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Corinthia Hotels challenges global managers to satisfy health and safety standards

August 9, 2015 • admin

Corinthia Hotels is pioneering a brand new solution to monitoring and maintaining health and safety standards around the board. The hotel group is operating with health and safety experts Check Safety First to implement a risk management system at 10 of its luxury hotels worldwide, recognising its teams globally for meeting the necessary standards of hygiene as a part of its business strategy. General Managers around the company might be regularly assessed on their ability to keep these standards to deliver the handiest service to guests.

Corinthia Hotels worldwide were using Check Safety First’s complete E-Cristal auditing system to preserve the top levels of hygiene. Following the success of the system on the group’s London hotel, its complete module package have been rolled out in Budapest, Khartoum, Lisbon, Prague Tripoli and St Petersburg.

E-Cristal is an electronic risk management system that gathers and records hygiene data while alerting managers to points of weakness. The package includes Foodcheck, Roomcheck, Firecheck, Safetycheck and Aquacheck. It gives managers 24/7 control across all properties and was developed according to guidelines from the realm Health Organisation.

Liam Lambert, Chief Operating Officer for Corinthia Hotels, said: “Attention to detail is the important thing to providing guests with a luxury experience. Our partnership with Check Safety First will make sure that first-class hygiene standards are the concern in all our hotels. We’re using health and safety to measure the power of our General Managers and their teams to deliver the best standard of quality service to guests. We’re reminding all colleagues to simply expect what you inspect and don’t expect what you don’t inspect.”

Mark Harrington, CEO of Check Safety First said: “This new signing with Corinthia means we’re now working worldwide to enhance the standard of hotels for holidaymakers. The great thing about the answer is that it may be read and translated in nine different languages which implies it is usually used anywhere.”

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