Service That Survives Scale
Hospitality leadership practices preventing growth from weakening customer relationships
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- $229.00
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- $229.00
Descripción editorial
Hospitality leadership becomes most difficult when success arrives. Growth introduces process layers, reporting structures, and operational controls that often reduce the human experiences customers valued in the first place.
This book explores the tension between scale and intimacy. As organizations expand, service quality frequently becomes more predictable but less memorable. The result is a gradual erosion of customer attachment despite improving efficiency metrics.
The analysis focuses on three areas. The first is the transfer of service culture from founders and frontline teams into larger organizational structures. The second examines decision authority and how employee discretion influences customer perception. The third studies how operational consistency can coexist with moments of surprise and personal relevance.
Customer experience is approached as a strategic management issue rather than a branding exercise. The book investigates how systems either protect or weaken emotional engagement as businesses mature.
Across European markets, where differentiation increasingly depends on relationships rather than products alone, organizations face pressure to preserve trust while expanding. Businesses that successfully scale hospitality create competitive advantages that remain difficult for competitors to automate or imitate.