METHODOLOGY: POPULATION AND SAMPLE
Lodging properties in Florida’s Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties constituted the research
population for this study. Participation was restricted to those properties belonging to one of the three county hotel
and motel associations and having 100 or more guest rooms. This convenience sample provided a study group of
lodging executives working in full-service, medium to large staffing environments. Based on data from the three
associations, 180 lodging properties met our criteria.
Letters from Lynn University and two hotel and motel associations, Greater Miami & The Beaches Hotel
Association, Palm Beach County Hotel & Motel Association that endorsed this study were mailed to respective
county property GMs. Included with each letter were five survey questionnaires with GM distribution instructions.
The survey instrument design included an introduction script briefing participants on the research purpose and the
industry-education partnership arrangement between the three counties (Dade, Broward and Palm Beach) and the
two researchers’ university affiliations (Lynn University and Florida International University). The enclosed
instructional piece directed GMs to complete one survey and distribute the four remaining questionnaires to property
directors of human resources, sales & marketing, rooms and food & beverage. Accompanied with each survey
questionnaire was a pre-addressed, stamped return envelope.
From the 180 properties that met the study criteria, thirty-three GMs responded, resulting in a response rate
of 18 percent. In pursuit of higher participation (Johanson and Woods, 1999), a reminder letter was sent to the GMs
in Dade County, as a test group, which generated no additional responses. As a result, reminder notices were not
sent to the remaining Broward and Palm Beach counties. A final 119 usable surveys from respondents (GMs and
directors of human resources, sales & marketing, rooms and food & beverage) were returned.
From the total group of respondents, over 90 percent were associated with full-service properties, many
being upscale resorts and all-suites. Affiliations were primarily with mid-size properties, employing between 100
and 500 employees. Over half of the respondents held GM/AGM or director of human resources job titles, with the
remainder being primarily split among rooms, food & beverage and sales & marketing director titles. A few of these
individuals had multiple areas of concentration and expertise, but most were tooled in their respective areas of
responsibilities. The majority of property executives were males (61%), over age 35, with ten or more years of
industry experience. The number of employees under their direct supervision ranged between five and fifteen, on
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