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yuliannab

What is clean technology (clean tech)? - Definition from WhatIs.com - 1 views

  • Clean technology (clean tech) is a general term used to describe products, processes or services that reduce waste and require as few non-renewable resources as possible. The Clean Technology Trade Alliance, a global initiative to drive the expansion of clean tech, defines it as: A broad base of processes, practices and tools, in any industry that supports a sustainable business approach, including but not limited to: pollution control, resource reduction and management, end of life strategy, waste reduction, energy efficiency, carbon mitigation and profitability. The term "clean tech" is often credited to Ron Pernick and Clint Wilder, who wrote a book called “The Clean Revolution: The Next Big Growth and Investment Opportunity.” In the book, the authors identify several main drivers of clean technology:  the current cost of conventional technology the capital being invested in research and development by large corporations a competitive global marketplace a change in consumer attitude which has brought environmental concerns into the mainstream the growing middle-class in China, which is forcing the Chinese government to invest heavily in alternative energy resources. 
    • yuliannab
       
      There is very little information on even clean technology, but this is the closest that I have seen so far. This article (well, really trying to sell a book) is about global initiative to have clean technology.
cwilliamsiona

BMS Helps Hoteliers to Adopt Green Cleaning Practices | Hotel Business - 0 views

  • hoteliers are looking at cleaning methods that are good for their workers and good for the environment.
  • The BMS mission is to provide a clean, sustainable and healthy environment for hotel guests, hotel staff and our staff that provides the service,
  • The added benefit is that they are also safer for the environment.”
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  • Selecting products with minimal or eco-friendly packaging can have a big environmental impact.
  • Practicing green cleaning as a part of your overall sustainability efforts has a positive impact on guest perception, which can lead to higher occupancy and revenue.
  • good for the planet, good for the balance sheet
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    This article discusses the importance of hoteliers using green cleaning products. The added benefit to using green cleaning products is safe for the environment. If hotel practice green cleaning, it may lead to higher occupancy and revenue. If consumers are eco-friendly, they want their hotel to be as well. Overall, our society is becoming more aware of products that are impacting our environment and it is vitally important that hotels listen and make change that for good for the people, good for the planet and good for the balance sheet.
Lymaris Collazo

For hotels, COVID-19 has created an operational "perfect storm" | PhocusWire - 0 views

  • As recovery starts in some regions, hotels are reporting dramatic and unexpected spikes in occupancy numbers, swinging from 20% to 80% occupancy and back down to 20% in a matter of days.
  • We found that the average guest departure room cleaning time has increased by around 11% overall. In fact, over half of the hotels we spoke to report an increase in minutes spent cleaning each room of at least 15% or more. Ivaylo Ivanov, senior vice president of hotel operations for Okada Manila, estimates that at his 5-star resort, an additional 25% to 30% time is required to clean each room.
  • On top of the basic need to have the right amount of staff in place for a highly unpredictable amount and type of guests, hotels also have to process systemic change in the way their operations run to be able to guarantee the care of their staff and their guests. Surgical precision also needs to be applied to cost control.
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  • One of the biggest challenges for operations managers and housekeepers alike is in implementing the new cleaning protocols. Extra time needs to be planned per hotel room to make sure that the right processes are followed, and the correct manpower needs to be available to execute the new protocols adequately for the number of rooms in service.
  • Some hotels are also deploying cleaning techniques that require rooms to be left for three hours after spraying, others have a policy of allocating 24 hours per room before another guest can be checked in to ensure there is time to fulfill the new procedures.
  • The guest profile of businesses is changing too in many instances. Many business travel hotels are having to work out how to pivot to attract and profitably service leisure guests in the absence of a business travel market currently.
  • Expense control pressures are increasing as the costs of these operations continue to spiral with hotels having to outlay hundreds of thousands of dollars on new cleaning products and protective equipment.
  • With supplementary costs like these to balance against occupancy rates of 20% on average, hotels have to find sophisticated ways to save on costs that won’t compromise the all‐important guest experience.
  • We expected hotels to turn to a reduction in stayover cleans as a key way to balance out the additional time spent cleaning check-out stays. However, our survey found that only 12% of the hotels we have spoken to have actually gone down this route.
  • As a five‐star resort where guests know to expect exemplary service, Ivaylo at the Okada resort just simply does not feel this option is open to them as standard (although, if guests request it, that would of course be accommodated). Indeed, where guests do want stayover cleans, the hotels we surveyed found that cleaning time significantly increases by around 35%.
  • When all the strings of the current environment for operations staff are pulled together, it is easy to see that not only have their jobs fundamentally shifted but that there is a huge amount expected of them. Technology has played a vital role in helping teams to communicate and operate during the lockdown, and it will be even more essential to equip teams with the right tools in this next stage so that hotel operations can be optimized to the maximum and these key members of the team are properly supported.Now is the time to assess each process to gain a full picture of exactly what labor and time is needed to continue to operate at the level guests expect whilst adapting to the regulations of the new normal. Any investment made now to support this essential part of any hotel will pay dividends in terms of lowering staff turnover and increasing guest satisfaction as well as realizing business-critical cost savings.
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    On this article you may learn about the security protocols of cleanliness rooms that hotels had to implement due to Covid-19. This challenges comes with the accompanion of controlling opertional costs and what labor and time is needed to continue to operate at the level guests expect whilst adapting to the regulations of the new normal.
mmorr116

