Chapter 12: Relationships are Simple. Simple is hard.
āOne of Richard Coraineās most often repeated sayings was āOne size fits one.ā He was referring to the hospitality experience: some guests love it when you hang out at the table and schmooze, while others want you to take their order and disappear. Itās your job to read the guest and to serve them how they want to be served.
Related Quotes
Unreasonable Hospitality ā Will Guidara
A Letter from Simon Sinek
āOn its surface, this is a book about a talented entrepreneur who helped transform a middling brasserie in New York City into the best restaurant in the world. However, this book is much bigger and more important than that. It is a book about how to treat people. How to listen. How to be curious. And how to learn to love the feeling of making others feel welcome. It is a book about how to make people feel like they belong.
Chapter 2: Making Magic in a World that Could Use More of it
āāPeople will forget what you do; theyāll forget what you said. But theyāll never forget how you made them feel.ā This quote, often (but probably incorrectly) attributed to the great American writer Maya Angelou, may be the wisest statement about hospitality ever made.
Itās a clichĆ© that culture canāt be taught; it has to be caught. And what better way to appreciate the exquisite nature of Danielās food than to spend six months ferrying plates from the kitchen to the table? More important, while we were teaching people the technical points a little bit at a time, it would give them the opportunity to fully absorb the culture we were building, long before they became point person with a guest. And how we chose which people to invite onto the team became central to our success.
Not every guest wanted a history lesson during their dinner. Many were charmed and wanted to engage with us. But some people were there to talk to their companions or to eat; they wanted us to drop off their food and leave them alone. I had stripped the team of their authority to read the table and deliver an appropriate level of detailāto tailor the service experience to the guest. In my pursuit of a sense of place, Iād actually made the meal less hospitable.
Worse, it was essentially the same mistake Iād made the year before, when Iād hesitated to promote a general manager. Once again, the guy known for talking about how much he trusted his team had acted as if he didnāt trust them at all.
In truth, Iām not surprised I made this mistakeāand Iām almost certain Iāll make it again in the future. My compulsive attention to detail is one of my superpowers; itās how I take aim at perfection. But that tendency also means Iām always walking a tightrope between my desire to guarantee excellence by controlling everything and knowing I want to create an environment of empowerment and collaboration and trust among the people who work for me. Like excellence and hospitality, these two qualitiesācontrol and trustāare not friends.
Appendix
āBut I also have to give some credit to a class called Organizational Behaviorāmostly because they made us read The One Minute Manager by Ken Blanchard and by Spencer Johnson.