Bakul Pednekar on Building a Workplace Where People Feel Heard, Valued & Empowered

Bakul Pednekar on Building a Workplace Where People Feel Heard, Valued & Empowered

Bakul Pednekar

Published on July 1, 2025

Bakul Pednekar, the Director of People and Culture at Four Seasons Hotel Bengaluru, is on a mission to create more than just an excellent place to work, he’s building a workplace where people feel truly heard, valued, and empowered. With over two decades in hospitality, Bakul brings global perspective and local sensitivity to shaping people strategies that go beyond roles and hierarchies.

Under his leadership, Four Seasons isn’t merely positioning itself as a luxury brand but as a people-first organisation where careers are nurtured with intent and care. From tackling pressing industry challenges like talent shortages and rising attrition, to developing skillsets tailored for an increasingly luxury-focused market, Bakul is aligning long-term growth with evolving industry needs.

He’s also made learning a cornerstone, with a dynamic mix of digital modules, classroom sessions, soft skills workshops, and mentoring that not only upskill teams but also instill confidence and curiosity. Initiatives like the lively “Four Teams” programme, where employees compete in everything from wellness activities to culinary contests have added a spirited, collaborative edge to engagement, strengthening bonds across departments.

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For Bakul, leadership is inseparable from culture. By embedding empathy into management training, encouraging open dialogue, and fostering psychological safety, he’s ensuring Four Seasons remains a place where people feel respected and inspired to grow.

As he puts it, “We position ourselves not just as a luxury brand, but as a people-first organisation where careers are nurtured with purpose.”

Want more?
Read our full interview with Bakul Pednekar in our website e-magazine to see how Four Seasons Hotel Bengaluru is creating a future-ready, values-led hospitality workforce and what that means for the industry at large.


Shaping Colombo’s Luxury Hospitality Landscape: A Conversation with Andreas Streiber

Shaping Colombo’s Luxury Hospitality Landscape: A Conversation with Andreas Streiber

Andreas Streiber

Published on March 1, 2026

In an exclusive interaction with Hospitality News, seasoned hospitality leader Andreas Streiber offered a thoughtful and compelling perspective on leadership, guest experience, and the evolving role of luxury hotels in dynamic city destinations. As the General Manager of Shangri-La Colombo, Andreas brings with him over 25 years of global experience with the Shangri-La Group, shaping his people-first philosophy and deeply rooted approach to service excellence.

Drawing from a career that spans multiple international markets, Andreas reflected on how global exposure has influenced his leadership style. He emphasised adaptability, cultural sensitivity, and empathy as critical elements in managing diverse teams and meeting the expectations of an increasingly global guest profile. According to him, understanding cultural nuances and fostering inclusive team environments are essential to delivering meaningful and authentic hospitality experiences.

Speaking about Shangri-La Colombo, Andreas described the property as more than just a luxury urban hotel. As a landmark development and the first new luxury hotel to open in Colombo in over three decades, it represents confidence in the city’s future as a global destination. He highlighted the hotel’s unique balance of contemporary elegance and Sri Lankan heritage, positioning it as a social and cultural hub for both international travellers and local communities.

Operational excellence remains a cornerstone of his leadership. Andreas shared insights into the importance of strong training programmes, quality control, and the strategic use of guest feedback to ensure consistency across service and performance. He also underlined the role of accountability and teamwork in delivering seamless guest experiences in a large luxury environment.

Food and beverage, he noted, plays a powerful role in shaping a hotel’s identity. By blending authentic local flavours with global culinary influences, the hotel aims to create dining experiences that are both culturally rich and emotionally engaging.

Looking ahead, Andreas outlined his vision for Shangri-La Colombo, one centred on deeper guest engagement, an inclusive and empowered team culture, and long-term leadership in sustainable luxury hospitality.

This insightful exchange offered a rare glimpse into the mindset of a leader shaping one of Colombo’s most iconic hospitality destinations. It was truly a great conversation, and we invite you to explore the complete interview in the Hospitality News March magazine, available on our website and in the physical print edition.


Shreya Malpani on Building the Future of Experiential Entertainment

Shreya Malpani on Building the Future of Experiential Entertainment

Shreya Malpani

Published on March 1, 2026

As India’s leisure and entertainment industry enters a more experience-driven era, leadership clarity and operational precision are becoming defining factors of success. In an exclusive conversation with Hospitality News, Shreya Malpani, Director at the Malpani Group, shared powerful insights into how immersive destinations are being built for the modern Indian consumer.

Representing a new generation within the Group’s legacy, she is closely involved with brands such as ImagicaaWorld and Dave & Buster’s in India. Her vision signals a shift from traditional arcade-led formats to integrated, design-forward ecosystems where food, technology, and play converge seamlessly.

At the heart of her leadership philosophy lies clarity of vision and uncompromising experience standards. She emphasised that while multiple formats may operate under one umbrella, alignment in guest experience principles is non-negotiable. For her, strategy cannot remain disconnected from operations. Brand storytelling, team culture and on-ground delivery must move in sync to ensure experience integrity at scale.

Marketing, she explained, must evoke emotion before promoting offers. Campaigns are built around how guests should feel, ensuring that the promise communicated externally is consistently delivered internally. Emotional recall, according to her, is the true measure of brand strength in entertainment.

Reflecting on launching Dave & Buster’s in India, she highlighted a critical learning: global formats must be contextualised. Indian consumers are aspirational yet discerning, requiring a fine balance between international benchmarks and local cultural relevance. Authenticity and operational discipline, she noted, are essential to sustaining credibility.

On balancing creativity with operational excellence, she advocates “disciplined creativity”- encouraging bold ideas within structured systems that protect brand standards. Innovation, when supported by process, becomes sustainable.

Looking ahead, she sees integrated, multi-format destinations, personalization, immersive technology, and community-driven programming shaping the future of leisure in India.

It was a great conversation we had with her, one that reflects ambition, structure, and a clear direction for experiential growth. To explore the complete interaction, read the full feature in the HospitalityNews March Magazine on our website and secure your physical copy for an in-depth industry perspective.


People, Purpose, and Culinary Leadership

People, Purpose, and Culinary Leadership

Chef V. Bharathan

Published on February 1, 2026

In an exclusive featured interaction with Hospitality News, Executive Chef V. Bharathan offers rare insights into the values and discipline that have shaped his remarkable journey in hospitality. From beginning his career at the very entry level of Food & Beverage service to leading complex culinary operations at Bengaluru Airport’s Terminal 1, his story reflects resilience, consistency, and purpose-led leadership.

Now serving as Executive Chef at Avolta India, Chef Bharathan speaks candidly about the formative years that taught him patience, humility, and endurance, and the mentors who shaped his belief that leadership must be firm on standards yet humane in practice. He also reflects on balancing authenticity and innovation while cooking for fast-moving, diverse traveller audiences, ensuring comfort without compromising culinary identity.

The conversation further explores his pioneering work in fireless and knifeless kitchen systems, developed to enhance safety, efficiency, and team confidence in high-volume airport environments. Equally compelling are his thoughts on inclusive employment, where dignity, trust, and opportunity emerge as the true pillars of hospitality.

This thoughtful exchange goes beyond food, revealing a leader driven by character, discipline, and conscience. It is a meaningful conversation that captures the evolving essence of culinary leadership in India today.

Readers can explore the complete interview in the Hospitality News February Magazine, available on our website and in the physical print edition.