This Is What Makes Hilton a Great Place to Work
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Four years ago, Rebecca Hamby was living with her parents in Chattanooga, Tenn. and earning a modest hourly wage working as a guest service agent at the city's Hampton Inn by Hilton . Though her responsibilities weren't expansive--she had to check guests in and out and answer the phones-- Hamby took the gig with ambitions of a more prolific role.

"The job description said that there was plenty of opportunity for growth, and I always went beyond my duties to do as much as possible, but I never imagined that I would get to where I am today," recalls Hamby, who, four promotions later, is now a manager of brand performance for three hotels part of Hilton Worldwide: Hilton Resorts, DoubleTree by Hilton and the Curio Collection.

The position is based at Hilton Worldwide headquarters in McLean, Va. and earns Hamby a salary comfortable enough to take vacations to destinations such as Paris, long on her bucket list, and also build up savings. "I don't know what my future career at Hilton is, but I know that it has no boundaries," she says.

Hamby's trajectory is far for from unique. Promoting its own employees, referred to as "team members," is at the core of Hilton's philosophy and has been ever since Conrad Hilton founded the hospitality company in 1919.

After private equity firm Blackstone Group acquired Hilton in 2007, it hired Christopher J. Nassetta to become Hilton’s new president and CEO. The hospitality company wasn’t seeing its full potential, Nasetta told Fortune, so he pushed internal recruitment even more when he was brought on to lead the new Hilton Worldwide. “There was an amazing collection of assets, but we needed a way to inspire people,” he said, acknowledging a lack of recognition programs. He created a Team Member Appreciation Week in which he visits hotels to reward and thank employees for their work. He also began hosting quarterly town halls, where he delivers updates on the business and calls out high-performing team members. “I’m a constant communicator,” Nassetta says.

So far, the focus on promoting-from-within has worked, helping the company grow to 58,000 team members at more than 4,600 hotels across a portfolio of 13 brands. Two years ago, Hilton went public with a $2.3 billion IPO that broke industry records. The cultural overhaul is complete. Employees surveyed by Great Place to Work say the change is profound. Their comments were strong enough to propel the company onto Fortune‘s annual ranking of the 100 Best Companies to Work For at No. 56 this year -- joining list stalwarts Four Seasons, Hyatt, Marriott, and Kimpton.