TAG | blogworld
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Hotel room contents are public property – Blogword 09 follow-up
2 Comments | Posted by emerille in Uncategorized
Many people have asked me what happen after this inicident at a Marriott Courtyard in Las Vegas.
So here is a quick follow-up. Hotel did nothing but offer me a couple of comp nights which I refused.
Hotels are not liable for the theft of stuff in your room even when the window is smashed and there is a detailed police report about the burglary. End of story.
Sad really but it was a lesson learned.
I think I need another conference as I have not written a post here in so long. I apologize. I am going to try a new format and commit to one a week.
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Blogworld 09: A tale of burglary, Brogan and human business (part one)
31 Comments | Posted by emerille in marketing, social media

"nothing like this has ever happened here"
I began writing this post on those little note pad sheets in my hotel room because my laptop was stolen from my room. The sliding door was shattered and my bag, containing my Macbook Pro and my beloved Panasonic Lx3, was taken.
I began writing this on little notepads because of how infuriated I was with the process and how I was treated at the Courtyard Marriott Las Vegas.
Thursday’s final keynote by Chris Brogan hit on a fantastic subject, which he calls human business. He stressed that businesses need to create and foster communities, not audiences. “The difference between an audience and a community: one will fall on its sword for you and the other will watch you fall.”
Imagine if every person that interacted with your company was treated as a friend. I don’t mean a “move your couch” friend but perhaps a friend of a friend, someone you know.
- Perhaps the security guard who came to my room could have introduced himself, shook my hand, expressed some lament for the scene in my room instead taking a quick glance and telling me, “Metro is on the way”
- Perhaps the front desk person could have come or sent someone with a key to another room rather than waiting for me to call them
- Perhaps she should not have repeated the same statement that the security guard made, “nothing like this has ever happened here”. The neighborhoods near the convention center are not exactly plush luxury homes, this was an insult to my intelligence.
- Perhaps if I did not have to keep asking what I needed to do or if I should get them a copy of the police report or what happens next
- Perhaps if today, four days after the incident I had some sense of what the hotel is going to do about it
Perhaps then, I would not have such a great lesson in what not to do to your customers.
I suppose you could talk to your employees and make up some procedure and try to teach them this at orientation but I would just ask them if they treat their friends that way.
