Asia/Singapore Saturday, 20th December 2025
Page 1057

Thai MICE specialists celebrate strong start to 2013

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THAILAND’S MICE industry continues to register strong recovery in the first quarter, with DMCs reporting solid double-digit growth year-on-year.

Improved air access, revenue from new markets and Thailand’s value proposition were seen as key drivers of the positive trend. A peaceful 2012 – the first 12 months in the past five years to pass without any major political upheavals or natural disasters – was an additional shot in the arm for Thailand’s MICE players.

DMCs contacted by TTGmice e-Weekly reported a strong start to the year, with three posting yield growth ranging from 10 to 100 per cent year-on-year.

“We are up by 100 per cent on Q1 last year,” said Michael Lynden-Bell, general manager of Exotissimo Thailand. “We have done more MICE business in 1Q2013 than we did for the full 2012.”

France, Belgium and South Africa were key source markets for Exotissimo in the first quarter.

“The direct flight offered by Thai Airways from Brussels has been a huge win for us. We have seen a large increase in MICE business from Belgium and that has put Thailand back on the map as a MICE destination for many European markets,” said Lynden-Bell.

Other operators cited increased flight capacity from new carriers such as Norwegian.com and Thai Smile as additional boons to their business.

“We’re seeing good growth out of the American market,” said Andre van der Marck, general manager of Khiri Travel Thailand, where MICE yield rose 10 per-cent during the period.

“Australia is doing well for future bookings, following our trip to Melbourne for AIME in February,” van der Marck added.

Asian Trails Thailand’s incentives manager, Sumlee Anankamanee, said the firm’s MICE business grew by 30 per cent year-on-year in the last quarter as increased revenue from upper-market clients in India, China, Russia, Poland and Vietnam far outweighed a downturn in business from Portugal, Spain and other parts of Europe.

“Thailand’s still a good destination,” she said. “We are great value and we have everything in one place.”

CWT grows team

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CWT Meetings & Events has reinforced its team to manage and support the strong growth of its business with two new appointments.

Pauline Houston has been made director global supplier management for hotels and meetings and events. She is tasked with driving greater alignment in the approach to suppliers for both business travel and meetings and events clients.

Houston has worked for CWT since 2009 and was previously head of CWT Meetings & Events for the United Kingdom and Ireland.

Patrick Lukan has joined CWT Meetings & Events as senior director global operations to support the global strategy and delivery of operations for meetings and events. Lukan has worked the past 20 years in various technology and service delivery roles in the travel and technology industries including American Airlines, Sabre and Travelport.

Floyd Widener, global senior vice president, CWT Meetings & Events, said: “The beginning of the year has been very healthy for our business and we expect to see strong market growth for the first quarter of 2013 on a global level. We have further strengthened our team to drive even greater value for our clients.”

Party ideas for planners’ picking

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FOUR Points by Sheraton Bangkok, Sukhumvit 15 has rolled out two new customised events that organisers can weave into their overall meeting programmes at the hotel.

The ExecutiveChef is a dinner party where guests compete in a cooking challenge under the guidance of the hotel’s own executive chef. Inspired by the popular reality show, MasterChef, guests will have to create a dish that will impress the judges.

After the event, guests can sit back and enjoy their choice of soup and appetisers, and free flow of beer, wine and soft drinks.

The package, suitable for a group of up to 30 people, is priced from 3,500 baht (US$119.60) per person or 5,000 baht per team of two pax.

Event planners can also pick Movies Under The Stars for a post-meeting gathering. The movie party will be held on the hotel’s rooftop Garden Terrace, and is perfect for groups of 15 to 30 people. Priced from 2,000 baht per pax, the package includes selected cocktails, prosecco, beer and wine, as well as a menu of savoury and sweet nibbles.

Contact sarut.maneerat@fourpoints.com for more details.

Ditch chairs and embrace beanbags at meetings in KLCC

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KUALA Lumpur Convention Centre is encouraging event planners to inject a sense of relaxation into their meetings, training sessions or forums at the venue by switching chairs for colourful beanbags.

Under the new TenOnCall Beanie Experience, event participants can snuggle up in large, comfortable beanbags in various set-up configurations such as circle, half-moon and straight rows.

