Asia/Singapore Wednesday, 13th May 2026
Page 340

Shaping an event growth strategy

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Congratulations on ranking in the top 100 on this year’s Inc 5000 list of fastest growing companies in the US. What is your formula for success?
For us, it was all about the customer experience, which is 27 per cent of our team. We built a company around being there 24/7, ensuring that we’re basically an extension of your team to help you get done what you need to do. From Day One, when I started this company, that was part of our DNA.

Tell us about Day One because I’m sure that’s an interesting story.
So I started the business in 2015 because in 2014, I found out that my 17-year-old cousin was diagnosed with cancer. I wanted to do something for her. I had been hosting events for a while, but never of this scale. I realised that what I could do to raise the most money would be to host an event.

I was 24 at the time and I went down to my local aquarium in Boston and put my credit card down to rent out the aquarium to host this fundraiser. I did the math and realised I would need to sell 185 tickets to break even. We ended up selling 840 for that first event.

Frankly, we would have sold more, but the registration platform that we were using on the day of the event had a bug and everybody on our wait list was not able to check out. That probably cost the organisation US$10,000. So that was the first point of devastation with event technology.

We also could not find solutions to run the other aspects of the event that we needed to do. So I ended up working with a friend and we built out our own solution which worked on, and we received great feedback. Ultimately, we decided to build a business around helping event organisers. But technology isn’t going to solve every problem on its own so the support team needs to be there as well. So we built a company around not just Software as a Service, but Software and a Service.

What is one of your biggest pet peeves?
Many event organisers fail to capture the high that people get at the end of an event. It is just this incredible opportunity to have a call to action. Event organisers need to know what that call to action is when they go into planning an event.

The organiser of an event I attended recently did an incredible job of this. He actually sold US$100,000 worth of tickets for the next event, that’s not for five months, within the first day of this event because he knew what the call to action was. He incentivised people to do it.

He sold out of that ticket type on the first day and now he’s got this army of advocates on his behalf advertising his next event or experience, because he used that emotional window to drive registration. I see so many organisations fail to identify what their call to action is.

What other lost opportunities have you identified?
Events make up at least 25 per cent of B2B marketing budgets. So it is a huge segment and it’s at a time where everything is so data-centric right now. For organisers to be putting on these events and not have the data to show what action they drove, they’re doing themselves a disservice.

Your pivot through the pandemic was amazing, growing from US$300,000 to US$9 million in under eight months. Can you give us an idea of what top companies like yours are doing now to keep virtual audiences engaged?
Yeah, there’s been a lot of feature changes, as you can imagine. Over the past couple of years, what we have been telling organisers is, they should be selecting an event platform that’s able to cover the breadth of the different events they are hosting throughout the year – your entire gamut of event programming. But in any given experience, you probably do not want to be using more than say 20 per cent of what they have to offer, because you are going to start to overload attendees.

Gamification is one staple that we see in just about every event experience but at the end of the day, just like in-person programming, you cannot just stuff people in the room and expect it to work out. The events we see that have the highest engagement have great content and great excitement leading up to the event.

You also talk about growing and leveraging your networks in order to provide more services that make sense to the end users. I see many entrepreneurs doing this.
It is a very interesting space and that is one half of it. The other half of it is the way that companies are moving towards this model of essentially being a publisher, being a media agency themselves, because that is how they are building their brand and following by providing insightful content and education and learnings and entertainment out to their audience.

It is another aspect of the way the traditional mechanisms of digital marketing that we know are shifting. When it comes to generating that content, events are one of the best ways to be a thought leader in the industry. It is your opportunity to show, Hey, not only are we hosting this event and sharing all this insight about this topic, but we are also bringing in these industry influencers, leaders and experts who know even more about this topic than we do.

And then we have all of this great content and learnings that we can repurpose, not just during that event, but for additional materials for social media follow up, or as sales engagement content that we can hand off to the sales team. There are so many other avenues to reuse all of that content that is being generated.

Look at Salesforce, one of the largest companies in the world, launching a 24/7 media channel, on sales and marketing related content. People are building an audience and following and a brand before they even launch a company today because it gives them that edge to go out there and start selling and marketing what it is they’re building.

What about companies and events on much smaller budgets for what they are building? Where would you put your money in an event design that gives you the biggest payoff?
This goes back to what I was saying before, start with virtual. If you start with virtual, you can build that audience, get speakers and sponsors into your ecosystem. You already have a following, which makes the risk much less. When it comes to hosting an in-person experience, you are going to be able to drive sales further in advance.

If it is a paid event, you are going to be able to get people to justify flying across the country because they know your content’s going to be good. They are not taking that risk on attending your first in-person event.

