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Profile: Mark Gulessarian: How I attracted 1.8mil thru my hotel door

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  • Profile: Mark Gulessarian: How I attracted 1.8mil thru my hotel door

    Daily Post (Liverpool)
    September 21, 2005, Wednesday

    BUSINESS PROFILE: HOW I ATTRACTED £1.8M THROUGH MY HOTEL DOOR;
    DAVID JONES FINDS HOW MANAGER MARK GULESSARIAN HAS HELPED AN
    ANGLESEY

    by DAVID JONES


    MARK Gulessarian knew all about the attractions of Anglesey from the
    days when he holidayed there with his family.

    He went on to work in hotel management in towns across the UK and
    Europe. But when he saw an advert for a job running the Treaddur Bay
    Hotel on the the island it immediately caught his eye.

    "I saw this post in Anglesey advertised in a trade magazine and I
    knew the area because as children we came to Rhosneigr on holiday for
    about 15 years," he says.

    "And I knew Trearddur Bay, although I didn't know the hotel. So I
    came down and looked at the hotel and liked it."

    Gulessarian says he was attracted to the job, not just because of the
    beautiful location and quality of life, but also because the hotel
    was run by a privately-owned company and its two directors "came
    across as genuine, and with a keen desire for the operation to
    succeed at a higher level than it was".

    He moved to the Trearddur Bay Hotel as general manager in 1995 and
    over the course of the past decade has doubled the hotel's turnover
    to £1.8m.

    The business is part of Longford Hotels Ltd, owned by Manchesterbased
    brothers Christopher and Richard Lees-Jones who have family links
    with the Anglesey and Caernarfon areas. Richard is chairman of the J
    W Lees brewing group and Christopher vice-chairman. Christopher is
    chairman of Longford Hotels, whose registered office is at Trearddur
    Bay, and Richard is a director of the group.

    The 42-bedroom Trearddur Bay Hotel, two miles from Holyhead, trades
    strongly in the leisure market from Easter to September and is
    developing its business markets thanks to a new £1.1m conference and
    banqueting centre, called the Canalfan Penrhos Centre, opened earlier
    this year.

    It is that development, supported with an EU Objective 1 grant of
    £287,000 to retain and create jobs in the area, which is enabling the
    hotel to look both east and west for new business.

    "When I put together the business plan for the new banqueting and
    conference centre we looked at the opportunities in Ireland,"
    explains Gulessarian.

    "Dublin has become very expensive for the day delegate. So we will be
    looking to put together a package with Stena that will bring
    delegates over here, give them a conference and overnight
    accommodation at the hotel and get them back home at a rate cheaper
    than the £120 day delegate rate in Dublin.

    "We are also looking for business opportunities within the UK. We
    have a natural corridor along the A55 to Cheshire, Merseyside,
    Lancashire and Manchester and have identified conference organisers
    and bluechip companies who use conference facilities."

    While new business opportunities further afield are being targeted,
    the Anglesey-based business community continues to be an important
    part of the hotel's client base.

    "Our local business clients are the RAF, Stena, Anglesey Aluminium,
    BNFL and Holyhead Boatyard."

    All those businesses, in their own ways, have helped with the
    economic regeneration of Anglesey over the past few decades. Stena
    has, for instance, developed Holyhead port into a major European
    transport hub, while Anglesey Aluminium has provided well-paid jobs
    for almost 600 people through longterm power supply contracts with
    Wylfa nuclear power station. But with the atomic plant earmarked for
    closure in 2010, the smelter must devise an alternative energy
    strategy or face possible closure.

    Gulessarian said: "The Objective 1 programme has made a difference to
    the island's economy, not so much in GDP which has not risen,
    although that is a problem afflicting Wales as a whole, not just
    Anglesey.

    "But I sense there is a buzz about Anglesey these days and a lot more
    positive voices around.

    "Ty Mawr Industrial Estate at Holyhead is on the point of going
    ahead, and we have seen a lot of out-of-town retail development at
    Penrhos," he said. Tourism continues to be one of the island's key
    wealth generators. Gulessarian, trade director with the Tourism
    Partnership North Wales and Anglesey Tourism Association chairman,
    says: "I think tourism is probably the single biggest industry on the
    island. Stena has been successful in attracting large cruise ships to
    Holyhead this year, and that did give us some day visitors to the
    hotel.

    "There is also a plan to establish an airlink from RAF Valley to
    Swansea and Cardiff by September 2006.

    "There will be four return flights a day, opening opportunities for
    both the business and tourism markets.

    "But we must look at the wider picture. Valley to Stansted and Valley
    to Dublin are the other opportunities.

    "There are operating issues that need to be resolved with the RAF
    because Valley is an exceptionally busy base and they have concerns
    about the numbers of movements they can handle."

    The hotel is now in a position to be able to cater in a much more
    comprehensive way. It can cater for a business breakfast, training
    event or dinner for anything between 10 and 160 delegates.

    Outside the traditional holiday period, more than 80% of the guests
    staying at the hotel are business visitors, while on Fridays,
    Saturdays and Sundays that swings back to the leisure market with
    short breaks.

    Gulessarian says the all-year round room occupancy rate is 72%,
    significantly higher than the Wales average.

    "We now have 58 employees, of which 42 are full-time," he says.
    "Since we opened the new conference centre, we have already created
    five full-time jobs, and that figure is set to rise to 11 by the time
    we have rolled out the facilities and developed them to their full
    potential.

    "The centre was two and a half years in the planning and development,
    but I can see it generating income in the region of £250,000 a year."

    Of Armenian extraction - his grandfather settled in Manchester to
    work in the clothing trade - Gulessarian graduated from the Blackpool
    Hotel School in 1980 with an HND in hotel management and catering
    administration, before following what he describes as a traditional
    trainee management scheme in the Southport, Manchester and Liverpool
    areas.

    A move to Switzerland enabled him to broaden his experience before he
    returned to the UK as general manager with a hotel just outside
    Swindon.

    A spell with Trust House Forte gained him corporate experience before
    he moved to Pontefract to become operations director in charge of
    four hotels and four public hotels. From there, Anglesey beckoned.

    He says: "Career opportunities are better now than when I joined the
    industry. Then, it was long and unsocial hours and not particularly
    well paid. Today there is a strong career structure available to our
    employees

    question.

    ANSWER

    Age 49 this week Hometown Northwich Now resident Trearddur Bay
    Marital status Married, with three daughters Interests Golf, motor
    racing Unfulfilled ambition To own and operate his own hospitality
    business Personal business philosophy: Exceed guest expectations and
    deliver quality

    GRAPHIC: Mark Gulessarian is attracting trade from Ireland with
    Treaddur Bay's new banqueting facilities Picture: GERALLT RADCLIFFE
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