Taking in a (new) view: The travel, leisure, and hospitality industry should roam wider and explore

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Taking in a (new) view The travel, leisure, and hospitality industry should roam wider and explore deeper in its search for talent by James Hyde and Erica Wilding

January 2012 Many current leadership teams in the Travel, Leisure and Hospitality (TLH) industry lack experience in different industries, functions, sectors or geographies. As a result, the industry risks becoming insular and stagnant. Companies need to cross-fertilise with more external talent, and prioritise developing high-potentials to fill gaps in skill sets, and transform the sector into a magnet for high-calibre executives and graduates.

About this study Korn/Ferry Whitehead Mann surveyed and interviewed over sixty CEOs, human resources directors, and other senior executives across the industry. About half of respondents came from the hotel sector; the remaining half came from sectors including travel, restaurants, health & fitness, car hire, and timeshare. James Hyde, Senior Client Partner and Head of the Consumer Practice in London, presented our initial findings at the World Tourism Forum in Lucerne, Switzerland in April 2011. This report is our complete analysis of the survey results.

Travel-related businesses, which thrive by encouraging people to take in new experiences, have plenty of management teams who stay put. Few executives appear to move in and out of travel, leisure and hospitality—or even between corporate functions— to the detriment of the industry overall. That was one of the conclusions that emerged from research conducted by Korn/Ferry (Whitehead Mann’s) Travel, Hospitality, and Leisure Practice into how companies are building leadership pipelines. Specifically we sought to understand the prevalence and benefits of talent mobility and define any threats affecting talent strategy. A high proportion of the senior executives surveyed (89 percent) anticipated moderate or significant economic growth at their companies through brand or geographical expansion in 2011 and 2012. However, despite the positive forecast, many expressed anxiety about their industry’s standing in the war for talent, both at the graduate and leadership levels. At the leadership level, the survey revealed an insular executive landscape with a scarcity of fresh ideas and insights from other industries. Nearly half (47 percent) of those interviewed disclosed that “none” or “few” of their leadership teams had experience from other industries, while more than 79 percent rarely moved between functions. The responses gave the overwhelming impression of an industry constrained by a stagnation of ideas, low on diversity and ‘new blood’. The findings also revealed several key gaps in skill sets amongst current leadership teams. The most glaring and significant gaps fall in the category of Strategic Skills, which contains some of the hardest competencies to develop. Many of the executives we interviewed recognised that in order to meet the strategic needs of the industry, they would be wise to cross-fertilise external talent with existing industry experts.


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