Tags:

How I got here

Wednesday 28 July 2004 17:28
Gwyn Kennett, 31, heads up the resourcing side of Whitbread-owned coffee giant Costa in the UK. This includes recruitment duties for 300-plus high-street stores and outlets, as well as the company's roastery in Lambeth, London. This supplies the company's wholesale operation, which has concessions in Whitbread-owned Marriott hotels.

The company has opened 20 new stores so far this year, and there are plans to have 60 new units by the end of the year, which means Kennett is an extremely busy man.

Kennett conducts interviews for senior positions where he can, but with responsibility for the company's recruitment message and materials, the main thrust of his job is making sure the store managers have everything they need to attract people into the business.

"I tend to do 1,000 miles a week in the car," says Kennett. "It's typicallya 5am start and late finish, which can be tough."

However, he doesn't waste his commuting time, using it instead to get his thoughts in order and plan his strategy so he can devote all his energy to interviewing new recruits on location.

His favourite aspect of his role as resourcing manager is the feedback he gets after recruiting someone into the business and watching them go on to be successful.

Kennett originally cut his teeth as a manager at Bass chain Vintage Inn, before moving to Whitbread Restaurants as an area manager for Brewers Fayre & Brewsters in May 1999, with responsibility for Travel Inn.

In August 2001 Kennett took on responsibility for Project Energise as a way of stretching himself and "doing something different". The task was to oversee the sale of 44 Whitbread restaurant sites to Noble House Leisure, and Kennett said sitting around a table with 20 solicitors was intimidating but ultimately useful. It also started him "talking" with head office, rather than simply calling them when he wanted something, as he'd tended to do as a unit manager.

In March 2002 he became resourcing manager for Whitbread Restaurants, accountable for team member recruitment and Whitbread's Springboard award-winning Chef Modern Apprenticeship Programme, a responsibility he retains today.

"The project management side of the programme was highly beneficial, as previously I'd come from the background of being very operationally led. It allowed me to plan things out and to be less reactive," says Kennett.

"It was also useful as it introduced me to playing the political game that is required in any large organisation. Basically I was selling the apprenticeship programme to human resources teams across Whitbread."


Career highlights

May 1999
Joins Whitbread Restaurants as area manager, Brewers Fayre & Brewsters

March 2002
Resourcing manager, Whitbread Restaurants

February 2003
Resourcing manager, Costa

Recommended articles

Articles from the web

 
Profiting from 2012: Case Studies

Slash VAT, Boost business - Sign the petition now!

Latest Video

Foraging – why all the attention?

Using foraged ingredients is nothing new but the trend has become more mainstream over the past two years. However, the wider use of foraged food in restaurants also carries a certain amount of danger.

Watch here

Best of chef

Best of Chef – now available online

Best of Chef – now available online
View it now

Videos

Video: Foraging – why all the attention? Video: Bordeaux Revisited with Ronan Sayburn Claire John Campbell
Foraging:
why all the attention?
Watch the video here
Bordeaux Revisited
with Ronan Sayburn
Watch the video here
Claire Clark
masterclass
Watch the video here
Interview with John Campbell
at Coworth Park
Watch the video here