Sunday, June 20, 2010

Towards More Business-Oriented Business Centers


This is not a part of the intensified hospitality project but it’s an idea that was always there during the project.
I don’t know that much about the evolution of business centers in the hotel industry. But I would assume that at a point of time there were no business centers and then they started to add them to satisfy some basic communication needs that only business people needed back then and weren't easy to find around. And as far as I know it stopped there.
I see that most of business centers in the hotels today are incomplete secretarial centers. They sometimes provide more modest communication facilities than what we're already moving around with in our life of mobility.
I would think that business center is where a hotel can most add a value to business. I would simply say that hotels have the opportunity to be real business centers, all of the hotel, the entire hotel and not a small room thrown behind corridors. but let me now keep it to the same business center and not a business hotel.
I would say why don’t we have business centers being the places where business takes place? Where networking happens, where the hospitality industry weaves its values around a very huge portion of its customers and their real needs and interests.
I guess we need to move away from thinking of all customers the same way, and of business guests just like any other customer where their needs are expected to be a bed and a bathroom. Normally, when you even come to what executive rooms mean, it’s more of a luxury and not that much to add in the business domain. According to the proposed concept, following is what a hotel business center can offer.



  1. Establish and maintain a directory of local business entities and business people and make it available for guests.
  2. Establish and maintain a reputation system for those local business people who benefit from the business center. The reputation system relies much on the feedback given by the guests who established a relation with the local business person or entity.
  3. Establish and maintain a repository of catalogues of products and services for suppliers operating in various fields for easier selection and ordering.
  4. Create the opportunity for guests to communicate with other guests for networking and exploration of opportunities based on their preferences.
  5. Create the opportunity for guests and local business people to communicate for networking, exploring opportunities based on their preferences.
  6. Providing secretarial, translation, legal, accounting and tax advisory facilities for faster deal closing.
  7. Hosting a bank branch for faster on-site banking and financial services.
  8. Stock market follow-up and transaction facilities.
  9. Running a linkedin group that would connect guests and local business people before and after the visit.

Do you think such a business center will have a different value to offer to you on you next business trips?


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2 comments:

  1. This goes beyond the normal idea of a business center to a real business concierge who can help you be successful in the local surroundings. A go-between, a virtual assistant who knows the local area and surroundings from a business standpoint, just as a concierge knows the good restaurants and sights. They may also need to be tech savvy, to help with local printing or connectivity.

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  2. Hello Bill,
    It was nice seeing you here on the blog after seeing you in Karlsruhe and thanks for your valuable comment.
    You're right, you can look at it that way. I guess in the end, what we all get in business centers today is not that much needed. As I said we do move around with better portable facilities.

    This concept could be further intensified to reach the concept of what a business hotel could be, where it could be a center with stay facilities.

    Do you think we do need such services? Would it make a difference?


    Best Regards,
    Mahmoud

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