Angeline Lue, the centre’s director of sales & marketing, said the option was “ideal for clients who wanted to give a slight innovation to their meeting format”.

“It’s particularly ideal for training, brainstorming, teambuilding and creative networking. And with the beanbags’ funky colours, the meeting atmosphere will definitely be lightened,” Lue added.

TenOnCall Beanie Experience is enhanced with takeaway beverages, and complimentary Bean-ovation value-adds such as titbits, energy drinks, energy bars, comfortable slippers and a stress ball.

A beanbag can also be rented on its own at RM20++ (US$6++) a day.

Aloft opens its largest property in Malaysia

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THE 482-room Aloft Kuala Lumpur Sentral opened in the Malaysian capital last Friday, marking the entry of the Aloft brand into the country and setting a record for being the world’s largest Aloft hotel.

Its general manager, Paolo Campillo, is keen to attain a market mix of 50 per cent leisure, 30 per cent corporate and 20 per cent MICE.

The hotel will leverage on its good location in the commercial and transportation hub of Kuala Lumpur Sentral and its collection of event spaces to attract corporate business.

Aloft Kuala Lumpur Sentral boasts a large ballroom that can accommodate up to 1,000 people in a theatre setting and seven other function rooms.

Ganneesh Ramaa, manager of Luxury Tours Malaysia, said: “New international hotel brands in Malaysia will attract more global conferences and events to the capital. The hotel fills a niche as there are not many hotels in the city with large ballrooms.”

The hotel is looking at an occupancy rate of 65 per cent in its first year of operations, according to Campillo.

Meanwhile, the hotel had a roaring good start, achieving full occupancy over the F1 Malaysian Grand Prix weekend, which ran from March 22 to 24.

River Safari will enhance Singapore’s incentive appeal: DMCs

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SINGAPORE will add the River Safari to its latest collection of attractions come April 3, a development that some DMCs here said would further boost the city’s appeal in the eyes of incentive clients.

Hailed as Asia’s first river-themed wildlife park, the River Safari was built between the Singapore Zoo and the Night Safari at a cost of S$160 million (US$128 million). The 12-hectare park features over 150 plant species and 300 animal species in eight river habitats including the Mississippi, Nile and Amazon rivers. It also contains the world’s largest freshwater aquarium.

It will join other new attractions in the city-state such as the Marine Life Park in Resorts World Sentosa, Gardens by the Bay and the Giant Panda Forest.

Pacific World’s regional director, Singapore and Malaysia, Selina Grocott, told TTGmice e-Weekly: “Singapore may be small but it certainly commands an enormous presence in Asia’s incentive industry. (The) ever-changing tourism landscape and constant opening of new and exciting developments continue to position Singapore as a preferred destination in this region.”

Daniel Chua, managing director of Singapore-based conference organiser, Aonia, said the River Safari would add to the country’s dense collection of attractions, an attribute that appeals to time-starved business event travellers.

“Clients need to minimise the travel time between destinations and attractions, and Singapore’s density of attractions means event participants can pack their days here with a variety of things to do and places to see,” Chua said.

Dennis Law, managing director of Star Holiday Mart, a travel company that specialises in both leisure tours and business events, pointed out that Singapore’s “new nature-based spots will enhance (the country’s) image as an eco-friendly place and not just a city destination”.

“Singapore in itself is already attractive for both business and leisure travellers…and new options such as the River Safari will complement all our existing attractions,” Law added.

Entrance fees during the soft opening phase, beginning April 3, are S$25 (US$20) for adults and S$16 for children aged three to 12.

Additional reporting by Karen Yue

World Filtration Congress to head to Asia for the first time

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THE Taiwan Chemical and Engineering Society has won the rights to host the 12th World Filtration Congress (WFC12) in 2016, an event that has always rotated in the US and Europe.

Although the International Delegates on Filtration (INDEFI) comprised only three Asian members – Taiwan, Mainland China and Japan, Guo-zhen Huang, a professor with Tamkang University’s department of chemical engineering, felt that Taiwan’s odds at winning were quite promising and made a bid for the event’s hosting rights.

Huang, who was joined by several other professors in putting forth the bid, expects WFC12 to attract an estimated 2,500 domestic and foreign visitors from more than 40 countries.

