts, human behaviour in the hospitality industry, and indigenous research. He holds a Certificate in Food Production (currently Culinary Arts) from Kenya Utalii College, a BA degree in Hospitality Management from the University of Nairobi, Kenya, and a Master of International Hospitality Management (MIHM) from Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand. Charles Orido can be contacted at: [email protected] or [email protected] References (1) Druckman, C. Why Are There No Great Women Chefs? Gastronomica 2010, 10, 24–31. https://doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2010.10.1.24 (2) Harris, D. A.; Giuffre, P. “The Price You Pay”: How Female Professional Chefs Negotiate Work and Family. Gender Issues 2010, 27, 27–52. (3) Harris, D. A.; Giuffre, P. Taking the Heat: Women Chefs and Gender Inequality in the Professional Kitchen; Rutgers University Press: New Brunswick, NJ, 2015. https://books.google.co.nz/books?id=qTaACgAAQBAJ (4) Murray-Gibbons, R.; Gibbons, C. Occupational Stress in the Chef Profession. International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management 2007, 19, 32–42. https://doi.org/10.1108/09596110710724143 (5) Zengeni, D. M. F.; Tendani, E.; Zengeni, N. The Absence of Females in Executive Chef Position in Zimbabwean Hotels: Case of Rainbow Tourism Group (RTG). Australian Journal of Business and Management Research 2013, 3, 1–18. (6) Baum, T. Human Resources in Tourism: Still Waiting for Change? – A 2015 Reprise. Tourism Management 2015, 50, 204–212. (7) Adelowo, A. The Adjustment of African Women Living in New Zealand: A Narrative Study; Ph.D. Thesis, Auckland University of Technology, 2012. http://aut.researchgateway.ac.nz/handle/10292/4601 (8) Orido, C. O. Challenges Faced by Female Chefs in the Kenyan Hospitality Industry: A Study through an African Oral Tradition of Storytelling; Ph.D. Thesis, Auckland University of Technology, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10292/10626 (9) Christensen, J.; Rog, E. Talent Management: A Strategy for Improving Employee Recruitment, Retention and Engagement within Hospitality Organizations. International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management 2008, 20, 743–757.


Author(s):  
Olena Khytra

The hospitality industry acquires the features of an integrative industry, which combines material resources and intangible factors to meet the needs of modern man for comfortable travel and recreation. Hospitality is interpreted as a complex economic, social, cultural, psychological phenomenon, the impact of which on the development of the tourism industry determines the effect of synergy from the combination of tourist resources and quality of service. The author of article proposes to consider hospitality management as a multilevel dynamic management system for the process of providing services to tourists and vacationers, based primarily on the principles of humanism, tolerance, personalization of hospitality, respect for cultural diversity, priority to meet human needs for quality recreation and physical strength as well as cultural self-development. The social orientation of this system to some extent balances the commercial, purely pragmatic aspect of managing the development of tourism enterprises. A holistic model of hospitality management is based on a harmonious combination of four concepts. They are humanitarian, technological, functional and commercial. The system-forming component of the hospitality sector is a mechanism for managing consumer behaviour, which ensures an optimal balance of supply and demand in the market of hospitality services. The specifics of service in the hospitality industry is that the quality of service affects the emotional perception of tourists in the area and, accordingly, affects the image of the state. Therefore, the mechanism for implementing the service policy should be established through public administration measures. Among the key areas of hospitality management development is the formation of a rational organizational structure, improvement of hospitality marketing and support of corporate culture, the values of which are adequate to the socio-cultural environment of the hospitality industry. The specificity of the hospitality industry is also that an important role in ensuring competitiveness is played by an attractive brand, which stipulates the allocation in the management system of such a component as brand management. Considerable attention should be paid to the innovative development of hospitality enterprises and the constant improvement of professional competence of managers of socio-cultural activities.


