Read the full article - Benchmark Hospitality International
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Read the full article - Benchmark Hospitality International
COMPANY SETS HIGHER MEASURE FOR SUCCESS AS LEADERSHIP PASSES FROM FATHER TO SON MANAGEMENT COMPANY REPORT | TOP 100 RANKING EXCERPT FROM HOTEL BUSINESS VOL. 23 NO. 6 APRIL 7, 2014 C R E AT I N G A NEW BENCHMARK Benchmark Hospitality poised for further growth as leadership passes from father to son. BY STEFANI C. O’CONNOR If change is the engine that often keeps a successful business chugging along, Benchmark Hospitality International® is apparently aboard the bullet train. Having kept a largely low profile within the industry since it was founded by Burt Cabañas in 1980, Benchmark this year is looking to raise the bar, continuing to build on a decade of growth that has seen The Woodlands, Texas-based management company advance to 40 properties across two distinct property portfolios: Benchmark Hotels & Resorts® and Personal Luxury Hotels & Resorts®, as well as several additional corporate conference centers. Such success has been able to drive internal change as well, with multi-million-dollar investments into technology, sales systems, training and staff. The biggest change, however, came this past January when the engineer of the entire enterprise decided it was time for someone else to drive the train. Opting to take on the sole role of CONTINUED BenchmarkHospitality.com » chairman, Burt Cabañas named his son, Alex, president/CEO of Benchmark. While some might assume that would be the long hoped-for game plan, the elder Cabañas indicated such wasn’t the case. “I think what’s important is that we are a privately held company, not a family company, and when you separate that in your mind, hope doesn’t really enter into it. It is now absolutely fantastic that my son has gained the capabilities and the knowledge to be able to be the CEO of the company, but we never planned it,” said the chairman. Before taking on the new post, Alex worked for Benchmark for eight years, most recently as president of business development and finance, and previously worked with Boston Consulting Group in Massachusetts. “Once he became part of our organization, it became clear that his skill level, having been to Harvard Business School and through Boston Consulting, was something the company really needed at this point in its growth. Then it became a hope — a quiet hope — that he would eventually be able to step into the position,” said the elder Cabañas. What both men agreed on, however, was that the premise needed to be fulfilled and the fit a right one. “I wasn’t intending to be in this business at all,” said Alex. Still, he knew he wanted to lead an organization— “I raise my hand often to lead”—but admitted if it was determined he was not the right fit for Benchmark, “I would be totally fine with that because I never wanted my candidacy to, in any way, put the company at risk because of any perception that was created by the family legacy … it just all came together but Burt had to be the one to say: ‘It’s time.’” Citing a recent assessment by his father, Alex characterized Benchmark as experiencing the “greatest single era of accomplishment in general for the company. And that’s from the man who started it.” “I think what’s important is that we are a privately held company, not a family company. It is now absolutely fantastic that my son has gained the capabilities and the knowledge to be able to be the CEO of the company, but we never planned it.” BURT CABAÑAS • Benchmark Hospitality International® During the past five years, the success check marks have been many. “We’ve doubled the size in that period of time, launched our two brands, we bought another company (Seattle, Washinton-based MTM Luxury Lodging, which helped launch the Personal Luxury portfolio with four hotels and eight that Benchmark added), invested between $4 million and $5 million into the company, and been very deliberate with very specific objectives and strategic goals each year … and every discipline in the company, with two exceptions, has new leadership,” he said. “It’s a monumental context in the history of our company to think about all those things that have happened in a short period of time. Meanwhile, the industry is evolving very fast to support our business model in terms of what consumers are looking for, how distribution has changed and how branding in general has changed.” Benchmark also invested in the creation of a Global Revenue Support Center that supports off-peak and overflow reservations services company-wide at what it says are lower costs and higher conversion ratios than third-party providers. The management company’s properties have delivered annual revenues of more than $505 million, and among current goals is to get to $1 billion in the next 10 years. Key to that is expanding its portfolios, which complement each other in what they deliver for the company. “Our Personal Luxury properties are smaller, they’re 50 to 150 rooms, clearly positioned as luxury properties as the market would define them, competing against the best in the market that they’re in … from a pricing standpoint they’re also at the top of their market,” CONTINUED BenchmarkHospitality.com » said the CEO. “Our Benchmark resorts and hotels are larger—smallest at 150 rooms, largest at 500 rooms—and they are more group-oriented for the most part—not all—in that 40% to 70% of the business is group driven with the Benchmark Conference Center® designation associated with them.” Benchmark also incorporates the Personal Luxury positioning in a few of its larger properties, such as with the cottages and villas at Turtle Bay Resort in Hawaii. Benchmark has a third piece, Benchmark Conference Centers®, a combination of day conference centers, such as Tokyo Conference Center Shinagawa, and private and semi-private conference centers and hotels for major corporations, such as the Lockheed Martin Center for Leadership Excellence in Bethesda, Maryland. Benchmark has long been associated with the conference side of lodging and Burt was instrumental in founding the now global International Association of Conference Centers (IACC) and remains active with the organization. Alex said the variety of properties has broadened the scope through which investors and developers see Benchmark. “The diversity has been great for our growth. And, at the end of the day, it’s for us, it’s for our 6,000 employees. It’s giving them opportunities to do unique things and leveraging the intellectual property that we’ve built.” He noted Personal Luxury properties are poised to come on board in Florida and Chicago with a resort and conference center set in West Virginia and a number “Our unique culture of collaboration is intensely oriented toward innovation and performance. Fundamentally, that has driven our relative success.” TED DAVIS • Chief Marketing and Sales Officer Benchmark Hospitality International® LEFT TO RIGHT: Greg Champion; Burt Cabañas; Brad Hayden; Alex Cabañas; and Ted Davis of corporate and university ground-up development opportunities. “So, it’s really a balance,” he