&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Archive for May, 2009

May 29 2009

Pushing the Buttons

All the units are up. Thatched roofs are being laid by the Indonesian crew at an amazing speed. The main kitchen is being hosed down from the construction dust and the stainless steel appliances sparkle for the first time in months. Most of the staff are back on island and there are rigorous training programs going on. There is a lively buzz in the air as a fashion show of the new uniforms will be held in the lobby today. And I am having a fight with the Director of Design and Procurement from corporate.

Miss Darling at the corporate is the embodiment of the eternal conflict between corporate and operations. She sits in her posh office somewhere in a metropolitan city and chooses supplies for a property half a world away without an inkling of the reality on site:

  •  200 dainty beach umbrellas are ordered. They provide approximately a palm-sized shade under the searing tropical sun. The slightest sea breeze topples them either into the lagoon or on the future guest heads.
  • As a resort frequented mostly by honeymooners, we receive 80 twin beds and 40 king beds for our 100-room property. We have wanted 80 king beds and 40 twin beds (for the odd Japanese honeymooners who require twin beds, even on honeymoon). Of course it was entirely our fault that Miss Darling messed up the bed type.
  •  The said twin beds are accompanied by king-sized bedsheets.
  • Flat-screen TVs are in the design book. Hooray! But wait a minute. The order shows they are an older version with no swivel base. Can Miss Darling please order the version with the swivel?

o “No. Build your own swivel. I have already pushed the button.”

o Of course we have nothing else to do when opening a resort. We will have the entire engineering team dedicated to converting precious wood supplies imported at owner’s expenses to TV swivels.

  • The said TVs are to arrive on property with opening four months away. Where shall we store these precious and delicate appliances?

o “Why, put them in your ballroom!”

o “Well, our property has no ballroom. We are on an island the size of a park lot.”

o “That’s not my problem.”

o “Could you please delay the shipment to perhaps a week before the opening so we can put the TVs into the units directly?”

o “No. I have already pushed the button.”

The said TVs are currently housed in a container on the main island, at $17,000 a month, at owner’s expenses. I would love to have that money to upgrade the staff accommodation, or to buy a new generator for the powerhouse, or to dry dock one of the speedboats. Thanks to Miss Darling, it is spent on storing TVs that by the time we open will be outdated by a few versions only because she cannot wait to “push the button”.

She surely pushes my buttons.

01-frustrated.jpg

Advertise Here with Today.com

One response so far

May 21 2009

Tree Rings

A month has passed and I am happy to report that we have a solution for the rat invasion. It is outrageous to think that we needed to fly in a rodent expert all the way from Holland. He came highly recommended and I managed to convince the owners that spending $1000 on one air ticket is totally worthwhile when we are facing any future rebate at $1000 a room per night.

Hans earned our respect from the moment he entered the meeting room. Unlike most pest control officers, he was clean-shaven, well dressed and soft spoken. I was most impressed that rats had their own PowerPoint presentation. Hans quickly pointed out why our own rodent control had little success. He color-schemed the rats and highlighted their behavioral patterns. We were putting traps in the kitchen while the Asiatic black rats live in trees! South African rats are most active during the day while Indian rats come out only during the night…

We never knew we were the United Nations of Rodents headquarters!

Within one day, Hans made drastic changes to our pest control formula and the most daring move was to install metal rings on the coconut trees. We positioned the foot wide aluminum rings about 2 feet below the crown of the trees - just within sight of the juicy young coconut buds the rats love so much but just out of reach. Their claws will not be able to cling to the slippery aluminum therefore we will be able to catch them on the ground level.

By the end of the second day and Hans already on his way back to Holland, all our coconut trees proudly displayed their brand new shiny rings and we began to collect up to twenty rats in traps a night. The number peaked one day at 35 and began to dwindle to one or two a day. I guess we are finally on our way to a rodent-free island for the opening.

One last task before opening: I need to come up with a good story to explain the tree rings. Would guests really look up and notice the rings? If so, I can always blame the ubiquitous lizards.

2 responses so far

Advertise Here