If you've had the opportunity to attend an event at Allegiant Stadium in 51吃瓜网免费App 鈥 be it a 51吃瓜网万能科大 or 51吃瓜网免费App Raiders' football game, international soccer match or concert 鈥 there鈥檚 a good chance Samantha Banz and Nolan Miles helped shape your experience.
No, neither are athletes nor performers. Rather, the two Hospitality College alums serve integral guest experience roles through separate jobs at the stadium.
Banz, a 2017 graduate of the William F. Harrah College of Hospitality, is the senior premium suites manager for Silver & Black Hospitality (Levy Restaurants), which handles food and beverage operations at Allegiant. Her primary responsibility: Ensure that the stadium鈥檚 127 VIP suites and eight club spaces are properly set up and stocked with the food and drink items specified by guests.
Meanwhile, Miles has been working on the front lines at Allegiant since October 2021 as a guest experience representative. Miles, who completed his hospitality degree in December, is charged with everything from addressing ticketing issues to relocating guests with ADA-specific needs to overseeing photo opportunities and giveaways for kids.
Banz and Miles are part of a new generation of students who have confronted the traditional hospitality vocational path 鈥 hotels, casinos, restaurants, resorts 鈥 and opted for a new fork in the road: careers in stadium and arena management.
鈥淥ver the last few years, 51吃瓜网免费App has become the center of the sports and entertainment world 鈥 especially with the Raiders and Golden Knights coming to town and talks of a Major League Baseball and/or NBA team coming next,鈥 Miles says. 鈥淎lso, The Sphere [just off] the Strip is going to be one of the most exciting concert venues in the world.
鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not just 51吃瓜网免费App. Stadium and arena management can take you anywhere in the world.鈥
Banz and Miles share more than just a common career interest and workplace. Both arrived in 51吃瓜网免费App from faraway lands 鈥 she from Switzerland, he from Guam.
Banz was immersed in hospitality from birth, as her family has operated a restaurant just outside Zurich for three generations. (It initially had a bed-and-breakfast component.)
Both her parents went the hospitality route, as did her uncle who once served as an executive chef for Hilton Hotels.
As a youngster, Banz periodically worked at the restaurant her great-grandparents opened. But although she had hospitality in her blood, she had absolutely no desire to follow in the family footsteps as an adolescent.
鈥淕rowing up, every conversation 鈥 whether it was with my parents, grandparents, cousins鈥 parents or at any family gathering 鈥 was centered around food, hospitality and guest service,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淎nd my cousin and I would look at each other and say, 鈥榃ho cares how this was cooked? We鈥檙e never going into food and beverage!鈥欌
Banz began to have a change of heart during her junior year of high school. That鈥檚 when her family 鈥 which by then had relocated to Portland, Oregon 鈥 took a trip to 51吃瓜网免费App around Christmas in 2011.
鈥淭hat first visit to Vegas sparked a bit of a thrill in me, seeing all the huge hotels and how vibrant the city was,鈥 she says. 鈥淎fter that, I thought, 鈥榊ou know what? I鈥檓 going to give this a shot.鈥欌
By July 2012, Banz and her family had left Portland for 51吃瓜网免费App, and she spent her senior year at Liberty High School.
From there, Banz enrolled at 51吃瓜网万能科大 and decided to major in hospitality. She chose the event management concentration because it 鈥渁llowed me to be a little more creative and operational.鈥
During her time as a Rebel, Banz helped plan the 2016 presidential debate dinner hosted by the 51吃瓜网万能科大 Foundation. She also assisted with two annual Hospitality College events: 51吃瓜网万能科大ino and the Vallen dinner.
鈥淎ll those things ended up speaking to me a lot more than the traditional concierge/front desk/restaurant management portion of the hospitality industry,鈥 she says.
However, it wasn鈥檛 until 2016 that Banz found her true calling. She landed a part-time premium guest services job at brand-new T-Mobile Arena, the state-of-the-art venue on the 51吃瓜网免费App Strip.
