Hello, welcome back for another great week.
Sarah:My name is Sarah Karakaian.
Annette:I am Annette Grant, and together we are--
Both Annette & Sarah:Thanks for Visiting.
Sarah:Let's kick off this episode like we do every week, and that's sharing
Sarah:one of you, our loyal listeners who's using our hashtag #STRShareSunday.
Sarah:Annette, who are we sharing this week?
Annette:This week we are sharing @hillsidehouse_shenandoah.
Annette:And again, that's @hillsidehouse_shenandoah.
Annette:I just want to go-- this is a cozy little nook.
Annette:I want to shout out their dog, Luna.
Sarah:Luna.
Annette:They have a thread throughout their whole, um, Instagram with their dog.
Annette:And I just absolutely love that, so I have to give--
Sarah:They're pet-friendly too, so that makes sense.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:You can pull in the heartstrings of the pet lovers.
Annette:But I want to go through one thing.
Annette:I love the cadence of their feed.
Annette:They go through-- they do, um, five-star reviews.
Annette:They do a reel of the area.
Annette:They do some action shots of what you can do with the home.
Annette:So they've done a nice job of just doing a mix.
Annette:It feels like a little formulaic, but it's good, of what they're posting about.
Annette:They also are getting people really excited.
Annette:They're getting ready to build three places on the property, so they
Annette:have a mockup of what's to come.
Annette:And so I love them foreshadowing, getting things ready for people, knowing that
Annette:they've got more places coming soon.
Annette:The other thing I want to highlight is in their bio.
Annette:They say it right there.
Annette:Book directly and save, and then they have their link.
Annette:So I think giving that call to action of say, why would
Annette:someone want to book directly?
Annette:So they have booked directly and save.
Annette:So that's like, oh, if I just book direct, I can actually save money.
Annette:So I think you can't just say book direct.
Annette:You've got to give them a reason why they should book direct.
Annette:So I love that they have that there, their call to action, in their
Annette:bio, so people know immediately.
Sarah:Absolutely.
Sarah:So great job Hillside House.
Sarah:Listeners, give them a follow.
Sarah:Share some love on the gram.
Annette:And use our hashtag.
Annette:And also they have this really cute green bathroom sink that I'm feeling.
Sarah:I love green.
Annette:Uh, yeah, it's good.
Sarah:Green is so good.
Sarah:All right.
Sarah:So today we're going to talk about parting ways with team members.
Annette:Ooh.
Annette:Yeah.
Sarah:It's never easy
Annette:Yeah.
Sarah:And I start off the episode, I feel like Annette thought maybe
Sarah:I was being a little too vague.
Sarah:So hang tight through the episode, and we get to the, um, nitty
Sarah:gritty of what actually went down.
Sarah:But yeah, letting go of team members is never easy no matter
Sarah:how long you've been with them.
Annette:Years.
Annette:Ooh.
Sarah:Years or months.
Sarah:Either way, it's never
Annette:They're all hard, especially when they're the backbone.
Annette:Well, no, it's always hard.
Sarah:So we're going to unpack, um, a situation that we've recently
Sarah:gone through, and we hope it serves one of you out there and helps
Sarah:you with a difficult situation.
Sarah:SEGMENT GAP
Sarah:All right.
Sarah:So this is a difficult conversation, but it's one that it's really important that
Sarah:we share here on the podcast, so anyone listening, maybe you're going through
Sarah:this right now, maybe you're thinking about it, might be in your near future,
Sarah:or maybe everything is great right now and you're like, this doesn't applied to me.
Sarah:But I assure you, if you get into business, there's going to be moments
Sarah:where it's time to part ways with people on your team, and it really doesn't matter
Sarah:if they've been on your team for a short amount of time or a really long time, but
Sarah:we've had to part ways with some of our team members recently, and we thought we
Sarah:would share as much as we can here in the podcast and with what we learned, what
Sarah:we did right, what we didn't do well, and just discuss it here in the pod.
Annette:I'm actually going to quote-- I went to have coffee with the developer
Annette:that I used to do all of my co-hosting with, and I do want to quote him because
Annette:I thought it was the truth because we were talking about, um, turnover on
Annette:your team, and he was like, it sucks.
Annette:It always sucks.
Annette:If they suck, it still sucks.
Annette:If they're good, it sucks.
