The Talent Problem Won't Be Solved by Another Corporate Initiative
IHG's latest push on innovation, inclusion, and talent empowerment sounds great in a magazine interview. The question is whether any of it changes what happens at 2 AM when your front desk agent is alone, underpaid, and wondering why they didn't take the warehouse job.
I've been reading corporate talent strategy pieces for about 30 years now, and they all sound remarkably similar. Innovation. Inclusion. Empowerment. High tech AND high touch. The language rotates every few years, but the PowerPoint deck is the same. And meanwhile, 67% of hotels are still reporting staffing shortages, 12% so severe they can't run normal operations. That's not a talent strategy problem. That's a math problem.
Here's the math. The average housekeeping cleaner in the US makes $27,130 a year. The national median household income is $74,580. We're asking people to do physically demanding, emotionally taxing work for roughly a third of what the country considers normal. And then we hold conferences about why we can't find people. I knew a director of housekeeping once who told me, straight-faced, "We don't have a recruiting problem. We have a reality problem. I can get anyone to apply. I can't get anyone to stay past the first paycheck." She was right. She's still right.
Look... I don't doubt the sincerity of folks at IHG or any other major brand talking about empowerment and inclusion. Nearly 6,800 hotels worldwide, they NEED a framework for this stuff. And the data backs up the business case... companies with above-average diversity report 19% higher revenue than their less diverse competitors. That's not soft talk. That's a real number. But there's a gap between the corporate framework and the property where it has to live. The brand publishes the digital learning module. The GM with three call-outs and a sold-out house doesn't have time to assign it. The front desk agent who needs development gets scheduled for 11 PM to 7 AM because that's the shift nobody else will work. Empowerment requires margin... margin in the budget, margin in the schedule, margin in the staffing model. Most properties are running without any margin at all.
The part that never makes it into these articles is the owner's side of the conversation. Labor costs are up almost 5%. Every "invest in your people" initiative has a line item attached to it. Training programs, mentorship structures, flexible scheduling, competitive compensation... all of it costs money. And when the management company presents the talent initiative to the owner, the owner asks one question: "What's the ROI?" Not because owners are heartless. Because the debt service payment doesn't care about your inclusion metrics. The PIP doesn't get cheaper because you launched a mentorship program. So the GM sits in the middle, getting squeezed from both sides... corporate saying "empower your team" and ownership saying "hold the labor line." I've been that GM. It's a miserable spot.
What actually works... and I've seen it work... is smaller than a corporate initiative. It's a GM who learns every employee's name in the first week. It's a department head who notices someone struggling and adjusts the schedule before they quit. It's paying $2 more per hour than the Amazon warehouse down the street and making that decision stick in the budget. It's giving your best housekeeper a path to supervisor that she can actually see, not a career portal she'll never log into. The industry doesn't need another thought leadership piece about the future of talent. It needs 50,000 GMs who understand that the person folding towels at 6 AM is the whole business model, and act accordingly. Every single day. Not when the magazine calls.
If you're a GM at a branded property reading corporate talent initiatives and wondering what to actually do this week... start with the exit interviews you're not conducting. Every person who quits is telling you something. Write it down. After 90 days, you'll have a clearer picture of what's broken than any corporate framework will give you. And if your labor budget is too tight to pay competitively, have that conversation with your ownership group now, with turnover cost data in hand. Replacing a front desk agent costs $3,000-$5,000 when you add recruiting, training, and the productivity dip. That's your ROI argument. Use it.