Service culture is often talked about in hospitality, but rarely clearly defined or properly implemented. In many hotels, service is left to individual effort rather than a structured expectation. Staff are expected to “do their best,” but without clear standards guiding behavior, service delivery becomes inconsistent.
Across Nigeria, Africa, and even within the wider hospitality environment, this is a common challenge. Two guests can have completely different experiences in the same hotel, depending on who is on duty, how they were trained, or how they interpret their role. What should be a consistent brand experience becomes unpredictable.
At first, the impact is not always obvious. The hotel is still operating, guests are still coming in, and revenue continues to flow. But over time, the effects begin to show. Guest satisfaction starts to decline, repeat business reduces, and the overall perception of the brand weakens. What seems like small inconsistencies gradually turns into a bigger performance issue.
Service culture is not about being friendly or polite. It is about having clear standards, consistent behavior across all teams, and structured supervision to ensure those standards are maintained. Without this, service depends too much on individual effort, and that creates gaps that affect the entire operation.
In hospitality, consistency is everything. When service is predictable and aligned with clear expectations, guests feel confident in what they will receive. But when service varies, trust is lost, and value begins to decline.
The cost of poor service culture may not be immediate, but it is always cumulative. And in the long run, it is one of the fastest ways for a hotel to lose its competitive edge.