Annette:It just always sucks.
Annette:And I was like, oh, it just sucks.
Annette:You know why?
Annette:Because we're humans, and we care about each other.
Annette:While it's happening and it sucks, but also, uh, as someone that has been let go,
Annette:it also ends up being a really good thing.
Annette:Because if it's not a fit, it's not a fit.
Annette:And people can just move on to the next thing.
Sarah:And I think we can say that with confidence.
Sarah:You and I have been let go in the past, and we've let people go.
Sarah:People let go of-- you know what I mean?
Sarah:There's a lot of moving on.
Annette:Chapters end.
Sarah:Chapters end, and it's okay.
Sarah:And it's natural.
Sarah:This episode is going to offer you, though, some insight into our personal
Sarah:recent experience and what we learned from that, and hopefully it gives you just a
Sarah:little bit of insight into maybe what's normal, what is challenging for us is
Sarah:probably challenging for everyone else.
Sarah:And just deep dive into it a little bit.
Annette:Let's do it.
Sarah:All right.
Sarah:So first of all, I think the most important piece of advice we can give
Sarah:to everyone, and this goes for maybe you're a co-host and you're working
Sarah:with an owner, obviously, we can all relate to this from a guest standpoint,
Sarah:but also from our team, is to not make decisions when you're emotional.
Annette:I joked around earlier, before the episode, and said to Sarah, so
Annette:we should just never make decisions.
Annette:Anyways.
Sarah:No, but when you're really heightened, when maybe there's a
Sarah:disagreement that's happening, or you're frustrated because of repeated behavior,
Sarah:whatever that is or looks like for you, and you're just seeing red, that is not
Sarah:a good time to call that person, or to message that person, or to communicate
Sarah:with that person because you're going to say things that you don't mean, or maybe
Sarah:not in the tone you want to convey it in.
Sarah:Nothing productive is going to come out of that.
Annette:Agreed.
Annette:Step one.
Sarah:Step one.
Sarah:I then would lean on whether it's your business partner, your
Sarah:life partner, a friend, maybe your pillow, just scream into it.
Sarah:Get that emotion out.
Sarah:Say what you want to say, write it down, perhaps.
Sarah:I'm not saying to bottle it up, but you definitely don't want to
Sarah:share that with the person that maybe is causing the emotion.
Sarah:Okay.
Sarah:Next on is, here's what was difficult for us in our recent situation was how much
Sarah:we respected the fact that while there was some disconnect happening, that there is
Sarah:money going into this person's account.
Sarah:We had a job that was putting food on their table.
Annette:Mm-hmm.
Sarah:It was a big part of their life revenue.
Sarah:And so when you decide that it's no longer a good fit or you know it's coming, I
Sarah:think the thing that makes it so hard is, yes, we're human, and here's why.
Sarah:It's because we are exchanging money for those services.
Sarah:And so you know it's going to be a big thing in their life if you decide to
Sarah:call it quits, if they've not made the decision, you are making that decision.
Sarah:And that's hard.
Annette:Mm-hmm.
Annette:But you can also, a, if they're a vendor, if you have a contract with
Annette:them ahead of time, that's something-- again, all these things-- always have
Annette:the end in mind at the beginning.
Annette:Um, and so that's something that you can put in their contract.
Annette:If you have open invoices from them, of course, you want to square up with those.
Annette:But I think there's a way to definitely handle that, and that's
Annette:planning that ahead of time.
Sarah:And I think you can also ask yourself as you are contemplating
Sarah:ending a relationship with a team member is, the reason you want to end
Sarah:the relationship, is it changeable?
Sarah:Are we putting in enough effort to see if there's a way to work things out?
Sarah:I think it's in an relationship, a marriage, a life partnership,
Sarah:business partnership, and a vendor or employee relationship is, are we
Sarah:supplying all the tools that they need?
Sarah:For example, here, are there training videos we could make to really
Sarah:clarify, um, anything that's a misstep?
Sarah:Whether it's a clean, or an inspection, or what you expect
Sarah:from an operator to deliver KPIs.
Sarah:Is there a disconnect, and is it something we can fix?
Sarah:Can we change that?
Annette:Is it fixable?
Sarah:Is it fixable?
Sarah:Pictures.
Sarah:Whether it's videos, training videos, pictures of ideal setups
Sarah:in your back of house space.