Why a College Student Developed a Hotel Housekeeping Robot | Hospitality Technology - 0 views

  • Recently, Maidbot announced its partnership with RB (Reckitt Benckiser), a health, hygiene, and nutrition company and the makers of many world-renowned brands including Lysol, Dettol, Harpic, Finish and Mucinex. Maidbot is partnering with RB to drive greater confidence in the hospitality and commercial real estate industries by innovating cleaner, more hygienic experiences for guests and employees alike.
  • The two companies will collaborate to develop innovative commercial cleaning solutions which will drive the commercial robotics revolution and transform the commercial services industry. 
  • as hotels and other companies began to use Rosie – something interesting happened. As the team designed the hardware and navigation software to optimize Rosie’s cleaning function for varied environments, they uncovered demand for predictive data that could provide significant added value to management.
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  • Green also saw similar issues in other types of commercial real estate with demanding cleaning operations. So Green created Rosie the robot (Yes – named after The Jestons’ maidbot!) to vacuum commercial floors so that humans could focus on more meaningful and enjoyable work.
  • Micah Estis Green founded the company when he was a student working as a room attendant at The Statler Hotel on Cornell University’s campus. While cleaning rooms, he realized housekeeping is a hotel’s highest variable cost and that room attendants have the highest rate of injury.
  • Rosie can track environmental data from temperature and humidity to Wi-Fi signal strength. Rosie evolved from being a commercial floor cleaning robot to an indoor mobile data platform - mapping indoor data over physical space. Rosie’s cleaning skills combined with her data tracking has made her a valuable asset to many hotel properties.
  • Operators have seen an increase in efficiencies in room and public space cleaning, so they have derived value in changing operations accordingly. Additionally, the robot captures actionable data that can help mitigate lost revenue from guest complaints - ie. poor Wi-Fi in a room will lead to a guest complaint which could lead to a discounted rate - which has an impact on the top line for operators.”
  • “COVID has had an unprecedented impact on the service industry and operations have changed drastically,”
  • Rosie can help alleviate the strain that increased an increased task list may cause. Rosie can also tackle public spaces -- like lobbies and corridors -- to clean consistently and support house aids so they can tackle higher touch and guest-focused tasks. 
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    Interesting article! This robot Rosie, was created by a student while working as a housekeeper at a hotel. He saw that majority of accidents reported by housekeeping staff were injuries sustained from vacuuming. Later they found that Rosie was much more capable at performing other duties than housekeeping. Due her data storage capabilities she became useful in tracking environmental data, temperature, humidity and WIFI signal strength. No doubt this type of green technology has had a tremendous impact on the overall guest experience and increase in revenue.
cwilliamsiona

Diigo - BMS Helps Hoteliers to Adopt Green Cleaning Practices | Hotel Business - 0 views

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    This article discusses the importance of hoteliers using green cleaning products. The added benefit to using green cleaning products is safe for the environment. If hotel practice green cleaning, it may lead to higher occupancy and revenue. If consumers are eco-friendly, they want their hotel to be as well. Overall, our society is becoming more aware of products that are impacting our environment and it is vitally important that hotels listen and make change that for good for the people, good for the planet and good for the balance sheet.
Dongyun Oh

First Hotel in U.S. to Recycle All Soaps - 0 views

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    Laguna Beach welcomes more than 6 million visitors annually to its sandy shores. Now visitors who stay in the beachside city's 22 hotels and lodging establishments will be inadvertent participants in a citywide effort to recycle all of the soaps, shampoos, hair conditioners, lotions and bath gels that are left over after a night's stay. Starting Monday, Laguna Beach becomes the first city in the nation to have all of its hotel properties with more than 20 rooms participate in Clean the World -- a Florida-based nonprofit that provides recycled hotel soaps and hygiene products to those in need. Montage Laguna Beach, Pacific Edge Hotel and Best Western Laguna Brisas are among the 18 participating hotels, along with four of the city's six bed and breakfasts, for a total of 1,229 rooms. In an average year, with an estimated 75% occupancy rate, Laguna Beach hotels generate 336,000 bars of soap and a slightly lesser number of shampoo, conditioner, bath gel and lotion bottles, all of which were previously thrown in the trash. Working with Clean the World, those hygiene products will be reclaimed by the housekeeping staff and set aside in a separate receptacle to be shipped to a Las Vegas processing facility. The bars of soap are cleaned of hair and paper, sterilized, ground into pellets and pressed into new bars of soap that are distributed to non-governmental organizations in 45 countries that do not have ready access to soap. The bottled amenities are likewise reclaimed. If they're full, the bottles' exteriors are sterilized and redistributed to homeless shelters and soup kitchens inside the U.S. If the bottles are 25% empty, the plastic is recycled or potentially upcycled for use in other products. Founded in 2009, Clean the World has 1,200 partner hotels across the U.S. and Canada, 126 of which are in California, including the Disneyland Hotel, Disney's Grand Californian Resort & Spa and Disney's Paradise Pier Hotel in Anaheim. Since joining the Clean th
Rochelle Perez

