Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - The representative of tie color in hotel management.

The representative of tie color in hotel management.

1 First of all, we understand the definition of a tie in an industry from the implication of the color of a simple colored tie:

Red: festive, joyful and powerful-the scene of the festival. Now ordinary hotel enterprises will not use pure red except Japanese enterprises;

Blue: rational, safe and continuous-generally the color of the tie of leisure department or security personnel;

Gray: quiet, humble and elegant-generally in the security department or fast-moving consumer goods (fast food) industry;

Brown: energetic, healthy and romantic-generally equipped for hotel leisure departments;

White: pure, frank and clean-generally used in wedding photography shops or western food service industries and Korean enterprises.

2. Secondly, in the comprehensive hotel management, the ties provided by the laundry room to the managers should generally conform to the corporate cultural connotation and the two prerequisites and foundations of elegance and identity. In regular star-rated hotels, except for senior decision-makers or general managers, every manager's tie is pre-made according to corporate culture and identity requirements, and you are generally not allowed to change it at will during work (most star-rated hotels, especially foreign-funded enterprises, such as Japanese enterprises or Korean enterprises, are particularly strict or demanding);

3. Examples of requirements for wearing ties: The ties I have worked in several comprehensive hotels in Korea and China are classified as follows:

A: The tie style of the hotel general manager can be matched according to the working scene; Suits can be matched according to the scene.

B: The tie of executive vice president or department director or department manager level is two or more elegant business colors; According to the special needs of individual departments, you can choose one or three suits to choose from.

C: Ties such as department heads or foremen are generally solid colors such as crimson, dark brown or blue, or two colors, which are relatively tall and straight; Suits are mostly blue.

D: Generally, the color scheme of the security office is navy blue, gray black or black, and monochrome or self-matching is not allowed; Wearing black or training clothes.

To sum up, there will inevitably be some mistakes in personal elaboration. Please forgive me and hope to help you from the actual situation. Thank you!