Sarah:This is exactly-- I always get that-- we went to this conference, listeners,
Sarah:several years ago, and this stuck out like a sore thumb, but the presenter
Sarah:was essentially talking about this very subject, and she had a piece of paper and
Sarah:a pencil on all of our chairs, and she asked us to draw the picture of a bicycle.
Sarah:We all know what a bicycle is.
Sarah:We all drew the bicycle, and of course all of our bicycles looked different.
Sarah:And so when we get frustrated about a relationship with a vendor because of
Sarah:some, whatever that disconnect is--
Annette:The way you make a bed isn't the way they make a bed.
Sarah:Correct.
Sarah:Youmight say, fold the towel.
Sarah:But see, when I want my towels folded, I have a very particular way that I want it
Sarah:folded, and I have to remind myself that even if you can see the end result, how do
Sarah:you get there really makes a difference.
Sarah:So are you doing enough focused training work with your vendors?
Sarah:Are you meeting with your vendors in between showtime, in between
Sarah:turnovers, or inspections, or whatever to revisit your expectations
Sarah:and their expectations of you?
Sarah:Are you pausing for a moment?
Sarah:Are you always in a go go go mentality, forgetting to come back and really
Sarah:discuss and break down those operations?
Annette:And have you done-- Go side by side with them.
Sarah:Yes.
Annette:If there's been repeated issues, it's like, maybe just
Annette:simply going to the home, doing the clean with them or the inspection.
Annette:And I know that could be a very dicey subject because people don't want
Annette:you looking over their shoulders per se, but this is-- again,
Annette:you're in a partnership together.
Annette:And it could be like, hey, I want to see if there are any tools,
Annette:if there's anything that I can do that would make your job easier.
Annette:And a lot of times-- I know we've talked about this all the time.
Annette:You go, and you're like, oh my gosh, they just need a new vacuum cleaner
Annette:or this isn't working properly.
Annette:This washer and dryer is terrible.
Annette:Let's get a new washer and dryer.
Annette:It's faster.
Annette:You can see-- that stuff becomes very, very clear.
Annette:But if you're not on the frontline, you're not doing it, you don't even
Annette:recognize what might be holding them back from doing an excellent job.
Sarah:Here's my weakness, is I am very well aware of my
Sarah:aggressiveness in terms of details.
Sarah:Then I do get self-conscious when I work with a vendor or an employee to
Sarah:not micromanage or to-- obviously, I've hired them for a skillset, and so I am
Sarah:self-conscious about my aggressiveness, so I don't end up breaking it down
Sarah:step by step of how I want them to get to the final destination.
Sarah:But I have to remember that it's going to be better for everyone to just be who
Sarah:I am, the leader that I am, knowing that I have all the good intentions, and when
Sarah:we are going through those trainings and we are meeting up every month or quarter,
Sarah:whatever that is, to walk them through, and obviously, you don't want to put them
Sarah:down or make them feel like they're not capable, but still, you know what I mean?
Annette:Mm-hmm.
Sarah:Tell them what you want, I guess is what I'm trying to say.
Annette:You permit it.
Annette:You promote it.
Sarah:You permit it.
Sarah:You promote it.
Sarah:And if I'm not being clear, I'm like, oh, just-- then I want you to roll the towels
Sarah:and make sure they're on the same way, but I need to show them exactly how to do it.
Annette:Exactly how.
Annette:I agree.
Sarah:And then there's this side too of, can the behavior be changed?
Sarah:Is there something happening in their personal life that
Sarah:is affecting their work life?
Sarah:Are they having transportation issues?
Sarah:Is there an issue with how they communicate?
Sarah:Are they having trouble keeping up with their phone bills?
Sarah:And I know you might be thinking, well, that's not my responsibility, but just
Sarah:remember, number one, if otherwise the relationship is solid and their work
Sarah:is good, the cost of hiring someone new or finding a new vendor is--
Annette:And the learning curve.
Sarah:And the learning curve is, quite honestly, astronomical.
Sarah:And the time that you end up putting and focusing on this aspect of your business,
Sarah:where everything else gets put on hold or who knows what, wouldn't it have been
Sarah:nice just to maybe figure out how you can, I don't know, get them the bus pass or--
Annette:Help them with-- or if they're asking for a higher rate.
