If you are an organised, smart and enthusiastic individual looking to make a career move, this could just be the right move for you.
Candidate’s minimum requirements:
Education:
• Grade 12 or equivalent • Accommodation Certificate/Hotel School diploma is advantageous
Work experience:
• At least two years’ previous experience in the same or similar position in a four/five-star hotel • Familiar with all duties and procedures in Front Office Department • MS Office (Word, Excel and Email) is essential • One year’s Opera experience is essential • Valid drivers licence • Third language is advantageous
Other:
• Friendly and service orientated • Reliable, responsible and dependable to fulfil obligations • Excellent communication skills • Attention to detail • Willingness to lead, take charge and offer direction • Ability to multitask • Show initiative by taking control of task
Tasks (include but not limited to):
• Check in and check-out of guests • Ensure accurate billing • Make travel arrangements for sightseeing and tours • Receive, store and deliver luggage and mail • Relieve night audit when necessary • Perform office duties • Receive reservations for accommodation from clients, either in person, online or by telephone, fax or email • Take guests’ details and allocate their rooms • Talk to transport carriers (such as airlines, bus companies and rental car agencies) to make and confirm travel arrangements for guests • Inform guests of the hotels services and facilities, policies and procedures • Provide tourist information to guests • Make reservations for sightseeing tours, restaurants, the cinema and live entertainment • Deal with enquiries and requests from guests • Take messages for guests • Finalise guests’ bills and issue receipts upon payment • Perform cashier duties and exchange foreign currency • Place guests’ possessions in a safe if requested • Coordinate the cleaning of guests’ personal laundry and room service deliveries • Follow in-house procedures to help ensure the security of guests and employees • Perform general secretarial duties, such as preparing correspondence and attending to incoming calls
To apply for the position, please forward a motivational letter, an updated CV with a picture of yourself to
moc.snaidotsucreerac@2tnatlusnoc
**Please note that only successful candidates will be contacted. Should you not hear from us within 14 days – please consider your application unsuccessful**
Neat unfurnished 1 bedroom with full en-suite apartment in the heart of Umhlanga. Spacious open plan living area and a small balcony with sea views. Shops and restaurants at your doorstep. Good security with 1 undercover parking bay. Such a brilliant opportunity. Call Pixie now to view.
An absolutely unique home, exuding sophisticated simplicity.
Tucked away on a quiet road in the heart of the beautiful Claremont Upper – this exceptionally well finished dwelling offers excellent security, with a charming gate entrance leading one up through a sleek entrance stairway and atrium, into a spectacular open plan living area , complete with a state-of-the-art kitchen, top quality finishes & appliances and a stunning patio, boasting views as far as the eye can see.
With breath-taking views from every room, this special double storey home includes two elegant ensuite bedrooms drenched in light and graciously private on the upper level of the home.
A home characterised by minimalistic luxury – although sleek and uncomplicated this space is both extremely inviting and hugely comfortable.
The ideal penthouse for a corporate couple, or those scaling down.
Here’s a win-win for all those bath lovers who struggle with poor sleep: New research suggests a soak in the tub before bedtime may shorten the time it takes to fall asleep.
A well-timed warm bath, or even a warm shower, also appears to prolong how long someone stays asleep, investigators found. And indications are that overall sleep quality improves as well.
Why? In large part, it has to do with lowering a person’s body temperature.
Body temperature “starts to naturally decline as part of its natural [24-hour] cycle about one to two hours before the usual time of going to sleep,” explained study author Shahab Haghayegh.
And a warm bath or shower can give that process a shove in the right direction, he explained, by boosting blood circulation from the inner body to the outer body. The result is a “very efficient removal of heat from the body, which causes a decline in body temperature,” he said.
The trick is to both time and heat that bath to perfection.
“Yes, the temperature matters,” stressed Haghayegh, a doctoral candidate in sleep research and bio-med engineering at the University of Texas at Austin.
“It should be warm. Not too hot or cold,” he noted. “Actually, a too cold or too hot bath can have an effect opposite than that desired, causing an increase, rather than a decrease, in core body temperature, and disturbed sleep.”
Timing is also important. “The optimal timing of bathing for cooling down of core body temperature in order to improve sleep quality and help with falling asleep faster is approximately one to two hours prior to going to bed,” he said. Taking it outside that window can actually disrupt the natural body temperature cycle, he warned, and not in a good way.
But after analysing the findings of 17 previous investigations, Haghayegh and his colleagues found that a properly heated bath or shower taken at the right time for as little as 10 minutes can have a positive impact on sleep.
The review was published in the August issue of Sleep Medicine Reviews.
The studies in the review included all sorts of participants, including young, healthy soccer players, middle-aged patients struggling with traumatic brain injury, and older patients diagnosed with sleep apnea. Some even focused on cancer patients and those coping with heart disease.
But regardless of the type of person at hand, the review indicated that those who took a timely warm bath or shower effectively set in motion a process known as “water-based passive body heating”.
And doing so reduced the time it took to fall asleep, also called “sleep onset latency.”
The total time patients were able to spend asleep also went up. And warm baths appeared to serve as a booster of “sleep efficiency,” meaning the amount of time a person spent in bed sleeping, relative to the amount of time spent in bed trying to sleep.
Sleep researcher Adam Krause, who was not involved in the study, said the sleep-promoting power of a warm bath or shower “has long been believed. And it’s nice to see the literature provide support for it.”
Krause is a doctoral candidate in psychology with the Center for Human Sleep Science at the University of California, Berkeley.
It may seem a bit counterintuitive, he acknowledged, given that it essentially involves exposing the skin to a certain amount of heat to trigger a drop in body temperature.
“[But] the net effect of this is a cooling of the core body and brain temperature, which is the necessary sleep-initiating cue the brain is waiting for,” Krause explained.
“I think this is such a nice, simple and subtle technique to help with sleep,” he added. “And it’s always one of my main recommendations for people having trouble initiating sleep.”
Executive project manager in Western Cape | Other Engineering | Job Mail | 4494427
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Engineer in Kwazulu-Natal | Other Engineering | Job Mail | 4494423
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A third suspect was arrested on Wednesday afternoon in connection with the murder of Ukrainian tourist Ivan Ivanov while hiking above Chapman’s Peak Drive in Hout Bay, Cape Town.
According to Western Cape police, the 27-year-old suspect was arrested on the same day as the second suspect who was arrested at Hout Bay harbour in the early hours of Wednesday morning.
Ivanov, 44, a husband and father of three, had been in the country on business and was on a two-day break in Hout Bay.
He was robbed and stabbed to death near East Fort, a popular tourist site on Chapman’s Peak, on Saturday morning.
Community Crime Prevention, a local security response group that was patrolling the area, apprehended 23-year-old Sinaye Mposelwa and found a black backpack that was believed to have belonged to Ivanov. It emerged during court proceedings Mposelwa had been out on parole at the time of the killing.
“On his clothes, and also his face, he was full of blood,” prosecutor Nicky Konisi told the Wynberg Magistrate’s Court on Monday.
Konisi said the blood was believed to be that of Ivanov as he was found with multiple stab wounds.
The second and third suspect are expected to appear on a charge of murder in the Wynberg Magistrate’s Court on Friday.