What is in development right now?
There has been a lot of talk around the metaverse. I do not think that is a one-year-out scenario. I think at best, we are probably looking at three years before there is meaningful adoption. And I think we are going to have to see better hardware before that really comes into prominence. But in the more immediate term, the focus continues to be on the integration between event tech and the entire martech ecosystem.

Japan offers chartering options for its bullet trains

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The Nozomi shinkansen is now available for charter

As iconic as cherry blossoms, Mount Fuji and geisha, Japan’s shinkansen bullet trains are now being made available as unique venues for business events and groups.

On December 15, 2022, the president of Central Japan Railway Co announced that Nozomi-class bullet trains can be chartered, in part or entirely, for the approximately three-hour one-way trip between Tokyo Station and Shin-Osaka Station.

The Nozomi shinkansen is now available for charter

Groups can reserve a single car or, for a large event, the entire train. A car typically has 100 seats and a Nozomi – which means “wish” or “hope” in Japanese – can pull up to 16 carriages, including two first-class cars.

Travelling at speeds of up to 300kmh, carriages can be equipped with television monitors and audio equipment, while clients can also arrange to have seats fitted with personalised head-rest covers that can be retained as souvenirs.

Client groups are also able to advertise within the carriages, while groups will also be waved off at their point of departure and welcomed at their destination by station staff bearing personalised banners. The rail firm will also roll out a red carpet inside trains for VIPs.

A limited selection of drinks and light snacks can be served on the route from the trolley service that is typically operated on Nozomi trains, although the company said consideration would be given to permitting catering facilities.

Reservations for the service can be made through JTB Corp, Japan’s largest travel agency, or JR Tokai Tours, the railway firm’s affiliated travel firm.

When asked how much an experience would cost, JTB declined to confirm the cost of hiring a carriage or an entire train, although an official did tell TTGmice that the cost of chartering an entire car “would definitely be lower than the cost of buying all the seats in the car”.

Japan Railway anticipates that the new service will prove popular for incentive and corporate training events, while the space could also be adapted for music, sports and even fashion-related events.

Philippines’ welcome plans for China are in motion

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The whole of Luzon goes into lockdown; Mahatao Tayid Lighthouse in Batanes province pictured

The Philippines has been preparing for the influx of Chinese tourists long before China announced its reopening next month.

Preparations cover three main areas: negotiations to resume commercial and charter flights; e-visa platform to expedite visa application processes; and the launch of cruise tourism in February 2023.

The Philippines will improve access for Chinese travellers; Mahatao Tayid Lighthouse in Batanes pictured

The Department of Tourism (DOT) is “in close coordination with tourism attaches in Beijing and Shanghai to ensure that we continue the efforts of resuming flights both commercial and chartered,” said tourism secretary Christina Garcia Frasco in a December 19 press briefing.

So far, Philippine Airlines (PAL) has announced resuming services between Manila and Xiamen starting January 13 with a weekly flight, but “will build up frequencies over time, in line with the easing of restrictions and applicable government authorisations”.

PAL had previously served five Chinese cities from Manila – Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Xiamen and Quanzhou (Jinjiang) – prior to the pandemic. It continued to operate several regular charter flights during the pandemic.

The DOT has also proposed to the Department of Foreign Affairs the provision of e-visa platform in certain key source markets including China and India to expedite visa and other travel requirements into the Philippines.

Verna Buensuceso, DOT assistant secretary for product and market development and officer-in-charge – undersecretary, tourism development, explained: “E-visa is something we have pushed and would like to prioritise in (source) markets that have big groups, hopefully China and India. These are areas we have very limited foreign posts and it will really facilitate the processing if we have an e-visa system.”

Buensuceso said they are also looking at other possibilities, such as establishing a system for expediting group visas.

By February next year, cruise tourism will be launched with at least 156 ports of call across 40 island destinations, a new product for inbound, including Chinese tourists, Frasco said.

She emphasised that China, once the country’s second biggest inbound market, “is still very much on the horizon” considering that at some point it provided over 1.2 million tourists into the Philippines. As such, efforts towards resuming Chinese arrivals have not stopped.

Hong Kong players call for more details to plan for Chinese return

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Japan tightens border controls for Chinese arrivals

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Spikes in local Covid-19 infections across Chinese cities have led Japan to tighten its border controls for travellers arriving from China from December 30.

All travellers from China, including Japanese citizens and residents, as well as those who have been to China within the previous seven days will be tested for Covid-19 upon their arrival in Japan. Positive cases will be directed to a seven-day quarantine at designated facilities. Asymptomatic cases may be allowed to serve a shorter five-day quarantine should they test negative on the fifth day.

