Business Management Executive Q&A
Q&A: Accor Repositioning to Focus on Core Businesses
July 17, 2007

Accor North America, a division of Accor, has approximately 870 properties in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The company's brands include Motel 6, Studio 6 (an extended-stay brand), Sofitel Hotels and Resorts, Novotel and Ibis brands. Accor made news in April when it sold the Red Roof Inn chain to a consortium including Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Westbridge Hospitality Fund L.P. for $1.3 billion. The estimate for Accor’s room numbers, post-Red Roof Inn, is about 101,600 rooms.

Georges Le Mener, president & CEO of Accor N.A., talked with CPN Senior Editor Eugene Gilligan about what is ahead for the company.

CPNHospitality: Please talk about Accor's decision to sell the Red Roof Inn chain?

Le Mener: Accor had a change in management 18 months ago. Accor was in very diversified businesses, and the decision was made to concentrate on two main businesses-hotels and business services, such as meal vouchers, which is a major business around the world except in the U.S. The company has decided to refocus on these two businesses, and sell non-core businesses. For instance, the company had a stake in Club Med, which has been sold. An Internet business in Italy is in the process of being sold.

As owners and operators of hotels, we own lots of real estate. We want to sell some of that real estate, become less capital intensive, and move more toward a manager and franchisee model. We always want to own some real estate, but we want to be less capital intensive.

The Red Roof chain is more of a regional chain, and it was going to take a lot of investment to expand it nationally. Profits were higher in Motel 6, and if we were going to sell Red Roof, with the price of hotel assets today, now was the ideal time to do it.

CPNHospitality: What are your plans for the Motel 6 brand?

Le Mener: We want to develop both Motel 6 and Studio 6, our extended stay brand. We have 45 of Studio 6 properties today, and they are doing very well. We want to introduce a new economical model, because construction costs are increasing. We want to develop 300 properties, between these two brands, in the next five years.

CPNHospitality: Please talk about your plans for your Sofitel brand?

Le Mener: We want to reposition Sofitel, to be very upscale. We want to be just below Four Seasons and Ritz Carlton, and above Marriott and Hyatt. We also are going to launch a new brand, in late September, where we will convert some Sofitels that can't reach that level, to this new brand. We also want to expand Novotel to major North American markets.

 
Recent Executive Q&A Headlines
trkla Tom Brookwood Takes Residential Respite from Chaotic Commercial Market
It might appear counterintuitive for a significant private equity player, having chucked most of its commercial real estate at the height of the market, to then take refuge in the seemingly even more troubled residential market, but that’s exactly what Brookwood Financial Partners L.P. has done.
Ezovski_Derek New Environmental Regulations Impact Loans, Due Diligence
On Aug. 1, new environmental regulations in the revised Small Business Administration's standard operating procedures for lender and development company loan programs took effect. CPN associate editor Amanda Marsh spoke with Derek Ezovski, managing director of Environmental Data Resources’ commercial property due diligence services, about how these new regulations will impact real estate.
Barfield_Bruce Casinos Use Technology to Combat Downturn
The volatile U.S. economy has taken its toll on casinos, which are now experiencing something of a slowdown. However, casino operators are ready to weather the downturn with strategies and technology to maximize revenue from each guest. CPN associate editor Amanda Marsh discussed the state of the market and this technology use with Bruce Barfield, president & principal of The Rainmaker Group, which produces a profit optimization software--dubbed revolution Product Suite--that helps operators make decisions on room rates and allocation based on forecasting algorithms and customers’ spending and gaming histories.
FM Global: Most Companies Not Geared up for Natural Disaster Property Damage
The largest corporations in North America, thereby the companies with the most to lose, are ill prepared for the potential damages to properties from natural catastrophes, according to a report from FM Global. Commissioned by the Johnston, R.I.-based business property insurer, the 2008 Natural Disaster Business Risk Study involved companies with a minimum $1 billion in annual revenue. One of the report's most striking conclusions is the fact that 96 percent of respondents noted that their companies have operations in geographic areas that are vulnerable to hurricanes, floods or earthquakes, but only approximately 20 percent of that group responded that their companies are "very concerned" about natural disasters having a negative impact on their bottom line. Steven Zenofsky, FM Global assistant vice president & manager for public relations, spoke with CPN contributing editor Barbra Murray about the study's results, as well as actions companies can take to protect their properties from these potentially devastating acts of nature.
Johnson, Tim NBBJ's Johnson: Designing for China Presents Unique Challenges
The eyes of the world will soon be trained on China as the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing takes center stage, but the commercial real estate world has long marveled at the size and scale of development in the nation. One man who is playing an important role in development in China is Tim Johnson, partner in the architecture firm NBBJ.