Annette:In our membership last week, we had, um, someone that actually, her cleaning team
Annette:has asked for a pretty large increase in pay, and she's more than happy to give
Annette:it to them because she gets five-star reviews again and again and again, and
Annette:she knows that that would be on the edge.
Annette:That might be forfeited if she were to go back to the open market
Annette:and try to find someone new.
Annette:And that was like, it was a no-brainer for her to just keep them on board
Annette:because they give her excellent, excellent turns every single time.
Annette:And she's like, yeah, if they need more money, they backed up why,
Annette:and she was happy to provide that.
Sarah:And obviously, she looked into her financials.
Sarah:It is something that she can figure out and make happen.
Sarah:Now, let's say you've done all these things.
Sarah:Because in my case, I did all of these things.
Sarah:I mean, this was quite some time of figuring out why is there a disconnect?
Sarah:What is it?
Sarah:Is it the tools?
Sarah:Is it the compensation?
Sarah:Is it the support?
Sarah:What is it?
Sarah:Why is there a disconnect?
Sarah:And at the end of the day, when it comes to something that is just against
Sarah:your company values, your mission, the culture that you want to create in your
Sarah:business, if your business is you, and that's it, and you still want to come to
Sarah:work in a happy, upbeat solution-based atmosphere, and there is a disconnect in
Sarah:terms of personality that isn't changeable by something that you can simply do,
Sarah:that's when you have to ask yourself when you're not in an emotional state.
Annette:We're getting ready to leave for a trip.
Sarah:We're getting ready.
Sarah:Right.
Sarah:Because as Annette said before we hopped on too, there is never a good time.
Annette:Ever a good time.
Annette:It's like, oh, it's a holiday weekend.
Annette:Oh no, this guest is coming.
Annette:There will never be a good time.
Annette:That's the other part.
Annette:I do want to-- the conversation will never be fun, and there
Annette:will never be a good time.
Annette:And it will always suck.
Sarah:It'll almost always very much suck.
Sarah:But knowing that you have to-- know what your non-negotiables are.
Sarah:Annette and I talk about non-negotiables all the time.
Sarah:Non-negotiables in terms of working.
Sarah:We get into to business ownership, into running these short-term rentals to
Sarah:create a certain life for ourselves.
Sarah:So when you do that, you need to lay the groundwork of what you're willing
Sarah:to put up with and what you're not.
Sarah:And then when those things happen-- I'm not saying it's easy because I
Sarah:don't-- I mean, Annette can tell you how many times we've talked about
Sarah:these certain situations and how long we vacillate to making the decision
Sarah:that we know needs to be made.
Annette:Mm-hmm.
Sarah:And let me tell you, here on the other side, it never got easier.
Sarah:But once the decision was made to part ways, things end up working out.
Sarah:All the things that you were terrified about.
Sarah:Even on the other side, the person that you end up letting go, as we
Sarah:all know, being on the side of being let go, it ends up being some of the
Sarah:best things that can happen to you.
Sarah:AD MARKER
Annette:I just want to dig into the situation a little bit more,
Annette:but I don't know if you want to.
Sarah:Do it.
Sarah:Yeah.
Annette:We're specifically talking about-- you don't care
Annette:if I talk about it's a cleaner?
Sarah:No.
Sarah:Not at all.
Annette:Okay.
Annette:And I want to give some transparency here.
Annette:This is specifically about the backbone of the business.
Annette:The every day ins and outs.
Annette:And so I know that this is a topic that comes up often of, is
Annette:it about the work that they do?
Annette:And there are some things that-- Sarah, and I can let you know, there are things
Annette:that you-- there has to be give and take, especially-- the turnover team, the
Annette:cleaning team, it is such a laborious job.
Annette:And Sarah says it all the time.
Annette:They are coming into a mountain of work.
Annette:And so just having that understanding of what they're dealing with.
Annette:But two, that's where as the turnover team, as the business owner,
Annette:they also need to recognize that.
Annette:There needs to be-- I think there is some stuff-- this particular situation
Annette:of having some redundancy in their team and taking-- it's just as important
Annette:for you as a host, taking some time off, also them having time off.
Annette:But that's up to them.
Annette:That's their business.
Annette:But I'm in LinkedIn, um, following someone on LinkedIn right now, and every
Annette:day it's like new property managers.