Beekeeper, Whispr Offering Hotels a FREE 'Cleaning Task Lists' App to Fight Covid-19 - 1 views

  • Is your hotel "Covid Clean?" It can be, thanks to a new app that gives housekeepers step-by-step cleaning instructions that follow Center for Disease Control (CDC) guidelines to stop the spread of the virus. Beekeeper, a mobile-first communication platform for frontline workers, is now offering the "Cleaning Task Lists" by Whispr app FREE to its customers. The smart checklist will work on any Android or iOS device and can be activated by Whispr immediately if the hotel is an existing Beekeeper user.
  • "We are extremely proud of our innovation partner, Whispr, for designing an app that will enable hotels to be truly responsive to the virus and lessen its impact on the property, staff and guests," said Andrada Paraschiv, Beekeeper Head of Hospitality. "Because our core products are integrated, any hotel using the Beekeeper operational communication platform can upload the 'Cleaning Task Lists' by Whispr app in minutes. The app includes a real-time dashboard showing each room's availability as it is made Covid Clean."
  • "We are encouraging our customers to display the Covid Clean badge throughout the hotel and on their websites and social media profiles to let travelers know their doors are open and the assets are virus free," Paraschiv added. "This is a critical first step towards economic and social recovery for hotels."
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  • "Both Beekeeper and Whispr believe in using technology to connect workers and bring them together when you need it the most," he added. "This is that time, and we think this is a good example of how to use modern tools and actually make a difference. We're offering this totally for FREE to any hotel in the world. This is our way of trying to help."
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    Article is describing how Whispr and Beekeeper are helping hotels maintain new standards
tgood006

How Hotels Can Spring Clean Their Information Security Policies Ahead of the Summer Tra... - 8 views

  • Shockingly, nearly a third of hotels (32%) admitted they currently have no known policy for storing and disposing of documents
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    Memorial Day weekend will soon be upon everyone and with summer officially kicks off. This article talks about how hotels can clean up and do better to protect their guest personal information. A few years ago, all major corporation were required to adopt General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulations which helped some hospitality companies. In my current capacity with Marriott International as a Workforce Administrator we were required to schedule all customer facing associates for training on GDPR. Prior to Marriott acquiring Starwood hotel company they had their own data hacking which caused an increased expense for Marriott to let customer know they were doing all they can to stop the data breach and protect their personal information. They also created a dedicated call center for this effort to let guest know that they will continue to put protecting their personal information as a high priority. This article outlines how hotels can prepare for increased guest traffic and protect their guest personal identical information. One of my responsibilities as a Workforce admin is to handle staffing for all of Marriott International Customer Engagement Centers. Employee training on GDPR is required every year for Marriott associates. Training employees on how to better protect guest personal information is more cost effective than dealing with a data breach due to negligence of an absent-minded employee. Guest expect to know their personal information is going to be protected. This allows them to have piece of mind. Leaving a clear and clean area allows for guest to feel that their information is being protected. Imagine walking up to the front desk and finding the previous guest personal information cluttered in view. This will make the current feel their personal information will left unattended and viewable to the guest to walk up causing nothing but anxiety attacks. Unable to enjoy their summer vacation. Guest expect that the overall security of the hotel
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    32% of companies not having a known policy is startling considering that 77% of Americans find it to be important to them. Yet another IT issue the states finds itself behind the curve on.
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    Another point as for the "clean desk" policy goes, it also needs to include stricter policies on securing credit card information. It should not be written down or repeated on the telephone. In an open environment sound can carry and unwanted parties can hear. Cell phones should be stored away from the desk, because cell phones are in itself a potential security breach.
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    Our hotel as well has reinforced the clean desk policy. I remembered the data breach for Marriott it was in most major news channel and at work for several months we had the same questions from our guest requesting more information. As you stated a hotline was created and of of course the most surprising for me was the acceptance from our guest. Main responses were, with the new technology advance world we've coming and going into that is something we all have to face.
akallison93