Author(s):  
Nurwarniatun Nurwarniatun

Artikel ini mengeksplorasi pengembangan SDM pustakawan di perpustakan IAIN Kediri serta kendala-kendala yang dihadapi oleh perpustakaan dalam mengembangan SDM pustakawan. Metode penelitian dalam artikel adalah kualitatif, sedangkan sumber  datanya  adalah  data lapangan  yang  diperoleh  dari  pengamatan,  dokumentasi dan wawancara  dengan kepala  perpustakaan  dan  para  pustakawan  di  IAIN Kediri. Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa pengembangan SDM pustakawan di IAIN Kediri bertujuan untuk meningkatkan kompetensi kepustakawaan pada aspek manajemen, pengolahan dan pelayanan perpustakaan. Mulai tahun 2013-2019 terdapat 29 kegiatan pengembangan SDM, kegiatan-kegiatan tersebut bisa dikelompokkan menjadi:  kompetensi manajemen perpustakaan, kompetensi pengolahan bahan pustaka, kompetensi IT, Kompetensi penulisan karya ilmiah dan Daftar Usul Penetapan Angka Kredit (DUPAK) dan Literasi Informasi, dan terakhir kompetensi soft skills.  Kendala pengembangan SDM yaitu: kemapuan pustakawan dalam hal dasar-dasar kepustakawanan sangat beragam,  Pustakawan belum menguasai aplikasi dasar sistem informasi, Pustakawan tidak percaya diri sehingga minim tindak lanjut, minimnya anggaran pengembangan SDM, dan perpustakaan tidak otonom dalam merencanakan kegiatan pengembangan SDM. Kata Kunci: Pengembangan SDM, Pustakawan, Perpustakaan This article explores the development of librarians 'resources in the library of IAIN Kediri as well as the obstacles faced by the library in developing librarians' resources. The research methods in the articles are qualitative, while the source data is field data obtained from observations, documentation and interviews with librarians and librarians at IAIN Kediri. The results of this study indicate that the development of librarians' resources at IAIN Kediri aims to enhance the competency of librarians in the areas of library management, processing and service. From 2013-2019 there were 29 human resources development activities, which can be grouped into: library management competencies, library processing competencies, IT competencies, Scientific writing competencies and Credit List Assignment List (DUPAK) and Information Literacy, and finally soft skills competency. Human resource development constraints are: librarians' competence in terms of corporate fundamentals, Librarians have not mastered the basic application of information systems, Librarians are not confident enough to follow-up, minimal HR development budgets, and the library is not autonomous in planning human resources development activities. Keywords: development of librarians 'resources, librarian, library


2016 ◽  
pp. 926-945
Author(s):  
Narelle Borzi

Globalisation is changing the worlds of work and education. Although the hospitality industry has always operated at an international level, today's educators must prepare future managers for an increasingly diverse global world where we are all connected via technology in ways that were unimaginable even 10 years ago. Educators face strategic decisions about how and when they integrate technology into their programs. Transnational e-learning spaces, which are affecting the way we operate in our daily lives both at work and learning, have opened up. Educators need to fully understand what happens within these spaces—to the learners and to learning—in order to ensure that the quality of learning and the learning systems. This chapter considers ways in which hospitality management education can be enhanced through a focus on e-learning and identity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1515
Author(s):  
Yohny ANWAR ◽  
Kiki Farida FERINE ◽  
Nikous Soter SIHOMBING

This research was carried out by of the hospitality industry in North Sumatra. The object of this research is human resource competency, customer trust, customer satisfaction and customer retention in the North Sumatra hospitality industry. The Outcome of this study indicates that human resource competence, customer trust, customer satisfaction and customer retention in the hospitality industry in North Sumatra, Indonesia is relatively good. Human resource competency has an Consequence on customer satisfaction. Customer trust Consequences customer satisfaction. Human resource competency has a Consequence on customer retention. Customer trust has a significant Consequence on customer retention. In addition, there is a Consequence of customer satisfaction on customer retention and there are direct and indirect Consequences of human resource competence and customer confidence in customer satisfaction as well as a Consequence on customer retention of the hospitality industry in North Sumatra.


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