Travellers from China, Hong Kong and Macau are restricted to arrivals at four airports in Japan, including Haneda Airport (pictured)

The announcement from Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida on December 27 followed news of China’s decision to scrap quarantine for inbound travellers from January 8, 2023 – a move that will trigger travel for both foreigners and Chinese residents.

Flights from China will also be restricted, while arrivals from China, Hong Kong and Macau will only be permitted through Narita, Haneda, Kansai and Chubu international airports.

According to news reports, Kishida said the measure would only be temporary to prevent infections in Japan, and that the authorities would continue to monitor Covid-19 developments in China.

China to scrap Covid-19 quarantine for foreign arrivals from January 8

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China has reduced the quarantine period for international travellers to seven days; Shanghai pictured

In a further move to loosen its strict zero-Covid regime, China will remove quarantine measures for foreign arrivals from January 8, requiring only a show of negative PCR test result obtained 48 hours ahead of entry to China.

The announcement was made by the National Health Commission online today.

Foreign arrivals to China will no longer need to serve quarantine from January 8, 2023

The reopening is expected to inject fresh hopes of recovery into China’s business events industry, which has been severely disrupted by the authority’s zero-Covid strategy.

Cape Fahn Hotel, Koh Samui welcomes new GM

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Cape & Kantary Hotels has appointed Urs Aebi as general manager of Cape Fahn Hotel, Koh Samui.

He joins Cape Fahn Hotel, Koh Samui from Selina Serenity Rawai Phuket where he was also general manager.

Armed with his skills in accounting and cash-flow management, Aebi looks forward to working with the local team and suppliers to offer unrivalled service and facilities, as well as maintain the high standards of the hotel.

La Vie Hotels & Resorts names new head of South & South-east Asia

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La Vie Hotels & Resorts has appointed Shankar Sreekumar as its head of South & South-east Asia.

Based at La Vie’s regional office in Bangkok, Thailand, Shankar brings with him almost two-decades of experience in the hospitality industry, having held numerous operations-focused roles.

He was most recently director of IHG’s centre of excellence, new hotels, AMEA.

Rutjiret Ananphong helms as GM of Centara Ubon

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Centara Hotels & Resorts has appointed Rutjiret Ananphong as general manager of Centara Ubon.

Having been a part of Centara Ubon’s pre-opening team since August 2022, she will continue to oversee and direct all aspects of operations when the hotel officially opens next year.

Bringing with her over 20 years of experience, she was previously general manager of COSI Krabi Ao Nang Beach.

HK MICE stakeholders laud relaxation of entry rules, but recovery conditions still not optimal

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There is light at the end of the pandemic tunnel for Hong Kong (pictured)

Business events stakeholders in Hong Kong have hailed the government’s decision to relax entry restrictions good news, having done away with the city’s 0+3 quarantine arrangements on December 14.

However, many other Covid-related limitations and rules are still in place, continuing to pose a challenge for stakeholders to sell the destination to overseas buyers.

There is light at the end of the pandemic tunnel for Hong Kong (pictured)

According to Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (Management)’s managing director, Monica Lee-Müller, this relaxation in measures is an important step the business events industry has been waiting for.

Similarly, general manager of DMC Momentous Asia Travel & Events, Doris Lam, called the relaxation “good news”.

Having just returned from IBTM World, Lam shared that her European clients have shown interest in visiting Hong Kong, but she does not have any solid leads on groups with intention to travel.

As such, she does not expect a surge in visitors over the next few months, and remains hopeful that in time, all Covid-related restrictions will be completely lifted.

Right now, her focus is on developing “new and interesting products”, as well as updating their lists as some attractions, like the Jumbo Floating Restaurant, no longer exist.

Hong Kong Exhibition & Convention Industry Association’s chairman, Stuart Bailey, called the removal of the Amber code restriction a “big step forward that will help with the resumption of MICE activity”, and expects the convention and exhibition sectors to rebound by mid-2023.

“However, there are still some hurdles to overcome. Issues that remain are the testing regime that remains in place for arrivals, and another test on day two. If found positive, visitors are quarantined to their hotel rooms for five days and cannot leave the city,” Bailey explained.

The other major issue is the prolonged closure of China’s border, where many trade exhibitions in Hong Kong are reliant on Chinese participants.

Still, Bailey remains optimistic that solutions can be found in due time, as the association is closely working with the government to remove the last remaining obstacles.

For Katerina Tam, director of International Conference Consultants, she expects business events groups to return to Hong Kong from 2Q2023. However, one “stumbling block” is that banquet group sizes are still limited, which she hopes to see it relaxed soon.

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