Annette:And every day, the property manager is talking about their cleaning team and
Annette:relying too much on one contractor there.
Annette:And how that has just pretty much been a pain point for
Annette:every single property manager.
Annette:It's a through line, um, in every, uh--
Sarah:I'll explain that a little bit.
Sarah:So, I mean, they have one contractor that they rely on for all of their
Sarah:properties, and how that's a mistake.
Annette:Yes.
Annette:Well, just like-- yeah, I mean, they're putting all their eggs in
Annette:that one basket for that team.
Sarah:And listeners, that's not uncommon.
Sarah:I've been there.
Sarah:I've done that.
Sarah:Because when you work with a company and you give them multiple properties,
Sarah:you can often work out a really great price point for their services.
Sarah:And then you get a certain amount of loyalty there too, because
Sarah:it's a large account for them.
Sarah:But then when things go south, no matter what the contract says, it doesn't make
Sarah:it any easier when you know the end is near and they have-- you're right.
Sarah:You have all of your eggs in one basket, and how tough that is.
Sarah:So it's such a-- catch 22.
Sarah:Is that the right word I'm looking for?
Sarah:You can get your best pricing when you work with one cleaning company, give
Sarah:them all your properties, but if it goes south, what does that look like?
Sarah:I remember we had an interview with a guest a long time ago on the podcast
Sarah:and she mentioned that a cleaner really wanted all of her properties
Sarah:because she had great properties.
Sarah:A cleaner loved working for her, and she made her sign a contract.
Sarah:I don't know what the contract said, but just something to the fact of--
Annette:If you leave, you need to have-- I forget.
Annette:It was like 30 days notice or something.
Annette:Butstill doesn'tmean that's going to happen.
Sarah:No, it doesn't mean that's going to happen.
Sarah:And here's the thing too, listeners.
Sarah:We not only had to part ways with this backbone of the company, a cleaner,
Sarah:but we've also had to part ways with other team members, and it had
Sarah:nothing to do with their skillset.
Sarah:This cleaner was actually excellent.
Sarah:These team members are actually good at what you've hired them to do.
Sarah:But when there is a misalign-- if there's something unaligned
Sarah:there-- unaligned, misaligned.
Annette:Misaligned.
Sarah:Misaligned.
Annette:Go misaligned.
Sarah:Okay, great.
Sarah:It's very hard to come back from that.
Annette:Right.
Annette:To bring it back to alignment.
Annette:For misalignment to alignment.
Sarah:Now let's talk about how, okay, you've made the decision,
Sarah:and you had the conversation.
Sarah:It was not easy.
Sarah:It was very hard.
Sarah:And actually, in this case, it was once I got it out of my mouth--
Annette:Rip the bandaid.
Sarah:Rip the bandaid.
Sarah:The response from the other party was actually quite pleasant.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:because it was-- yeah.
Sarah:Because I think they felt it too.
Sarah:And what's still sad to me, or what I'm still struggling with,
Sarah:listeners, is I still don't know why the relationship went south.
Sarah:There's no one that I know of or that they shared with me.
Sarah:There's no one moment or anything in particular I did.
Sarah:And that's tough.
Annette:Right.
Sarah:In any relationship.
Annette:For sure.
Sarah:It's not you, it's me.
Sarah:So that continues to be hard.
Sarah:But here's what I will tell you too.
Sarah:When you end up parting ways and you have to find a new team, what happens then?
Sarah:Well, here's what I've learned.
Sarah:That's also hard.
Sarah:No amount of prep work that I did in the background--
Annette:I'll just say, be prepared to pick up the slack.
Sarah:Are you prepared to pick up the slack?
Sarah:Know that you're not going to be able to predict everything.
Sarah:Because you know how I like to do that, and then I can't,
Sarah:and then that frustrates me.
Sarah:But I mean, I had discussions with other offers out there and having that
Sarah:transition from one cleaner to another.
Sarah:And it doesn't matter how far in advance I'd done that, how many people I talked
Sarah:to, all that got ready, the handing of the baton to the new team continues
Sarah:to be difficult, just because now you're working with a whole new person.
Annette:Mm-hmm.
Sarah:Or new company, and you have to retrain your brain to
Sarah:know that they're new to you.