He believes that, besides establishing international academic authority in the filtration industry, hosting WFC12 in Taiwan will create opportunities for younger scholars to participate in international academic activities, internationalise Taiwan’s academia, and stimulate commercial activities and industrial development.

“Having won the rare opportunity to host (the congress) in Taiwan, we must be sure to impress the world, so that Taiwan may shine in this international professional arena,” said Huang.

12th Asia Superyacht Rendezvous

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Picture by Angsana Laguna Phuket

The need for a temporary private jetty on the beachfront and a wet weather programme are no issues at all for Angsana Laguna Phuket, and it delivers the annual event immaculately, writes Karen Yue



Some 120 owners, captains and crew members of the world’s best sail and motor superyachts – luxury pleasure craft that measure over 100 feet – swept on the Thai resort destination of Phuket in December last year.

They were there to attend the 12th Asia Superyacht Rendezvous, an annual social event that included private parties, competitive sailing races and a gutter boat race. The event was held at the Angsana Laguna Phuket, part of the Laguna Phuket integrated resort.


Kamolux Israngkul Na Ayuthaya, spokesperson of Angsana Laguna Phuket, said the resort was chosen for the event as it was the “newest resort in Laguna Phuket with the biggest beach club in Phuket”.


Angsana Laguna Phuket opened on December 1, 2011 after an extensive refurbishment costing US$50 million in 2012, which gave it a fresh and lively vibe along with material comforts.


Kamolux added: “The resort was also ideal as the organiser was looking for a new venue on Bang Tao Bay where guests can enjoy the event at different locations every night, while allowing all yachts owners, captains, crew and guests to see their (craft) and other participating ones parked along the bay.


“Although not participants stayed at the resort – many of them chose to stay on their yachts – it was very convenient for them to get onto the beach and to the (event venues in the) resort because there was a private jetty and private speedboat on standby throughout the event.”


The event kicked off in Tabak and Phak Tob meeting rooms. All participants, as well as local and international sponsors, media and guests, were greeted at a media welcome and captain’s briefing before heading to an opening cocktail onboard S/Y Silolona, one of the participating superyachts. A private jetty was constructed on the resort’s beachfront and speedboats were provided to get guests onto S/Y Silolona.


A race commenced on Bang Tao Bay the next day, and come evening, the delegates adjourned to Xana Beach Club for the Feadship Challenge, a gutter boat race in which competing crew must build a model boat from a simple kit and blow it quickly down a three-metre gutter course.


A standing cocktail was also arranged on Xana’s garden area. The buffet line and canapé selection featured Thai and international cuisine.

Samantha Caalsan, event manager of Asia Pacific Superyacht, was all praises for the dinner selection. She said: “Buffet food is never good but I have to give it to Angsana Laguna Phuket. The quality of the food was exceptional.”

The event culminated on December 18 with a gala dinner on the beachfront of Xana. Angsana Laguna Phuket arranged for Thai dancers to entertain guests during the pre-dinner cocktails, and then surprised everyone with the appearance of a baby elephant.


Dinner commenced under a white purpose-built marquee on Bang Tao Bay. A combination of buffet lines and live cooking stations provided a stream of popular local dishes such as Thai green curry and chicken massaman to keep delegates’ tummies happy.


Kamolux recalled that a wet weather programme had to be put in place for the Feadship Challenge and cocktails, as it was held outdoors and the weather in December had been unpredictable. If the sky had broken with rain, the event would be shifted to the resort’s Market Place Restaurant, which offers beautiful lagoon views and has both an air-conditioned indoor area and a sheltered outdoor space.


43rd Union World Conference on Lung Health

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Distance was no barrier for the conference team in Paris who took up the challenge of organising the world’s largest meeting on lung health in Kuala Lumpur, discovers S Puvaneswary


The conference drew an impressive 2,600 delegates in attendance and raised US$140,000 in funding

Malaysia was chosen to be the host country of the 43rd Union World Conference on Lung Health due to its ongoing efforts to improve the health of its general population and its support for new medical research in the areas of tuberculosis and lung disease.

According to Nils E Billo, executive director of the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (Union), other winning factors that swung the decision to take the world’s largest annual meeting on lung health to Malaysia were the opportunity to draw local delegates, the strong support from partners such as the Malaysia Convention and Exhibition Bureau (MyCEB), the Malaysian constituent member of the Union, Malaysian Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis (MAPTB) and “the beautiful Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (KLCC)”.

