Hospitality Manager

Posted 7 days 17 hours ago by Academy Education Network Ltd

Permanent
Not Specified
Hospitality & Tourism Jobs
Not Specified, United Kingdom
Job Description
What does a Hospitality Manager do?

Hospitality Managers run the operations of hotels, restaurants, event venues and tourism businesses. The day to day mix depends on specialism: hotel operations managers oversee housekeeping, front desk and concierge teams; restaurant general managers run service, food cost and staff rosters; event managers coordinate weddings, conferences and corporate hospitality; revenue managers optimise pricing and inventory across rooms or covers. UK hospitality is highly internationalised - global hotel chains run substantial graduate programmes specifically aimed at international students.

  • Manage guest experience, operations and revenue across hospitality venues.
  • Lead front of house, food & beverage and back of house teams.
  • Specialise in hotel operations, F&B, events, revenue management or general management.
  • Work for international hotel chains, restaurant groups, event venues and luxury resorts.
UK salary ranges

Luxury 5 star hotel general managers (London Mayfair, Edinburgh, Cotswolds) earn £85 000-£140 000+. Mid tier hotel general managers (Premier Inn, Hilton mid tier) sit at £45 000-£65 000. Restaurant general managers at premium brands (Hawksmoor, Caprice Holdings, Hakkasan) earn £55 000-£90 000. Event managers at major venues or agencies earn £45 000-£75 000.

London pays 20-30 % higher on average than other UK cities, particularly for luxury 5 star hotels.

Typical entry routes
  1. Graduate management programmes at Marriott, Hilton, IHG, Accor and Hyatt offer a structured path to General Manager by year 5-7.
  2. Hospitality apprenticeships (Levels 3 5) provide a fully employer funded route, progressing from Supervisor to Senior Manager over 2-4 years.
  3. MSc Hospitality/Events (1 year) is a postgraduate specialist degree popular among graduates of non hospitality undergraduates.
Skills you'll need
  • Calm leadership under pressure during peak service.
  • Empathy and exceptional guest facing communication.
  • Cultural awareness across diverse staff and guests.
  • Stamina for long hours, early starts, late nights and weekends.
Career progression
  1. Supervisor / Junior Manager - lead a small team within a department (F&B, front desk, housekeeping). Build operational management skills.
  2. Department / Hospitality Manager - own a department or area within a venue. Take responsibility for guest satisfaction, P&L and staff management.
  3. General Manager / Senior Manager - run an entire venue or multi department area. Lead recruitment, budgets and major operational decisions.
  4. Multi Site GM / Operations Director - oversee multiple venues or a regional cluster. Strategic leadership across operations, F&B, revenue and brand standards.