Step 6 Developing reading skills the hotel trade in the world
The accommodation sector is central to international tourism. Tourism flows are directly influenced by the size of this sector, by the way it adapts to demand and by the quality of the accommodation on offer. Three characteristics are associated with accommodation:
Seasonality. Its economic activities are seasonal which implies a great flexibility in structures.
Manpower planning. The industry is labour-intensive, which further compounds the problems caused by seasonality. It requires accurate forward planning of temporary employment.
Perishability. Accommodation production cannot be stocked. As with transport, accommodation products that are not consumed can not be stored for use at a future date. Non-utilization is expensive.
The quality of the accommodation, the hospitality and customer service provided by staff and the efficiency of the operation all contribute to the success of international tourism.
Since the advent of mass tourism many forms of accommodation have been developed. These can be classified according to different criteria:
Built accommodation or alternative accommodation: hotels, second homes and holiday centres or campsites, caravans and cruise liners;
Individual or collective accommodation: second homes or holiday villages;
Profit-and non-profit-making accommodation: hotels or holiday camps for children and social tourism.
The hotel is the traditional form of tourist accommodation. As a major economic activity, it creates direct and indirect employment and provides an important source of foreign currency.
The growth of the hotel trade has come about as a result of the traditional industry adapting to current conditions and modernising.
Accommodation supply is determined by the specific nature of the tourism industry. The hotel trade displays features associated with both heavy and labour-intensive industries. Investments in hotel construction tie up large amounts of capital for medium- to long-term periods, a typical feature of heavy industries.
The activities connected with running a hotel are those of a service industry which is labour-intensive.
Industrialised countries have a competitive advantage, since sources of finance for investments are generally more easily available to them. Although developing countries have plenty of manpower, they often lack the necessary resources to develop tourism adequately and to manage their services in a competitive manner.
In the economic analysis of international tourism, a hotel must be differentiated from other forms of lodgings used by tourists. Thus, a hotel is a commercial establishment offering rooms or furnished apartments to a market which is either passing through the area or staying for several nights.
It may offer a catering service, bar and complementary services. It can operate all year round or seasonally.
The hotel trade constitutes the principal accommodation capacity in industrialised countries.
However, there is a relative decline in its importance with respect to other types of accommodation and the whole structure of the hotel trade is undergoing profound change. The number of small independent and family-run hotels is falling, while the number of hotel chains is growing rapidly.
There are two main kinds of hotel chains: hotel consortia which group together independent hotels, and integrated chains, which are made up of homogenous units.
- Федеральное агентство по образованию
- Unit I the tourist industry step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation the tourist industry
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- The Domestic Visitor
- The International Visitor
- Classification of International Visitors
- The International Tourist
- The Excursionist or the Same-Day Visitor
- Travel Motivation
- Climate
- Personal Motives
- International Tourism Trends
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit II working in tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation careers in tourism
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit III travel agents step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation the retail travel agent
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice Two-Part Verbs
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Travel agents try not to miss internet boat Online Booking Threatens Traditional High Street Outlets
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit IV tour operators step I Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation tour operators
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Hotel contracting
- When the welcome is frosty
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Tour guides
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit V tourist promotion step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation tourist promotion
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Promotional tools
- Brochures
- Main Target Markets
- Making Brochure Work
- Copywriting
- Grab Attention by Direct Addressing
- Some Copywriting Hints
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit VI tourist attractions and entertainment
- Step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation
- Tourist attractions and entertainment
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Compound Nouns
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- How disney does it
- Unit VII tourism and transporattion
- Step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation
- Tourism and transportation
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- Sail away
- Imagine that you recently accompanied a group
- 4.1 Put the words in the right order to make correct sentences.
- 4.2. Put the underlined words into the correct order.
- 4.3. Join the verbs and prepositions and make phrasal verbs to replace the words underlined in the sentences below.
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Air transport and tourism
- Cost Structures of Airline Companies
- Direct Operating Costs
- Indirect Operating Cost
- General and Administration Costs
- Labour Costs
- International tourism development: problems of equipment and infrastructure
- Ground and Station Equipment and Hospitality Services
- Air Fare Tariffs
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit VIII accommodations and catering
- Step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation
- Accommodations and catering
- Step 4 Foodservice
- Step 5 Vocabulary practice
- Adjectives and Word Order
- Step 6 Developing reading skills the hotel trade in the world
- Hotel Consortia
- Integrated Hotel Chains
- Hotel Franchising
- Tourism lodgings
- Second Homes Wholly Owned by Tourists
- Second Homes with Shared Collective Services
- Timeshare
- Furnished Rented Accommodation
- Seasonally Rented Furnished Accommodation
- Cottages and Farmhouse Accommodation
- Guest Lodgings
- Social Accommodation
- Restaurant Chains
- Step 7 Test tasks
- Unit IX regulation, research and development in tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation regulation, research and development in tourism
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice british and american usage
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- When the heat is on
- Overseas markets
- External Influences on International Travel to Britain
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit X environmental tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introduction
- Step 3 Reading and translation the environmental tourist How to Be an Ecofriendly Tourist in the Alps
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice - Reporting verbs
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Does tourism ruin everything that it touches?
- A Brief History of Tourism
- Tourism Today
- The Future of Tourism
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Unit XI business travel step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation business travel
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- 4.1. Match the verbs in a with the noun phrases in в to make expressions which are often used in meetings.
- 4.2. Match the adjectives in a with the nouns in b. Use a dictionary, if necessary.
- 4.3. Use the expressions from 4.2 (above) in the sentences.
- 4.4. This is an extract from a meeting about tourism in Goa. Fill in the gaps with expressions from 4.1.
- 5.1. Match the words on the left to the words on the right to make noun collocations and use the collocations in the sentences.
- 5.2. Link the adjectives with the nouns to complete the definitions below
- Step 5 Developing reading skills
- Travellers’ tips
- 4.1. Choose a title for the article:
- 4.2. Sentences a-e have been removed from the text. Match them to the correct boxes:
- Step 6 Test tasks
- The international executive lounge club
- Unit XII customer relations in tourism step 1 Vocabulary list
- Step 2 Introductory text
- Step 3 Reading and translation customer relations in tourism
- Step 4 Vocabulary practice
- An unfortunate incident at ridgeway tours
- Step 5 Developing reading skills handling a complaint
- 5.1. When It Pays to Complain
- 5.2. Dear Travel Agent, Please Stop the Cows Staring at me...
- Step 6 Test tasks
- Турфирма с грязными руками
- Ленивого «кинуть» легко
- Готовьте компромат
- Contents