Cleaning robots are powering an automation revolution in hospitality - The Washington Post - 0 views

  • While Vi-YO-Let, the product of a partnership with Denmark-based UVD Robots, might play cute tunes and light up as she moves, she has a serious job: disinfecting the air and surfaces around her. And she does so remarkably well: Her array of UV lights, which look like a bundle of lightsabers, kill more than 99 percent of viruses and bacteria, including the coronavirus.
  • More and more guests are requesting the robo-cleaning package
  • But as the pandemic rages into its second year, major brands are increasingly turning to the world of high-tech disinfection to strengthen their cleaning protocols
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  • It’s a trend that’s slowly transforming housekeeping — and accelerating the pace of automation in hospitality.
  • Until recently, only health-care workers would frequently interact with disinfecting bots, which cost upward of $125,000 each. It’s a steep investment, but if it boosts travelers’ confidence, it’s worth it,
  • The appeal to the hospitality sector of virus-slaying UV light is obvious. Hospitals have found Xenex’s patented machines kill “22 times more pathogens” when compared with a room cleaned to CDC standards alone, Miller said.
  • certain hospitality jobs, those where face-to-face customer service is a key part of the experience, were less vulnerable.
  • Today, travelers might stumble on UV bots anywhere from five-star hotels and convention centers to train stations and cruise ships.
  • Verified Market Research that projects the market for UV disinfecting bots will grow to more than $5.5 billion by 2027.
  • Some robot makers refer to these kinds of bots as “cobots,” a portmanteau of “collaboration” and “robots,” because they’re intended to work alongside people rather than replace them.
  • a report that predicted more than 60 percent of jobs in hospitality-dominated cities like Las Vegas could be automatable by 2035
  • Take the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, Calif. The iconic hotel, famous for hosting the annual Golden Globe Awards ceremony, boasts in one promotional video that its Xenex robot staff “zaps every inch before your arrival,” leaving you a “pathogen-free sanctuary” where you’ll “rest assured you’re sleeping in the safest room possible.”
  • the pandemic is likely to accelerate the automation of jobs in sectors like hospitality.
  • “If they can develop driverless cars, if they can develop the whole variety of different things I saw there, certainly the jobs in our industry are going to change.”
  • Unite Here negotiates “extensive technology language” into its labor contracts. This helps ensure that workers can retrain for new skills, transition to other roles or at least receive severance pay if their jobs are automated out of existence.
  • Even as new technologies create new roles, some types of jobs may go away for good.
  • For now, even a state-of-the-art robot sometimes requires the delicate human touch.
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    This article explains how robotics in hospitality is becoming far more common because of Covid-19. They go into detail about how, right now, all robotics require the assistance of humans. But they also go into how that can change in the next few years. The better technology gets, the less need there is for human support.
jchac014

Why Hospitality Should Consider Disinfecting Kiosks, POS and More with UV-C Energy Tech... - 1 views

  • Using UV-C energy to inactivate microorganisms at the genetic level by scrambling their cellular DNA, UV-CLEAN has been proven by independent testing to eliminate 99.9% of deadly pathogens on high touch surfaces.
  • hotels and restaurants have a large number of points of interaction that are used by employees and guests. These touch points include check-in and informational kiosks, the point of sale, payment devices, order taking stands and on-table devices – all of these points of interaction can be a source of harmful viruses and bacteria.
  • Current cleaning standards are inconsistent, prone to error, are expensive due to labor costs, can cause increased failure rates (due to liquid damage), and can cause cosmetic damage to technology.
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  • The solution leverages UV-CLEAN technology to automatically disinfect surfaces during pre-set cleaning cycles.
  • Disinfection in hotels needs to focus on both technology and consumer items.
  • Within sit down restaurants, technology is expanding to include check-in kiosks, on table payment and entertainment devices and pay at the table devices.
  • “As IUVA recognized, UV-C has been proven to inactivate coronavirus, SARS-CoV-1, which is 80% genetically related to COVID-19.
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    UV-Clean is useful, disinfecting technology the Hospitality Industry can use during and after this COVID-19 pandemic. As restaurants and hotels slowly open back up, their surfaces run high risk of carrying the virus, being that more people are going to be around and touching things.
anonymous

Marriott International Utilizes Advanced Technologies to Elevate Its Cleanliness Standa... - 0 views