The event aims to bring innovation, expertise, solutions and support to address health challenges in low- and middle-income populations.

Aptly themed Driving sustainability through mutual responsibility, the five-day conference featured speakers from 65 countries.

Significant highlights of the conference included the Run for your Lungs activity, which was jointly organised by the Union and MAPTB as a fun run that stressed the importance of lung health, as well as the launch of The Union Centennial Campaign for Research and Education.

Although the conference has been organised every year, Billo told TTGmice that there were challenges in putting it together.

He noted that the organising team was based in Paris, while the event was slated to take place in the capital of Malaysia.

“The distance…was a bit challenging. It helped that we had very strong support from MyCEB, G2 Public Relations in Kuala Lumpur, MAPTB, KLCC and the French-Malaysian Chamber of Commerce, as well as our Union staff at The Union Asia Pacific Office in Singapore.

“We also worked successfully with a number of local vendors and suppliers,” he said, adding that the organising team had to make several site visits to Kuala Lumpur.

All that long-distance coordination and intensive communication paid off, as the 43rd Union World Conference on Lung Health turned in a shiny performance report. It drew more than 2,600 world experts on lung health from over 122 countries. Some 200 Malaysian delegates attended and benefited from the conference.

Billo said: “We consider this an excellent turnout since these are difficult times economically for many public health organisations and advocates.

He also revealed that US$140,000 was raised at the 1st President’s Centennial Dinner, and the money would be channelled into research and education programmes.

“On the whole, this conference was highly rated and very successful. The standards of the facility, food, entertainment and settings were all very high, which left a very positive impression on our delegates,” he said.

MyCEB’s CEO, Zulkefli Sharif, said: “MyCEB was supportive of this conference as it facilitates the opportunity for professional development, knowledge exchange and best practices in the local and regional health sectors, particularly in respiratory health. This will impact positively on Malaysia as a model developing country.”

Vitanart Vathanakul

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The next generation is now running the Royal Cliff Hotels Group and Pattaya Exhibition & Convention Hall. Raini Hamdi speaks to the 30-year-old striker in the family, executive director Vitanart Vathanakul

Are you and your brother now running the business completely?

What’s happened is, mum (Panga Vathanakul) has taken the managing director/chairman position. Think of it as a football team – I’m in the forward position, the striker; my brother (Vathanai Vathanakul, 36, vice president) is the defence.

Our responsibilities are clearly defined: I look after sales and marketing, business development and investment. My brother looks after operations, service, maintenance, engineering, etc. Sometimes there are overlaps of course. For example, business development needs to contribute to design, so if we’re building a new restaurant or improving on our design, I would give input based on market feedback, recruit an interior designer, then my brother would take over the responsibility for the contractors, engineers, etc.

So where’s mum in the football field?

She’s the coach, the manager. She’s very involved, i.e., she also plays as well, in fact sometimes she comes in as the striker.

My mum has always been a hands-on kind of person and has always taught us of the need to be so. As owners, we can’t take the position of just standing back and letting the general managers do their thing. We’re owner-manager, so we’re very involved in the day-to-day management, sales, reservations, etc.

Why are you the striker and your brother, defender?

My strengths are in presentation and sales skills. I enjoy meeting people. I’m energetic and an extrovert. My brother enjoys sales too, and he’s not an introvert, but he prefers not to travel too much. He likes the service and operations part of the business and he’s careful and detailed in the way we provide our service.

It’s funny: growing up, I was actually shy and introverted. For some reason, this changed as I grew. I’m still shy at heart though.

Are you close to your brother and do you work well together?

Oh yes, he’s very supportive. I’m blessed to have him as a brother. He’s the trailblazer for me; he led the way for many things in my life. I studied in the UK because he went there first and told me how great it was, that it wasn’t just the excellent education, but learning multiple skills – sports, making friends from all over the world, understanding different cultures. He went when he was 11 years old; I went when I was eight.

You’ve been in the role for three years now. Is it difficult being back in Thailand, then holding the fort as striker?

