17.8 C
Galway
Home MORE Hotel and Venue Records: What Should Be Kept and What Should Go

    Hotel and Venue Records: What Should Be Kept and What Should Go

    0
    13
    Galway daily news Plans for city centre hotel development off Eyre Square

    Hotels, venues and event businesses are usually judged by the guest experience. Behind reception desks, booking systems and function rooms, there is also a steady flow of paperwork to manage.

    A busy hotel or event venue runs on planning. Rooms need to be prepared, staff rotas need to be covered, suppliers need to arrive on time, and events need to move from one booking to the next without unnecessary disruption.

    Guests usually see the front of house side of that work. The welcome at reception. The meal served on time. The meeting room set up properly. The event that runs as planned.

    That work also leaves plenty of records behind.

    Booking forms, staff files, supplier invoices, delivery notes, payment records, printed customer requests, event sheets and old contracts can all build up behind the scenes. Some of these records need to be kept. Others only have a short working life. The challenge is knowing the difference before old paperwork starts taking over office space, storerooms and filing cabinets.

    The Paperwork Behind Busy Hospitality Businesses

    Hospitality businesses move quickly. A booking changes. A customer asks for a special arrangement. A supplier sends updated terms. A staff member swaps a shift. A function sheet is printed for the team before an event.

    Even where booking systems and accounts software are used, paper still appears in daily work. Staff may print event details for service teams. Notes may be added to a customer file. Copies of invoices may be kept for checking. Signed forms may be stored after a meeting, wedding, conference or private function.

    None of this is unusual. The issue comes later, when paperwork created for immediate use stays in storage long after the job is finished.

    In a busy venue, files can gather in several places at once. Reception may hold one set of records. Accounts may have another. The events team may keep printed sheets. Contracts, HR folders and supplier paperwork can also end up being kept in different parts of the building. Without a regular check, older records can sit there long after the booking or event has passed.

    Guest And Event Records Can Build Up Quickly

    Hotels and venues deal with plenty of guest and event details. Names, contact numbers, booking notes, dietary requests, payment references, rooming lists and event emails can all be part of the file.

    While the booking is live, those details are used by different teams. Reception may need the contact note, the kitchen may need the dietary request, and the events team may need the latest room layout or timing change.

    A wedding, conference, private dinner or corporate meeting usually leaves a file behind. That might include the booking form, running order, supplier notes, guest list, room layout, payment record and printed instructions used by the team.

    When the event is finished, part of that file may still be needed for accounts or customer queries. The rest should be reviewed before it is kept.

    Staff And Supplier Files Need Proper Handling

    Guest paperwork is only one part of the picture. Hotels and venues also hold staff and supplier records.

    Staff files can include contracts, payroll details, training records, emergency contacts, rota notes, leave records and internal paperwork. Supplier files can include invoices, payment details, insurance documents, delivery records and pricing terms.

    These files are useful while they are current. The problem starts when old versions, closed records or outdated supplier details are kept without anyone checking them.

    The risk is usually practical. A cabinet fills up. Old folders are moved to a storeroom. Boxes are kept because no one wants to remove something important. Over time, current files and old records can become mixed together, making it harder to find what is actually needed.

    What Should Be Reviewed After Busy Periods

    Hospitality businesses often have peaks and quieter periods. Events, bank holidays, conferences, race weeks, wedding seasons and tourism peaks can all increase the amount of admin passing through an office.

    A review after a busy period can be kept simple. Current files stay where they are, completed records are checked, and confidential paperwork that no longer needs to be kept is set aside for secure destruction.

    Useful questions include:

    • Which guest or event records are still active?
    • Which files need to be kept for accounts, tax, HR or legal reasons?
    • Which supplier records have been replaced by newer versions?
    • Are printed guest lists, rooming lists or event sheets still needed?
    • Where are completed booking forms and payment notes stored?
    • What confidential paperwork should now be securely destroyed?

    These checks are easier to manage when they happen regularly. Waiting until storage is full usually turns a simple review into a larger task.

    Where Secure Shredding Can Help

    For hotels, venues and event businesses, the issue is not only how much paper is created. It is where that paper goes once the booking, event or supplier query has finished.

    Guest lists, payment notes, staff records, supplier terms and printed event sheets should not be treated like ordinary recycling. If those documents are no longer needed, they need a secure route out of the business.

    This is where Pulp’s onsite confidential paper shredding service can support hospitality teams. Secure paper consoles can be placed in office or admin areas, giving staff somewhere to put confidential paper between collections. The material is then collected and shredded outside the premises using mobile shredding trucks. Certificates of destruction are provided, and shredded paper is sent for recycling.

    Pulp’s service is handled by Garda vetted staff and operates with AAA NAID and ISO9001 standards. For hotels and venues, that creates a clearer record of how confidential paperwork has been dealt with after busy periods, events or internal file reviews.

    Old devices should also be included in records reviews. Reception computers, office laptops, hard drives, USB sticks and other data bearing devices can still hold booking records, emails, spreadsheets, customer notes or financial information. Secure IT destruction helps make sure redundant equipment is dealt with properly, rather than left in a cupboard after an upgrade.

    Better Records Habits Make the Next Busy Period Easier

    Good records management does not need to become a major project. For many hotels and venues, the starting point is a simple routine.

    Keep active files easy to find. Review completed event folders after a set period. Separate records that must be retained from paperwork that no longer has a purpose. Make sure staff know where confidential paper should go. Include old devices in the same review, not as an afterthought.

    Hotels and venues are built around service, but the admin behind that service matters too. Booking forms, staff records, supplier files and event paperwork may not be visible to guests, but they affect how well the business runs.

    A clearer approach to old records can make the next busy period easier to manage, while reducing the risk of confidential information being left sitting in storage for longer than it should.