Anonymous wrote:I’m an executive at one of the local major hospitality chains.
I would always advise someone who is interested in a travel or hospitality job to:
Major in general business, but minor in hospitality. Gives you much more options if you change your mind later about the travel industry.
Get service industry or hotel experience in college: work at an actual hotel or restaurant. Front desk, waiter or waitress, in the kitchen, or housekeeping. That experience is invaluable and really you only want to do it when you’re under 25.
Get the best GPA you can.
Do an internship the summer of your junior or senior year.
Then get a job at a property or an entry-level corporate when you graduate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best hospitality school in the country is at Michigan State. Then you can look at Cornell, University of Nevada (Los Vegas), and University of Houston. Virginia Tech also has a program.
I am in the hospitality industry and have several friends who graduated from this program. They seem to have strong connections with many of the hotel chains. I do think it's a good idea to have a minor or double major in some sort of business class (marketing/comms if she is not good at math) but I think that for any major. I also think learning Spanish is good for someone in this field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best hospitality school in the country is at Michigan State. Then you can look at Cornell, University of Nevada (Los Vegas), and University of Houston. Virginia Tech also has a program.
I am in the hospitality industry and have several friends who graduated from this program. They seem to have strong connections with many of the hotel chains. I do think it's a good idea to have a minor or double major in some sort of business class (marketing/comms if she is not good at math) but I think that for any major. I also think learning Spanish is good for someone in this field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best hospitality school in the country is at Michigan State. Then you can look at Cornell, University of Nevada (Los Vegas), and University of Houston. Virginia Tech also has a program.
I am in the hospitality industry and have several friends who graduated from this program. They seem to have strong connections with many of the hotel chains. I do think it's a good idea to have a minor or double major in some sort of business class (marketing/comms if she is not good at math) but I think that for any major. I also think learning Spanish is good for someone in this field.
Anonymous wrote:The best hospitality school in the country is at Michigan State. Then you can look at Cornell, University of Nevada (Los Vegas), and University of Houston. Virginia Tech also has a program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD loves sports and to travel, is a good planner and is looking to study something more hands on. Anyone have a student majoring in this field? We’re looking NC State, ECU, ASU, Colorado State and a few CA state schools that are probably impossible to get into. We’re in DC and will utilize DC-TAG.
If you don’t have anything constructive to say, remember silence is always an option.
At the risk of being blunt, those degrees are a total sham. They exist largely so athletes unwilling or incapable of doing college level work have something to major in and maintain their eligibility. Your daughter would be much better off majoring in econ, business, finance, accounting, etc. All of those degrees would still offer a pipeline into the hospitality/tourism/recreation industries and she would at least have a solid foundation to build her career on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was going to suggest UMass Amherst as well. When we toured they have a big hotel on campus that I believe was run by hospitality majors.
Thanks for the suggestions. I guess I’m asking more if folks think there is value in such a degree. Normally I would agree with the “blunt” poster but my daughter really, really wants to go to college and her learning style is more hands on, practical. Every career assessment she does points her to a people career and hospitality has come up a few times. For me, her getting a college degree is more about checking the box because w/out it, she’ll be shut out of the job market.
Yes, there is absolute value in a degree like this. All the big hospitality brands recruit from these schools both for internships and for jobs. Coming out of a hospitality school vs just having a high school degree and working the front desk at a hotel is like going to officer training school -vs- being enlisted. The degree will enable her to move up, give her more opportunities in other areas within the business and will most definitely give her a leg up. Most of the large hospitality companies will have some type of management training program which would introduce her to all aspects of the business.