8 Black-Owned Businesses Every Hotel Needs to Support
One of the first things we did as a part of our community impact strategy at Revival was run a list of everyone the hotel cut a check to in 2018. We wanted to see where there were opportunities to incorporate local, BIPOC-owned companies. Baltimore has one of the strongest entrepreneurship scenes in the nation. So, we had a great starting point. In the wake of the tragic killing of George Floyd in 2020, hospitality companies responded to global outcry and uprisings around justice by making broad commitments to supporting the Black community differently moving forward. IHG’s website features a report detailing DEI initiatives ranging from town halls to training initiatives to community partnerships. The family behind Marriott gifted $20 million to Howard University to create a hospitality leadership center that will be named after their late CEO, Arne Sorenson. I love that this and many other initiatives across major players in the industry are accompanied by intentions and strategies to address the underrepresentation of BIPOC and women in leadership roles in an industry that is incredibly diverse at the entry level.
Why We’re Creating New Positions In The Middle of a Pandemic
On September 9, 2021 my phone started to blow up from travel industry friends and acquaintances asking how in the hell we’re inventing positions out of thin air in the middle of a pandemic. On that date, we were featured in a 3-page article in Hotels Magazine entitled “Why Your Hotel Needs a Sonic Identity” wherein the author, Jeff Weinstein credits the leadership at Revival with hiring Jason Bass as director of Culture & Impact and DJ Impulse as Director of Content & Sonic Identity. It was right there, in the first paragraph where I think the head scratching (and perhaps, head shaking) began.
A Story About Impact Hospitality
In 20+ years in hospitality I’ve always had a “why” brewing just below the surface. It was never hidden. Anyone who was paying attention would’ve noticed it and anyone who ever asked knew what the mission was. “Let’s hand the next generation of hoteliers an industry that’s more fair, more inclusive, more just, and substantially more impactful than the one that we walked into on our first day.”