Yes, the transition was quite challenging. My education was not in hotels at all. I graduated in electronics engineering from Cambridge and my Masters degree was in physics.

Did you want to be a hotelier?

I always wanted to be a hotelier, but I always enjoyed those subjects – math, science, technology – and my parents let us do what we wanted in college/university; we just had to make sure it was a proper subject, challenging and taught us analytical thinking. So when I chose electronics engineering, they said that’s fine, you could use the math skills and apply that to the business environment. I chose physics for my Masters because studying science in Cambridge was a dream.

How was the transition challenging?

When I came back, it was quite difficult to acclimatise in every sense of the word.

I have to use different skills now. While analytical skills still apply in decision-making, people skills are definitely needed. The biggest challenge is managing the team.

I also need multi-tasking skills and prioritising skills. Every day in a hotel is different. For some jobs, it’s different days, same things. For hotels, it’s different days, different things.

Another challenge is delegating and trusting, because I want to do everything myself. But sometimes, you have to say to the team, “Help me with this”, and monitor their progress. It’s a steep learning curve.

My mother also always throws me in the deep end, giving me the most difficult job as that’s the best way to learn.

So what’s the biggest goal you’ve scored to-date?

The biggest thing I did was set up our Internet marketing team. It was an area we lacked in. Of course our sales managers were developing OTA distribution, but I needed fresh eyes to look at this in totality. I needed the young generation who were experienced in digital marketing to look at social media, OTAs, search engine optimisation, website optimisation, email marketing – the whole arena. My team of 12 staff in this department is the youngest in the whole Royal Cliff.

Our online sales rose in the first year by 30 to 40 per cent. I remember we had K-pop (Korean pop) idols staying here in (January) 2011. Once we knew there were going to be over 20 bands, with the most famous K-pop stars coming over, we marketed it  through social media. Within five hours of announcing it to the online community, we had over 500 rooms booked.

I had to go to the reservations room and tell the staff to relax – he was so tired because the phone calls kept coming in. Our fan base was 1,000. By the end of the K-pop programme, it was 5,000.

I think I’ve put more youthfulness into Royal Cliff. When I came in, I also initiated projects such as our new restaurant right on the beach, Breezeo, offering ‘be yourself’ dining with fun things like a menu of over 100 cocktails. If you don’t like the 100 cocktails, there’s also a menu from which you can create your own cocktail, choose your own liqueur, glassware, decoration, even ice.

I always emphasise the importance of creativity, being adventurous and taking risks.

And what’s a big mistake that you’ve learnt from?

Once, we had a lot of requests from bloggers to review Royal Cliff. I declined and I regret it to this day. I didn’t think I could get the best ROI from it. Some also felt the way I declined was rude, though I’m never rude to anyone. I learnt from that mistake, redeemed the relationship and they all came back.

Sometimes I can also get impatient with business partners and we have unnecessary arguments. But I’ve learnt to be more patient.

Do you see a younger clientele now at Royal Cliff?

Yes, we’re trying to tap the younger generation. I had a problem in that a lot of them felt Royal Cliff was unreachable – ‘a five-star plus product for my parents’. We’re saying, no, this is for young, sophisticated business travellers or for people who want to reward themselves and their families, and that it is reachable.

We’ve done a major rebranding exercise, from Royal Cliff Beach Resort previously to Royal Cliff Hotels Group, to emphasise that we have four different hotel products, one convention centre and 11 restaurants. And far from just a name change, we followed through with a one billion baht renovation and an investment on human resource training.

(The four hotel products are: the 544-room Beach Hotel, pitched as “casual luxury”. Aside from new, modern Mini Suite Plus rooms, it has a new infinity-edge pool and the beach restaurant, Breezeo.

Do you meet other young hotel owners and how are you all different from the older generation?

Oh yes, there are lots of them in Bangkok and Pattaya. The younger generation is starting to take over from their parents. I studied with some of them and we now exchange notes. In Pattaya, we meet for dinner sometimes, exchange ideas and do partnerships as well.

I don’t see them as competitors. If I’m hosting a 10,000-pax convention, no way can I accommodate them all at Royal Cliff, so I always recommend this and that hotel and ask them to send me their contract to send to the MICE organisers.

The younger generation of hotel owners are very driven. We want to do a lot in a very short time.

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