Sarah:And so what you're used to not having to talk about, your
Sarah:basics, your brand standards--
Annette:Right.
Annette:Are all brand new.
Sarah:They're all brand new.
Annette:And we say this.
Annette:Every property is a snowflake, so every single door, every single
Annette:bed, every single bedroom, every kitchen, even though they can be
Annette:similar, they're still different.
Sarah:Yeah.
Annette:They're still different.
Annette:And, ooh, the-- there's a lot.
Annette:There's so many things.
Annette:But again, be prepared to pick up the slack.
Sarah:And let me talk about that.
Sarah:So obviously, Annette and I talk about backups for your backups all the time.
Sarah:And listeners, I hope by now you've learned to know that Annette and I
Sarah:put our heart and soul, and, um, we take everything that we share with
Sarah:you very seriously, and we practice what we preach as much as we can.
Sarah:And again, I was doing my best to have a backup for my backup
Sarah:and I still had to clean.
Sarah:And I had to rally the troops to help me clean.
Sarah:Our inspectors helped clean.
Sarah:Annette helped me clean.
Sarah:Annette's mom helped clean, um--
Annette:Your husband.
Sarah:Husband cleaned.
Sarah:Who else cleaned?
Sarah:We had to rally the troops because it just took-- I didn't want to--
Annette:And we ain't canceling no reservations.
Sarah:Heck no.
Sarah:We don't do that.
Sarah:And I'm not throwing in a, um, you could do this, but I wasn't
Sarah:going to throw in a temp service.
Annette:Right.
Annette:Just going online.
Sarah:And here's what I realized.
Annette:Which, if you need to, you need to still inspect.
Sarah:No, no.
Annette:Yeah.
Sarah:People do it.
Sarah:I remember working at the hotel, we would do it often with servers,
Sarah:and bartenders, and cleaners.
Sarah:You can hire temp companies.
Sarah:But I did take this opportunity to re-put myself in the shoes of the cleaning team.
Sarah:And I learned so much about our checklists.
Annette:Ooh.
Annette:What your number one thing you learned?
Annette:What do you think you learned?
Annette:I learned that my feet really hurt.
Sarah:You remember how just hard the job is.
Annette:I'm like, oh man, my feet hurt really bad.
Annette:And your husband's did too.
Annette:We talked about that.
Sarah:We did.
Sarah:And I remember just how tough the laundry situation will always be.
Annette:Oh, yeah.
Annette:Wrestling with the bedsheets.
Sarah:Whether you send it out to a professional cleaning company,
Sarah:whether you have it in house, no matter what, laundry is tough.
Annette:And it just keeps coming.
Annette:And there always seems to be some little black speck of something no matter what.
Sarah:Yeah.
Sarah:Unfortunately, I don't have a tangible like, here's what I learned, but I just
Sarah:relearned to--and I've always had an intense respect for the cleaning team,
Sarah:but my goodness, did that remind me.
Sarah:But also, I did this too.
Sarah:I timed how long it took me to do Breezeway every time.
Annette:Mm.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:That was a good one.
Sarah:And Breezeway, listeners, if you're not sure, it's a property operations.
Sarah:They sponsor the podcast, but that's mostly because we're obsessed with them.
Sarah:We're like, listen, we love you so much.
Sarah:Please support our podcast because it's just perfect alignment.
Sarah:But we ask our cleaning team to go through a checklist that has pictures that
Sarah:really, again, draw that bicycle for them.
Sarah:And the way I explain to them is every checkbox, every box you check off, that's
Sarah:done, that's our little mini contract with each other that you've done that thing.
Annette:Right.
Sarah:And so I timed how long it took me to do it so that I knew when
Sarah:I was onboarding this new team, I could get down to the nitty gritty
Sarah:of how long each turnover would take with one person, with two people.
Sarah:What the quirks are at every single property.
Sarah:And I updated our Breezeway.
Sarah:So also in Breezeway, you can update the back of house of the property.
Sarah:So codes to all the doors, quirks about washers and dryers,
Sarah:dishwashers, whatever appliances.
Sarah:I really just got a chance to get in there and spring clean
Sarah:the back end of our properties.
Annette:Well, something I know that you were doing, because I was listening
Annette:to you is really shaping up the back of house and the supply closets.
Annette:Wait a second.
Annette:When those start to get sideways and messy, it does not make your life easier.