said. Benchmark Hotels & Resorts® has international properties, something Cabañas wants to see happen with the Personal Luxury collection. “We are looking for international expansion for Personal Luxury and we have two projects, one in St. John’s [USVI] and one in Great Exuma. One is signed up and the other is very close and we’ve been approached with some opportunities in the Bahamas. But we’re very selective as well. Growing our business overseas takes the right person and the right team because we’re really leveraging people in those circumstances,” he said. “The last thing I would ever want to do in an international market is to over-promise and underdeliver in a very human-based business.” The younger Cabañas’ concern for human perception is something ingrained and an extension of his father’s founding philosophy of treating his employees well, something that has earned Benchmark accolades as a top company for which to work by outside organizations. The company’s culture, which encourages team members to “Be The Difference” and empowers them to go “above and beyond” to serve guests and property owners, is key to the guest experience at Benchmark properties. The philosophy permeates the company from the line employees to the C-Suite. Ensuring the culture aligns with company objectives holds true as well for the executive team, which includes EVP/COO Greg Champion, Chief Marketing and Sales Officer Ted Davis and CFO Brad Hayden, who, with their teams, meet 12 times a year over a two-day period with Cabañas as a supplement to the daily emails, texts and calls. “The strategy team is focused on the overall growth of the organization and broader initiatives we have. Our operating team focuses on implementation: How do we support the property, make their lives easier? How do we implement opportunities, systems and ideas with them?” said the CEO. “And our general managers are a part of that operating team so there’s constant feedback between the field and ourselves.” “As a leadership group, we are committed to staying true to our defined objectives and our value system and we talk about this nearly every day,” said Davis. “Our unique culture of collaboration is intensely oriented toward innovation and performance. Fundamentally, that has driven our relative success.” Champion agreed. “We are a company that does an exceptional job of balancing goals between our two most important assets—owners and employees. All of our strategies revolve around improving that performance consistently.” For example, noted Hayden, “Within finance and technology, we are focusing on our analytical tools and platforms, to provide real-time, actionable information, to the hands of our general managers and their teams, as well as to the regional support CONTINUED BenchmarkHospitality.com » teams, at the home office. From software and systems to better manage our customer relationship management, systems to schedule the right number of associates, for the proper levels of business volume and tools and vendor partners, to simplify and streamline our supply procurement,” he said. “I think the goals of our owners and the company match up extremely well,” said Champion, noting the top three areas of concern include: “Rate. We have made great strides in the past 18 months; however, we need to continue to push the limits of rate without fear; Cost creep: As the economy continues to improve, we need to remain mindful of the cost initiatives that took us through the last downturn; and capital improvements: There is a justified level of confidence that has owners spending aggressively to improve their assets and drive market share and profitability.” “Our culture is inspired by the notion of making a positive difference in our employees’, owners’ and customers’ lives, and that is profoundly important to us,” said Davis. The new CEO also concerns himself at the granular level. “Guest experience, in general, is a huge focus area for me. That even includes when guests email me, I am right there responding personally and engaging in that,” he said. However, with the elder Cabañas remaining involved in the organization, the CEO said he has been “clear with everybody that if they believe Burt can be more impactful in any given situation or issue, walk right by my office and go see him. My ego will be just fine and my schedule will still be full.” Alex takes internal direction from what he calls his “Five Fs”: faith, family, friends, fitness and financial. “Those have been my five discipline categories since college. I set goals in each of those, and they are in order of importance for me,” he said, adding one of the life lessons he learned from his father is to have balance within personal and business endeavors. FATHER AND SON TEAM: Burt (left) and Alex Cabañas “There’s an institutional culture, a badge of honor associated with Benchmark that has lived and breathed for 33 years and was very influenced by its founder and will still be—and, of course, will be influenced by its CEO and a group of leaders. ” ALEX CABAÑAS • President/CEO Benchmark Hospitality International® “He always said balance your life. My addition to that over the years has been to have a balance of focus, not necessarily a balance of time.” While he’s had a lot of visibility within the company over the past eight years, in now beginning to put his mark on it, the executive has been traveling to properties where he’s had dinner with the executive teams, reviewed employee satisfaction survey results and held small roundtables with employees to engage them at the line level. “Getting the broader message out is helpful, but I’m much more interested in engaging people at a personal level. It’s the simplest of things that make people feel great, but that’s who we are,” he said. “There’s an institutional culture, a badge of honor associated with BenchmarkHospitality.com Benchmark that has lived and breathed for 33 years and, yes, was very influenced by its founder and will still be—and, of course, will be influenced by its CEO and a group of leaders. But, at the end of the day, I want everyone to own it, I want everyone to have the courage to speak up when something happens that’s not in line with it and I want every leader to have the humility to listen when something happens that’s not in line with it because if we do that, as we go from 36 to 60 properties, we won’t lose our culture along the way; everybody’s hands will be holding tight around it and we will have a lot more strength as a group believing in and protecting that culture than we will if they expect the home office to be the caretaker,” the CEO concluded. For over three decades, we’ve done business one way... In the best interest of property ownership. Next to our employee family, the relationships with our owners are the most valuable asset within our company. We are driven by our entrepreneurial approach to hotel and resort management. With the recent unveiling of Benchmark Resorts & Hotels, Personal Luxury Resorts & Hotels, and the prestigious Benchmark Conference Center collections, we continue to innovate and establish new levels of performance to which others aspire.