A Strategic Vision for Kimpton Hotel Monaco Salt Lake City
The Vault bar sits where gambling arrests happened in 1895. The marble floors are original Continental Bank. Kimpton's irreverence isn't brand positioning — it's architectural fact. I help hotels turn that kind of soul into systematic revenue.
Track Record
General Manager of a 133-key historic property with $9M budget. Regional Director overseeing 4 luxury properties, 521 keys, and 500+ associates. The Monaco's scale, F&B complexity, and IHG standards require this exact experience.
Delmonico Hotel, White House Hotel, Harr's No. 7, Continental Bank, Kimpton — five lives in one building. My career has been shaped by historic rebuilds. I understand what these buildings mean to their communities.
$1M+ in activation revenue since 2022 — built through recurring series, seasonal tentpoles, and premium experiences that layer on top of each other. I build systematic calendars that turn one-offs into revenue engines.
The Methodology
See the Potential → Shape the Process → Sell the Product
Every hotel has unrealized potential — in its spaces, its people, its place in the community. The work starts with seeing it clearly. Not what's broken. What's possible. The Vault as a Utah Hockey pregame destination. Bambara as a true destination restaurant. The building's 160-year story as a living brand asset. Mission begins when you name what this place could become — and lead the team to get there.
Vision without culture is just a poster on the wall. Shaping the process means leading a team that knows why they're here — and feels empowered to deliver on that promise. It's the rituals, the recognition, the shared ownership. I lead by removing barriers and learning alongside the people doing the work.
The product isn't a room. It's not a meal. It's the first-person experience of being served by a team with a defined vision and the culture to execute it. Guests feel something they can't quite explain — but they return for it. That feeling is the product. And when it's real, revenue follows.
Results in Action
See: The Warrior Hotel opened during the height of COVID — a masterpiece hidden behind masks and mandates. The building was beautiful, the brand was strong, but the community never had the chance to celebrate it. The opportunity wasn't just to relaunch a hotel — it was to reignite civic pride and reintroduce The Warrior as a symbol of Sioux City's strength and revival. The potential we aimed to actualize: belonging.
Shape: We began with a roundtable: What potential are we trying to actualize? The answer was clear — reconnection. The team envisioned The Warrior not as a luxury landmark standing apart, but as a gathering place standing with the city. We used the Chamber of Commerce as a bridge between business and community — transforming a single ribbon cutting into a six-week celebration of renewal. Each outlet — restaurant, bar, spa, hotel — became its own Chamber member, each with its own ribbon cutting, story, and moment of pride. Project plans were created, timelines set, every department had ownership.
Sell: For six consecutive weeks, the city came alive. Over 2,000 guests joined in the celebrations, rediscovering a place that felt both brand new and deeply familiar. $200K in auxiliary spend followed over five months. The Warrior reentered the community not through advertising, but through authentic connection. The hotel was no longer reopening its doors — it was reopening its heart.
See: Hotels in regional markets don't get foot traffic by accident — they earn it. The potential wasn't to compete for the travelers already coming; it was to manufacture demand by giving people a reason to arrive in the first place. The question we asked: What if the hotel itself became the destination?
Shape: We built a systematic programming engine with three layers. First, recurring series that create habit and fill midweek gaps: Ladies Night every Thursday (champagne, apps, DJ — $8K+ per event), Trivia Wednesdays, Sizzling Thursdays steak specials. Second, seasonal tentpoles that anchor the calendar and drive destination bookings: 12 Days of Christmas (daily giveaways, Santa brunch, tree lighting — 200+ room nights annually), NYE Masquerade Ball (400+ guests, $150/ticket), Valentine's couples retreats, Halloween costume party. Third, premium experiences that capture high-margin spend: winemaker dinners, chef's table events, spa skincare nights, bourbon tastings. We layered in community partnerships — charity football watch parties, Toys for Tots drives, Boys & Girls Club fundraisers — that deepened local ties while generating press.
Sell: Over $1M in activation and campaign-driven revenue since 2022. Across a 4-property portfolio, 22 activations drove a 6% TRevPAR lift. The properties went from competing on rate to competing on experience. Locals started recommending us to visitors. Guests started planning return trips around the programming calendar. The hotel became the heartbeat of the city — not just another room to book.
See: Hospitality turnover hovers near 80% industry-wide. But behind every resignation is a person who never felt seen, never felt developed, never felt like their future was here. The potential wasn't just retention — it was transformation. What if we built a culture where people actually wanted to stay? Not because they lacked options, but because they felt invested in?
Shape: We created a multi-layered recognition and development system. Monthly: Employee of the Month with real rewards — gift cards, prime parking, public celebration. Weekly: department-level shoutouts and in-the-moment acknowledgment. Annually: service anniversary celebrations, holiday parties, summer outings (trolley tours through historic districts, museum visits, team dinners). But recognition without development rings hollow. So we built career pathing infrastructure: identified high-potential associates early, created mentorship tracks, established cross-training opportunities, mapped clear promotion pathways. We celebrated internal promotions loudly. Every touchpoint reinforced the same message: You matter here. Your growth matters. Your future is here.
Sell: Retention climbed to 80%. Leadership retention increased 24%. We promoted 8 associates internally and mentored 14 team members into supervisor and management positions. Engagement scores jumped 27 points. But the real proof is in guest feedback: stable teams mean consistent service, familiar faces, associates who know preferences and anticipate needs. Teams that stay together learn together — and guests feel the difference in every interaction.
The Vision
The Monaco has Bambara, The Vault, and 160 years of stories ready to drive revenue. What I bring is the leadership to build a year-round system that compounds: destination F&B, a locals engine, and programming that positions the Monaco as Salt Lake's essential downtown hotel.
Elevate Bambara and The Vault as standalone destinations. Quarterly wine dinners in Cosgriff's former office. Pre-theater packages for Eccles Center. The Vault as Utah Hockey Club pregame hub — 41 home games, one block away. Target: 40% non-hotel covers.
Monthly themes tied to building history, Utah culture, and Wasatch seasons. Same template every month — tentpole event, outlet activations, room package, email campaign, charity partner, capstone. Repeatable. Scalable. Calendar-driven reasons to visit in every season.
Paid membership tiers with priority reservations, spa perks, exclusive previews. Salt Lake's downtown residents become year-round F&B revenue and brand ambassadors who defend against competition. The people who recommend the Monaco to every visitor.
Monthly themes rooted in what makes the Monaco singular: five eras of building history, Utah's mountain culture, and 160 years of gathering people — legally and otherwise.
Same structure. Different theme. Repeatable every year.
Signature monthly event
Activation in each venue
Themed package
Month-specific campaign
Local partner tie-in
Month-ending experience
The Building Is the Brand
The Monaco didn't manufacture a sense of place. It inherited one. This building has been gathering people — legally and otherwise — since before Utah was a state.
The Vault bar sits exactly where Harr's No. 7 operated from 1895 to 1922, cited frequently for "alcohol violations and illegal gambling." Bambara occupies the original bank lobby with polished marble floors. The private dining room is James Cosgriff's office. The 2-foot-thick vault walls are original.
Kimpton's promise — "irreverent, genuine, heartfelt" — has been in this building for 130 years. I'm ready to lead the team that brings it to life.
U.S. News #1 Hotel in Iowa (2024 & 2025). Business of the Year 2025. 70% rooms flow-through. 80% team retention. The methodology works — and it's built for properties with soul.