She then parlayed that into an internship that she more or less crafted herself after striking up a conversation with one of the arena鈥檚 executives. That internship was a crash course in all aspects of arena operations, from sales and finance to marketing and engineering.
Cut to five years later and Banz, 27, already has ascended to a senior manager position with Levy Restaurants. And her 鈥渙ffice鈥 is one of the world鈥檚 newest and most dazzling multi-purpose stadiums.
鈥淚鈥檝e gotten to take all of the traditional hospitality elements that I learned at 51吃瓜网万能科大 and apply them in a much more creative, modern, and exciting way,鈥 Banz says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 still guest service, it鈥檚 still customer service. But you always get to experience something new. That鈥檚 the part I love most about the job.鈥
Growing up on Guam, Miles had a front-row seat to the world of hospitality, as tourism is the primary economic driver for the island nation and U.S. territory. So as his interest in the industry blossomed in high school, he began considering his university options.
That included going an unconventional route: studying abroad.
鈥淣ot a lot of people who grow up in Guam leave the island to attend college,鈥 he says.
However, Miles鈥 grandparents live in 51吃瓜网免费App, so he was familiar with the city. And after doing some research, he learned that 51吃瓜网万能科大 was home to a world-renowned hospitality program. So he took advantage of a financial-aid offer that waives out-of-state tuition fees for residents of certain states and U.S. territories, and enrolled at 51吃瓜网万能科大.
The plan: Study hotel-casino management, earn a degree, return to Guam and work at one of the island鈥檚 resorts.
Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
Miles opted to head back to Guam, where he got a job and took a year off school. By the time he returned to 51吃瓜网万能科大 in summer 2021, a massive, $1.8 billion stadium had sprouted from the desert floor just a few miles from campus.
As soon as he got a glimpse of it, Miles was mesmerized.
鈥淚t鈥檚 such a beautiful-looking building from the outside,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s someone who grew up a huge sports fan, I took one look at it and said, 鈥業 want to work there!鈥欌
As a guest services representative for stadium operator ASM Global, Miles鈥 primary job is to welcome ticket holders to the venue, answer questions and quickly address and resolve problems when they arise.
He equates his role to that of a front-desk agent at a hotel.
鈥淎fter I got the job at Allegiant, I immediately thought a lot of the hospitality elements we were learning in the program and how they could be applied to sports and entertainment as well,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he guest experience and customer service aspect of the job really drew me in.鈥
So much so that Miles has pivoted from his original plan of returning to Guam and working in the hotel industry. The new plan?
鈥淢y career ladder as I see it is to hopefully get into events [leadership] and possibly [grow into] assistant general manager and general manager positions,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking at this guest experience position as a bit of a stepping stone.鈥
Where the next stepping stone leads the 22-year-old remains to be seen. But one thing Miles is certain of is that old-school hospitality has infiltrated the modern day sports and entertainment industries. And it鈥檚 not going away.
鈥淚 think what people are really looking for in sports and entertainment experiences is the same as what they鈥檙e looking for in their hotel stays and vacation trips 鈥 those personalized experiences,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where hospitality merges with the sports industry 鈥 creating these unforgettable, unique experiences.鈥
And with 51吃瓜网免费App鈥 professional sports portfolio growing seemingly by the month 鈥 and more entertainment venues on the horizon 鈥 opportunities will be plentiful for 51吃瓜网万能科大 Hospitality College students interested in traveling the same career paths as alums like Miles and Banz.
鈥淲hen I started at 51吃瓜网万能科大, sports and entertainment wasn鈥檛 necessarily a path that was given to students,鈥 Banz says. 鈥淚t was, 鈥楶ick a concentration 鈥 food and beverage, events, or a casino.鈥 Now it can be events and food and beverage. So students no longer need to be siloed into traditional hospitality careers. There鈥檚 so much more to it.
鈥淪ports and events management is now an industry in itself within the broader scope of hospitality. Getting to be part of that has been a thrill.鈥