Built from the floor up. Thirteen years at the franchise council table. Three decades of seeing the same elephant in different rooms — and a deep belief that it does not have to stay there.
In hospitality, the suite represents the highest level of the experience — the best you have to offer.
And dreams? Dreams are where vision lives before it becomes reality.
Suite Dreams exists to help organizations close the gap between the two. Not with generic training programs or one-size-fits-all frameworks — but with an honest, experienced, solution-driven partnership. — Dr. Cassandra G. Hill

Dr. Cassandra G. Hill, founder of Suite Dreams, did not arrive in hospitality through a corporate training program or a business school case study. She arrived through the front desk — checking guests in, solving problems in real time, learning fast that the experience a guest walks away with has almost nothing to do with the building they slept in.
It has everything to do with the people who showed up that day and what kind of team they were.
That foundation never left Dr. Hill. It became the lens through which every leadership role, every franchise conversation, and every organizational challenge that followed was understood — from the floor up, not the boardroom down. — The Suite Dreams Origin
For thirteen years, Dr. Hill served as Executive Director of the Choice Hotels Owners Council — one of the most significant franchise advisory roles in the hospitality industry.
That position meant facilitating the hard conversations. Representing the voices of franchisees in rooms where decisions were being made about their businesses. Building and sometimes rebuilding the trust required for a franchise system to actually function as a partnership rather than a transaction.
It also meant witnessing, up close, what happens when a Franchise Advisory Council works the way it is supposed to — and what happens when it does not.

Suite Dreams is ready when you are. The first conversation costs you nothing except the willingness to have it. And that willingness? That is already the first step toward fixing it.