Annette:So there needs-- we just did a YouTube video on this, but that is something like,
Annette:keeping that tight helps with everything.
Sarah:Well, because you end up getting comfortable with-- well, the current
Sarah:cleaning team, they had their own way of doing things and organizing things.
Sarah:So when we parted ways and I was bringing a new team in-house,
Sarah:I didn't know where stuff was.
Sarah:I didn't know.
Sarah:And I didn't have that tight grasp that I once had on all of our systems.
Sarah:And that's okay.
Sarah:I mean, we also learned-- we spoke at the investor conference two
Sarah:weeks ago in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Sarah:And one of the speakers just mentioned like, if you want to grow your
Sarah:business, you are going to have to delegate and know that things are
Sarah:going to happen and you're not going to be able to checkmate everything.
Sarah:And that's the way it is.
Sarah:In a certain regard, you cannot have a chokehold on literally
Sarah:every detail of your business.
Annette:You got to let it go a little bit.
Sarah:You got to let it go a little bit.
Sarah:And so I didn't want to be too hard on myself in the fact that I didn't
Sarah:know what the organizational systems were in all the properties anymore.
Sarah:But it was time for us to--
Annette:Just reset.
Sarah:Reset.
Sarah:And it was great.
Annette:It's time for for a reset.
Sarah:Yeah.
Sarah:Even the inspectors are really taking ownership, and loving
Sarah:it, and telling me what's been working, what hasn't been working.
Sarah:They'd love to try this so that when we onboard the new cleaning team, we
Sarah:can tell them, hey, we've learned over how many years now, this is will work
Sarah:really well, and we can actually give them a really nice onboarding experience.
Annette:Mm-hmm.
Annette:Ilikeit.
Sarah:So that was also that too.
Sarah:But--
Annette:Anything else?
Sarah:It's been a really hard six months.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:Then that's, um, we'll give some visibility there.
Annette:I'll give it for Sarah.
Annette:When it is the backbone of your business, it is mentally tough.
Annette:I think this episode is just to give everyone out there--
Annette:we know you're like us.
Annette:We know that you care so much, not only about your team, but you
Annette:care so much about your property and so much about your guests.
Annette:You are going to feel it.
Annette:You're human.
Annette:That's why we produce the show.
Annette:That's why we love when we meet our listeners because we know this is
Annette:going to strike a chord with you of that it isn't just throwing any team
Annette:in there, going on any app and just getting someone in your home because
Annette:it is an asset, and they are helping you manage that asset alongside you.
Annette:And so, um, it matters.
Annette:It matters.
Sarah:And I will always still hold with such weight in my heart team members.
Annette:Mm-hmm.
Sarah:Even if I know it's time to part ways, I mean, that's a long
Sarah:time that you've been working with someone, and there are so many awesome
Sarah:moments, and they've been there through it with growth and whatever.
Sarah:And so it's just--
Annette:It's hard.
Sarah:It's hard all around.
Sarah:But I will tell you, on this side of it, we're on the upswing again, and
Sarah:it feels really good to have some fresh energy, fresh ideas, and a new
Sarah:lease on business as we enter into the summer here, which is our busy season.
Sarah:So I hope that helps someone.
Annette:Yeah.
Annette:There's no good time.
Annette:Just remember that.
Annette:There's no good time.
Annette:And if you've gone over the things again and again and again and
Annette:it's not getting better, it's probably not going to get better.
Sarah:No.
Sarah:It took me too long.
Annette:Yeah.
Sarah:Honestly.
Sarah:I'll admit that to all of you.
Sarah:It took me too long, and it was because I was just, I don't know.
Annette:Well, you didn't want to have to worry about what was on the other side.
Annette:There's a lot of other things that you have to deal with.
Sarah:Yeah.
Sarah:So with that, listeners, listen to your gut.
Sarah:Know what your non-negotiables are.
Sarah:Go back to them.
Sarah:Because here's the deal.
Sarah:I wish I hadn't-- I vacillated for so long.
Sarah:I could have cut out a lot of sleepless nights if I would adjust,
Sarah:as I say, eaten the frog a lot sooner.
Sarah:So with that, I am Sarah Karakaian.
Annette:I'm Annette Grant, and together we are--
Both Annette & Sarah:Thanks for Visiting.