What hotel manager interviews assess
Hotel manager interviews (from front office manager through to general manager) assess: commercial acumen and P&L management, guest experience leadership, operational management across multiple departments, team leadership at scale, and brand standards compliance. At general manager level, expect in-depth questions on revenue management (RevPAR, ADR, occupancy), cost management (labour cost as a percentage of revenue, food cost, maintenance cost), and team leadership across all hotel departments. At department manager level, the focus is on departmental operations, guest satisfaction, and team management within that function.
Commercial and revenue questions
"How would you improve RevPAR at this property?" Strong answer: first audit current performance against the competitive set (STR data), identify whether underperformance is in rate (ADR) or in occupancy. If occupancy is the problem: distribution channel mix, direct booking vs. OTA, pricing competitiveness, promotional activity, corporate account development. If ADR is the problem: rate positioning, upselling (room upgrades, F&B packages), group and MICE business mix, reputation management (online reviews directly affect rate integrity). Show you understand revenue management as a data-driven discipline, not just "drop the price to fill the hotel." "Walk me through how you manage a hotel's annual budget." Show: revenue forecasting by segment (rooms, F&B, meetings), cost budgeting by department (labour, cost of sales, overheads), capital expenditure planning, and monthly P&L review against budget with commentary on variances.
Guest experience questions
"How do you handle a serious guest complaint?" Strong answer: listen without interrupting, apologise genuinely for the experience without over-excusing, take ownership (do not blame staff or suppliers in front of the guest), resolve the immediate issue as quickly as possible, follow up after the resolution to confirm the guest is satisfied, and complete an internal incident record to identify any systemic cause. The most expensive guest complaint is one that goes unresolved until TripAdvisor: proactive service recovery retains the guest and often turns them into a brand advocate.
Leadership and team management questions
"How do you maintain service standards across a large and diverse team?" Strong answer: clear service standards documented and trained (not just assumed), regular briefings at the start of shifts, consistent feedback (positive as well as corrective), mystery guest and guest satisfaction data reviewed and discussed with teams, recognition of excellent performance publicly, and addressing poor performance promptly and consistently. Hotels with high staff turnover suffer service inconsistency: show you understand that retention and development are commercial, not just HR, priorities.