  • 这些技术包括带有医院级消毒剂的静电喷雾器,以对整个酒店的表面进行消毒
  • 该酒店还在测试紫外线技术,以消毒客人共享的宾客和设备的钥匙。
  • 喷雾器可快速清洁和消毒整个区域,并可在酒店环境中用于清洁和消毒客房,大厅,健身房和其他公共区域。
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  • Marriott International rolled out a multi-pronged platform to elevate its cleanliness standards and hospitality norms and behaviors to meet the new health and safety challenges presented by the current pandemic environment, relying heavily on advanced technologies.
  • These technologies include electrostatic sprayers with hospital-grade disinfectant to sanitize surfaces throughout the hotel
  • The sprayers rapidly clean and disinfect entire areas and can be used in a hotel setting to clean and disinfect guest rooms, lobbies, gyms and other public areas.
  • ultraviolet light technology for sanitizing keys for guests and devices shared by associates.
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    The development of technology has enabled the hotel industry to provide safer services to guests in the context of the widespread of Covid-19. Marriott International has launched a multi-pronged platform to improve its cleanliness standards, reception regulations, and behaviors to meet the new health and safety challenges posed by the current pandemic environment, including static electricity with hospital-grade disinfectants Sprayer to disinfect the entire hotel surface. The sprayer can quickly clean and disinfect the entire area and can be used in the hotel environment to clean and disinfect rooms, halls, gyms, and other public areas. In addition, Marriott Group is also testing ultraviolet disinfection technology to disinfect the equipment shared between guests.
fischerc014

Hotels using robots for delivery, cleaning amid COVID-19 pandemic - 0 views

  • One surefire way to ensure you can socially distance during your stay is to have a robot deliver items to your room.
  • Rosé can bring you anything, either in-house or via a complimentary shopping service
  • The robot is sanitized after each delivery.
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  • For guests who prefer contactless deliveries
  • You may be wondering if Rosé replaces staff members who might otherwise be delivering items. That's not the case: The robot can't carry luggage, make beds or take reservations.
  • Each hotel at the properties had a robot available before the pandemic, though now they are much more popular
  • They can assist with hotels' intense cleaning regimens, given new guest and industry expectations for cleanliness.
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    Before, the 2020 pandemic, some hotels have already had robots incorporated into their hotel but it was more for entertaining purposes. Now they have become popular due to the pandemic. They help with social distancing by delivering guests their towels, pillows, foods, etc. They also assist with cleaning by using a super sterilizing blast. It is an expensive investment but worth it since it will become the new norm.
David Maggard

KELOLAND.com | Hotel Uses New Technology To Clean Rooms - 0 views

  • The goal is to have the cleanest hotels in the nation. And to do that, Best Western is using two new gadgets.
  • And the new wands and flashlights have paid off.  During the past two health inspections, Best Western Empire Towers has scored a perfect 100.
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    I guess not everything has to do with the bottom line. Best Western Hotel chain is trying to become the cleanest hotel on the market. I say " good for them and better for the customer who stays at Best Western Hotels". This attention to detail is where the energy should be focused in the housekeeping department and not just how many rooms a room attendant can clean in a 8 hour shift.Hopefully this attitude towards cleanness becomes a standard in the industry. Technology sometimes is a blessing.
Dalton Draper

10 Ways to Go Green and Save Green | Worldwatch Institute - 0 views

  • Save energy to save money.
  • Unplug appliances when you're not using them. Or, use a "smart" power strip that senses when appliances are off and cuts "phantom" or "vampire" energy use.
  • Use a drying rack or clothesline to save the energy otherwise used during machine drying.
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  • Less gas = more money (and better health!).
  • Plant drought-tolerant native plants in your garden. Many plants need minimal watering. Find out which occur naturally in your area.
  • Save water to save money.
  • Skip the bottled water.
  • Consider telecommuting if you live far from your work. Or move closer. Even if this means paying more rent, it could save you money in the long term.
  • Eat smart.
  • Walk or bike to work. This saves on gas and parking costs while improving your cardiovascular health and reducing your risk of obesity.
  • Think before you buy.
  • Go online to find new or gently used secondhand products. Whether you've just moved or are looking to redecorate, consider a service like craigslist or FreeSharing to track down furniture, appliances, and other items cheaply or for free.
  • Borrow instead of buying.
  • Buy smart.
  • Buy in bulk. Purchasing food from bulk bins can save money and packaging.
  • Invest in high-quality, long-lasting products. You might pay more now, but you'll be happy when you don't have to replace items as frequently (and this means less waste!).
  • Keep electronics out of the trash.
  • Keep your cell phones, computers, and other electronics as long as possible.Donate or recycle them responsibly when the time comes. E-waste contains mercury and other toxics and is a growing environmental problem.Recycle your cell phone.Ask your local government to set up an electronics recycling and hazardous waste collection event. 
  • Make your own cleaning supplies.Join the Million Car Carbon Campaign by purchasing your Earth-Aid kit today.The big secret: you can make very effective, non-toxic cleaning products whenever you need them. All you need are a few simple ingredients like baking soda, vinegar, lemon, and soap.Making your own cleaning products saves money, time, and packaging-not to mention your indoor air quality. 
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    This article talks of 10 simple steps to go green in both a comercial and home cercumstances. Every business can do these steps to make a green company that can be used as a deferenciation point. I have never heard a company say that they make their own cleaning products.
anonymous

