Open Forum

 View Only
  • 1.  How does your organization refer guests to other local businesses?

    Posted 05-02-2019 10:06 AM
    Good morning museum community,

    We frequently receive inquiries (both via phone call and on-site) from visitors asking for information on places to stay during their visit. This has led our management team into a wider discussion of how to respond to inquiries from guests that involve referring them to another local business or organization. This would include providing a response to questions like where to stay overnight, where to dine, what else to do/see in the area, and even specific questions such as what roofer we used for our restoration and whether or not we recommend them. We want to continue to provide concierge-level service to our guests, but recognize that making these referrals/recommendations could become hairy when considering how to pick and choose which to mention (and the possibility of someone having a poor experience with a business/organization we recommended). 

    How does your museum answer these questions? Do you have a standard practice, or even policy in place to guide your employees in their response?

    Thank you all for your time and to AAM for this wonderful resource.

    ------------------------------
    Amy Bishop
    Marketing Coordinator
    Castle in the Clouds
    Moultonborough, NH
    ------------------------------
    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 2.  RE: How does your organization refer guests to other local businesses?

    Posted 05-03-2019 03:21 PM
    We  distribute a map of restaurants in the surrounding area, without recommendations and do not recommend vendors.  We point out the American Society of Appraisers' website (our most frequent inquiry).  Only occasionally do we share info about conservators, not because we wouldn't recommend ours, but because we worry about their time... there are so few independent conservators out there!

    Vivian F. Zoë, Director
    Slater Memorial Museum
    108 Crescent Street, Norwich CT 06360
    860-425-5560 vox
    860-885-0379 fax

    "Inspiration is for amateurs - the rest of us just show up and get to work," Chuck Close, 2003


    Please note:  The information contained in this e-mail and any attachments hereto is intended only for the personal and confidential use of the designated recipients.  If the reader/recipient of this message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you have received this e-mail and all attachments hereto in error and that any review, dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail or any of its attachments is strictly prohibited.  If you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by e-mail and destroy the original message received.  Thank You.



    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 3.  RE: How does your organization refer guests to other local businesses?

    Posted 05-06-2019 09:39 AM
    Hi Vivian,

    Thank you so much for your reply! This is very helpful. I appreciate the time you took to share your process!

    Best of luck at your museum this year,

    Amy Bishop
    Marketing Coordinator
    Castle in the Clouds
    Moultonborough, NH

    ------------------------------
    Amy Bishop
    Marketing Coordinator
    Castle Preservation Society
    Moultonborough NH
    ------------------------------

    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 4.  RE: How does your organization refer guests to other local businesses?

    Posted 05-06-2019 07:06 PM
    Dear Amy,

    In my experience, serving as a "visitor concierge" is an excellent opportunity to work with your local/regional Destination Marketing Organization (CVB, etc.) in a more direct way than your museum may currently be doing. These organizations are in the business of making such referrals (including to your museum, too!), so I encourage you to get to know your local CVB staff if you haven't already done so. And, make sure to carry copies of their informational area tourism booklet, etc. (I'm assuming that there is one for your area, and that your museum is listed and/or a member anyway). That way, you can offer inquiring guests copies of the brochure. If your guests still want a specific referral, the language your staff uses can be couched in terms such as "a personal favorite of mine has always been..." or " a number of our guests have stayed at/eaten at/visited this specific..." And if their questions go beyond what your staff is familiar with, you can refer folks to this CVB (via website or telephone) which is in the business of handling such inquiries anyway. This has the added benefit of increasing the CVB's familiarity with your museum; if callers report that you are referring them, this can only help you.

    This is also an opportunity to explore the possibility of establishing specific marketing partnerships with suitable establishments. Perhaps one of the local hotels would like to offer admission to your museum, included within a package? Perhaps they will pay a negotiated rate for tickets, or provide complimentary or significantly discounted room nights for your visiting dignitaries or special donors, etc. Or maybe a good, well-known local restaurant will provide you with donated catering services or special catering rates for in-house events hosted by your museum, if you in return refer guests to their establishment? This requires a little extra work on your part to clarify up-front how the relationship will work, and to make sure that you don't cross ethical boundaries in working with for-profit businesses. My experience is that if you think through what you want to accomplish and what you have to offer, as well as what you are seeking, this sort of arrangement can be rewarding for everyone involved. 

    As for concierge services that are looking for roofing services or other very specific contractor services and so forth, this is certainly more tricky. It's one thing to factually state which company provided/provides which services (naming a reputable appraisal firm for those specific inquiries is thus a good response), but even hotel concierges don't typically answer questions about who roofed the hotel and whether they did a good job, for instance! It may be wise for your staff to get contact info for the guest, and have a staff member who actually works in that specific area return the call so they can have a more detailed discussion. Hopefully you don't get too many of those.

    Good luck - your objective is a worthwhile one!

    ------------------------------
    Paul Hammond
    Incoming Executive Director
    Colorado Railroad Museum
    Golden, Colorado
    ------------------------------

    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 5.  RE: How does your organization refer guests to other local businesses?

    Posted 05-07-2019 08:26 AM
    Dear Paul,

    Thank you so much for your response and input! This is really helpful - you make many great points. It is amazing to have other organizations to lean on as an unbiased resource for local information, something we can certainly turn to more often. I also love your idea about utilizing this situation as an opportunity for continued/improved partnerships within the local community. I look forward to sharing your thoughts with our team in drafting new guidance on this!

    Thank you again. Best wishes for you this year at the Colorado Railroad Museum and congratulations on your position as Executive Director!

    All the best,

    ------------------------------
    Amy Bishop
    Marketing Coordinator
    Castle Preservation Society
    Moultonborough NH
    ------------------------------

    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 6.  RE: How does your organization refer guests to other local businesses?

    Posted 05-07-2019 07:00 AM
    ​Offering information without making recommendations that come back to haunt you is a tricky situation. I would suggest two potential solutions. First, if you are near a location with a visitor's bureau, hotel/lodging association, or chamber of commence ask them for help on putting together a listing. Second, at your welcome/information counter have an inexpensive laptop that has preprogrammed a favorite listing for trip advisor or some similar (e.g., Yelp) web site access and offer to display that site's results for an inquiring guest. If this is a frequent event, you might even offer to print these out.  Doing this seems like a nice extra and helpful service that is inexpensive to offer and customer friendly while takings your organization off the hook for recommending. Good luck.

    ------------------------------
    Robert Ford PhD
    Professor Emeritus
    Rollins College
    Winter Park FL
    ------------------------------

    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 7.  RE: How does your organization refer guests to other local businesses?

    Posted 05-07-2019 08:31 AM
    Hi Robert,

    Thank you very much for your suggestions! We hope to have a visitor center one day, and when we do, having a resource like the one you mentioned for visitors to access local area information would be a positive addition. I'd certainly like to share your thoughts with our team. Thank you again for the time you took to share your ideas!

    Best wishes,


    ------------------------------
    Amy Bishop
    Marketing Coordinator
    Castle Preservation Society
    Moultonborough NH
    ------------------------------

    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more