News & Headlines - Beverly Hills Hotel Celebrates 100th Anniversary with Bold Eco Programs - 0 views

  • Included among the hotel's list of extensive green initiatives are participation in "Clean the World's" soap donation program, a Three Key Rating with Green Key Global's Eco-Rating Program, green purchasing practices, and energy efficient lighting upgrades.
  • This exciting time in our history has us further developing a program that aligns with Dorchester Collection's Corporate Responsibility model while remaining inclusive of components that reflect the unique heritage of our iconic property,
  • The hotel's commitment to green purchasing practices includes a partnership with Proctor & Gamble and ensures that almost all of our cleaning products are environmentally friendly.
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  • This, combined with a comprehensive recycling and composting program that includes E-waste items such as batteries, computers, telephones, radios and other electronics, yields a 92% waste diversion rate.
  • These efforts to protect the environment extend beyond the hotel, as employee teams support the California Coastal Commission and participate in Heal the Bay beach clean-ups.
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    The hundred year old, Dorchester Collection's Beverly Hills Hotel participates in various green initiatives within the hotel as well as around the world. The hotel purchases only green products, donates partially used toilet paper, donates soap and amenities to local and global shelters and organizations. Most importantly they participate in proper e-waste of electronics.  I think this Beverly Hill Hotel sets a great standard for all hotels. Not only does their hotel practice green initiatives but they take that extra step and their employees participate in beach clean ups. 
hchiebooth

Eco-Friendly Hotel Ideas You Need to Implement Now - 1 views

  • Eco-friendly travel options are projected to increase up to 36 percent in 2017 in order to meet green travelers’ demands. Business travel is also going greener
  • Reducing energy can enhance guest experience and add extra padding to your bank account.
  • As more consumers are choosing to engage in eco-conscious lifestyles at home, it’s unsurprising that their tastes in hotels and travel destinations are noticeably greener, too.
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  • it’s crucial for your hotel or resort to adopt more eco-friendly practices so your business can stay competitive, attract more travelers, save money, and do its part to protect the planet.
  • Making just some simple changes to how your hotel uses energy can make a big impact.
  • Energy-saving kitchen, laundry, and air conditioning equipment can also drastically reduce energy use in hotels. If your hotel or resort has a pool, consider purchasing a solar water heating system.
  • Using water in excess can also lead to groundwater contamination if sewage systems overflow. Conserving water also reduces energy use, thus saving your business money.
  • Linen reuse programs for hotels and resorts are another great idea in terms of reducing water and energy waste.
  • Swapping out conventional cleaning supplies with green cleaning products can help your hotel or resort offer a safer, more natural environment to travelers.
  • hotels are now using bio-based cleaning products
  • Implementing just some of these sustainability efforts in your hotel or resort will help your business stay competitive, save money, and reduce your negative impact on the environment.
  • Many hotels and resorts are now composting their food waste to divert food from landfills.
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    In the era of green travelers, the demand for eco-friendly hotels is on the rise. Since the interest is increasing, a lot of hotels have changed their routine practices and policies to become eco-friendly. Hotels have found ways to implement greener alternatives and have abandoned practices that create waste. Eco-friendly hotels have adopted practices that prove to be less harmful to the environment. For example, hotels can install energy saving thermostats, air conditioners and use solar water heating systems to conserve energy. Green travelers will appreciate these changes and it will also make a positive contribution to the hotel's bottom line. Eco-friendly hotels ultimately look at every facet of the guest experience to implement green changes. Some hotels offer programs where guests, that stay multiple nights, receive additional benefits for not having their linens washed. Some hotels have even replaced there chemical cleaning products for bio-based cleaning products. This is a great start toward a better tomorrow and within time more hotels will become more environmentally friendly.
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    Great article, the majority of hotels are currently implementing the paper straw and remove all plastics. Our hotel as well have changed the lights throughout the hotel. Not sure if that helps with the electrical cost but a lot of change is being made to be Eco-friendly.
rhoff019

Technology In The Front, Nothing In The Back? | By Kristin Carville - Hospitality Net - 0 views

  • In some cases, the reason is that hotels are unaware of the various technology available that can assist them in these areas. In other cases, it's because the attitude towards spending money and/or time on technology is still rather reserved.
  • Visualize supervisors finding out that a room is ready to be inspected the moment the housekeeper has finished cleaning it. Imagine being able to know exactly how long a housekeeper took to clean a room and whether the quality of work meets the hotel's standards. Perhaps, you want to be able to know exactly who is fulfilling a guest request when it comes in, and the status of progress? Or you want to find a guest's bags without having to visit all 5 rooms that are being used for storage? Or maybe you want to be able to track how your preventive maintenance is going.
  • The great news is that there are already technology solutions out there readily available to do these actions for hotels.
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  • However, these programs allow staff - from management to the room attendants - to know exactly what is happening in the hotel right at that exact moment, which is of vital importance.
  • One of the other great challenges that these programs can address is the collection of data, and the ability to produce factual reports on areas that have historically been based purely on anecdotal evidence. Whereas before, there would be rough estimates on how long each room would take to be cleaned, this information is now collected from the software and can be tabulated and reported however the hotel needs it. It also eliminates the need to go trawling back through overflowing filing cabinets to find out the frequency and cost of previous repairs - everything is now all collated together and much more easily accessible.
  • These days with the use of apps, barcodes, and QR codes, a simple luggage tag can be a valuable way to be able to record exactly where an item is and how it has moved around the hotel from storeroom to guest room
  • how hotels can deliver these experiences is changing, and hotels must move with the times and arm themselves with the tools of today to deliver this
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    Many hotels are stuck with old ways of doing things such as giving housekeepers lists of rooms to clean on paper. Many of the essential functions of hotels such as housekeeping, keeping track of guest requests, and preventative maintenance have different apps or software that can be used to keep track of all of that information. Hotels generally are not the first to implement new technology that is available. If hotels did implement technology that is currently available or in development, many jobs in the hotel can be completed faster by utilizing the technology.
Jennifer Mesa

Beyond 2005: Top Technologies That Will Redefine the Hotels of the Future - 0 views

  • Biometrics, a security technology that identifies individuals by retina scans, fingerprints or voice prints, is already in use at government and private industry installations. The lock on your hotel room's safe may soon be triggered by a retina scan. Guests of future hotels might also forget about room keys and check in to hotels with just a glance. An airport in Amsterdam is paving the way with the first public installation of retina scans replacing passport checks at security checkpoints.
  • I'm still dreaming about living in a Jetsons-style home that cleans itself, but I may see it in a hotel room first. In an interview with Travel+Leisure magazine, consultant Grace Leo-Andrieu imagines hotels of the future which offer "services that may not necessarily be performed by humans. Food and drinks could be dispensed by machines or robots, rooms could be cleaned by built-in vacuum and disinfecting systems, and a quick back-and-foot massage could be provided by a robotic apparatus."
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    The future of hospitality is approaching sooner than we thought. Biometric technology for airports is about to launch in an airport in Amsterdam eliminating passport and some other security measures. Also, hotels are looking into robots that clean room and maybe even give you a massage! 
Patty Ferrer

Hotel operators step up their green initiatives - Travel Weekly - 0 views

  • Our desert surroundings require that we be strong stewards of natural resources, especially water," Dumont said.
  • LEED is an acronym for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, the council's rating system for measuring the effectiveness of environmentally efficient buildings. LEED ranks buildings on a 100-point scale measuring energy and atmosphere, the sustainability of a site, efficient use of water and the use of environmentally responsible materials and resources in the building's construction and maintenance. It also awards six points for innovative design and four points for embracing regional priorities in products and services. The resulting levels are Certified (40 to 49 points), Silver (50 to 59 points), Gold (60 to 79 points) and the greenest category, Platinum (80 points or more).
  • he approximately 5 million hotel rooms in the U.S. rack up almost $4 billion in energy bills a year, or about $800 per room annually, according to Ashley Katz, spokeswoman for the Washington-based Green Building Council.
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  • MGM Resorts is among an expanding number of hotel operators looking to capitalize on growing environmental awareness among travelers by getting their hotel owner-developers to invest in systems that cut energy usage, save water and reduce waste.
  • The trend in consumer green consciousness has grown important enough among travelers that Sabre Holdings, one of the world's largest GDS operators, has taken notice. Last month, Sabre launched its Eco-Certified Hotel Program, making it what the company claimed was the first GDS to break out a list of "environmentally responsible accommodations."
  • MGM Resorts has cut its electricity usage by an amount that could power more than 12,000 homes.
  • Caesars Entertainment (formerly Harrah's Entertainment) set a goal of cutting its carbon emissions by 10% between 2007 and 2013. So far, the Las Vegas-based company has replaced 65,000 halogen light bulbs with LED bulbs, which use about 90% less electricity, and has recycled more than 60,000 pounds of soap for Clean the World, a nonprofit that sanitizes the soap and sends it to low-income areas of the U.S.
  • The trend in consumer green consciousness has grown important enough among travelers that Sabre Holdings, one of the world's largest GDS operators, has taken notice. Last month, Sabre launched its Eco-Certified Hotel Program, making it what the company claimed was the first GDS to break out a list of "environmentally responsible accommodations."
  • T he approximately 5 million hotel rooms in the U.S. rack up almost $4 billion in energy bills a year, or about $800 per room annually, according to Ashley Katz, spokeswoman for the Washington-based Green Building Council
  • MGM Resorts is among an expanding number of hotel operators looking to capitalize on growing environmental awareness among travelers by getting their hotel owner-developers to invest in systems that cut energy usage, save water and reduce waste
  • "We have had the Travelocity Green Hotel program since 2008 and noticed increasing demand and supply of green hotels," said Leilani Latimer, director of sustainability initiatives at Sabre. "Additionally, there is increasing interest on the corporate side as more and more businesses are integrating their overarching sustainability programs into their managed travel programs and looking for significant ways to promote sustainable procurement practices
  • "It's very difficult for hotels to be truly green by their nature," said Bjorn Hanson, divisional dean of New York University's school of tourism and hospitality management. "Daily cleaning consumes chemicals and energy, and public spaces are 30% to as much as 70% of the square footage of a hotel and must be lighted, cooled and heated."
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    With sustainability at the forefront of hotel operators and investors hotels are becoming conscious of the guests needs as more and more travelers are requiring and are staying at properties that are serious about environmental conservation. The article highlighted the fact hotels are big consumers of energy, therefore have construction that are LEED certified will not only benefit the environment but also the bottom line of investors.
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    Travel Weekly takes a look at hotels taking real initiatives to their commitment to going green, especially in Sin City. Hotel groups are looking not to save money through transparent initiatives asking guests to simply reuse their towels, rather the article looks at "hotel owner-developers to invest in systems that cut energy usage, save water, and reduce waste". It seems in addition to other environmentally conscious west coast cities, Vegas has set a standard by setting goals for increased recycling, decreased energy consumption, switching over to LED bulbs, composting food waste, reducing overall carbon footprint and emissions. In light of continuing green development, Sabre Holdings has launched an Eco-Certified Hotel Program taking the lead out of the other four major GDS's to tip their hat to eco-friendly hotels. As travelers, GDS's, hotels, travel websites, and developers alike place greater emphasis on the preference for environmentally conscious lodgings, the more likely the industry is going to continue adopting these measures.
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    Hotels are becoming more green world wide. MGM hotels is on board with a green initiative. Hotels electricity and water add up because they have to cool a building , clean and maintain the hotel. IT costs about 800 per room annually in electricity and water costs. MGM hotels reduced the electrivity they use which can help power 12, 000 houses. HOtels are also trying to reduce its carbon emissions. Although as the article states " its very difficult fot hotels to be trully green by their nature" every little bit helps.
Yi Sun

Back-of-house communication is key | Hotel Management - 0 views

  • MTech tracks service orders and guest profiles for hoteliers via the Internet with its HotSOS software platform. HotSOS interfaces with the property-management system and keeps important guest information, such as any issues experienced during a previous stay, at the push of a button. If a staff member is walking the property and sees an issue, he can relay a message from a handheld device to a back-of-the-house employee who can alert the appropriate department and immediately get a resolution in the works.
  • “Guest requests are reported and the system figures out who should cover it,” said Luis Segredo, president and CEO of MTech.
  • MTech recently introduced REX (Room Expeditor), specifically designed for the housekeeping department. REX allows room attendants to track room status and assign cleaning duties via an iPod Touch handheld device. REX uses information in the PMS to notify room attendants when rooms need cleaning and helps them track issues.
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  • Because a wireless network can support many applications, hoteliers are finding that adding services can be fairly inexpensive
  • Cameras can communicate wirelessly and video can be cached off site.
  • VoWiFi: Voiceover Wi-Fi is one way a mobile handset can be integrated into a voice-over-Internet-protocol network.Development kit: A software development kit typically is a set of development tools that allows a software engineer to create applications for a certain software package, hardware platform, computer system, video game console, operating system or similar platform.Browser-based: An application that is accessed via Web browser over a network such as the Internet or an intranet. Also a software application that is coded in a browser-supported language.Two-way: A radio that can both transmit and receive, unlike a broadcast receiver, which only receives content.RF: Radio frequency is a frequency or rate of oscillation, which corresponds to the frequency of alternating current electrical signals used to produce and detect radio waves.LAN: A local-area network is a computer network covering a small geographic area, such as a home, office or group of buildings, that consists of high data-transfer rates, a small geographic range and lack of a need for telecommunication lines.Mesh: Mesh networking is a way to route data, voice and instructions between nodes. It allows for continuous connections and reconfiguration around broken or blocked paths by “hopping” from node to node until the destination is reached.
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    It says the sooner the service is provided to the guests, the guests will more satisfied with the hotel. The telecommunication can help to reach the goal, for example, the system will determine which room need to be cleaned or not, the security camera also is a telecommunication system.
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    From my point of view, Mtech tracked service can really help the managers to save the cost on the management fees.
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