Asia/Singapore Friday, 8th May 2026
Page 397

Accor brings Novotel brand to Melbourne

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Accor’s midscale Novotel brand has emerged in Melbourne with the opening of Novotel Melbourne Preston, following an extensive refurbishment and rebrand of an existing property.

Event organisers will find 16 function spaces within the property standing on Bell Street at Preston, all of which have been refreshed and renovated with new carpets, curtains, reupholstered chairs and an AV upgrade.

Rising seven levels, the hotel comprises 383 guestrooms, suites and fully self-contained studio apartments, some of which offer views of the Dandenong. All rooms also feature modern technology and facilities including a Smart TV, multiple USB hubs, workspace, in-room safe and minibar on demand.

Meanwhile, the ground floor of the hotel has been activated with the addition of two new reception spaces, a new grab and go Stampton & Co café, as well as an assortment of seating arrangements and furniture, offering guests a range of options from a quick set down, lounge area, co-working and informal meeting spaces, plus large meeting tables with integrated power.

The hotel is also home to a new onsite restaurant, The Stampton, which opened in April 2022, serving an all-day dining menu.

Malaysian hoteliers report uptick in interest from Singapore corporates

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Mutiara Taman Negara Resort offers a nature-based setting for corporate groups

Corporate bookings and enquiries from Singapore are going strong, Malaysian hoteliers indicate, buoyed by the ease in travel regulations, as well as the strong Singapore dollar.

The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi director of sales and marketing, Zulkifli Rahman, said: “We are getting a lot of enquiries from c-level corporate clients looking to hold meetings here. Group sizes are small, with around 10 to 15 people and meetings usually will be one full day or 1.5 days.”

Mutiara Taman Negara Resort offers a nature-based setting for corporate groups

The interest to hold meetings in Langkawi, he elaborated, was due to the good flight connectivity to Singapore – which some companies have established their headquarters – as well as the island’s duty-free status.

Another five-star hotel that reports seeing increased corporate business from Singapore is the G Hotel Kelawai in Penang.

The hotel’s director of sales and marketing, Christina Tan, said bookings for corporate meetings have been strong for May, and forward bookings for June and July are also looking healthy.

“Many of our corporate clients have offices and businesses in Penang, hence (it is convenient) to hold face-to-face meetings in our hotel.”

Tan has also noticed that groups from Singapore now have reduced length of stays, and their schedules are not as packed.

“Pre-pandemic, Singapore meeting groups tend to stay a week and have a packed schedule. Now their stays last three to four days, but they have more free time. We also see some spouses tagging along, but not as many as in the past,” she told TTGmice.

Meanwhile, Mutiara Taman Negara Resort located north-east of Kuala Lumpur, is also reporting strong interest from Singapore corporates for July and August, mainly for teambuilding events and incentives, said acting resort manager Kingston Khoo. He added that budgets for such groups have increased around 10 per cent as compared with 2019.

The resort he shares, is generally popular with companies who want to be closer to nature, and Mutiara Taman Negara Resort fits the bill as it is the only resort within the vast Taman Negara national park.

London tops GainingEdge’s international association leadership rankings

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London is a city that global knowledge hubs with strong influence in international associations

Global convention industry consulting firm GainingEdge recently unveiled its second annual report on Leveraging Intellectual Capital of convention destinations, where London topped the destination rankings in terms of the strength of its international association leadership.

London – the city also ranked top in the same report last year – was followed by Paris, Tokyo, Beijing, and New York, indicating these cities are global knowledge hubs with strong influence in international associations.

London (its CBD pictured) is a global knowledge hub with strong influence in international associations

Milos Milovanovic, Head of GainingEdge Analysis and Research, said in a virtual media briefing on Monday: “These five cities are key global knowledge hubs which concentrate over 10 per cent of the total available intellectual capital, with 2,756 local leaders active.”

In addition, destinations that experienced the greatest increase in the influence of their local leaders on boards compared to the previous year were: Sydney with its leaders active in 46 additional boards compared with the previous year, followed by Kuala Lumpur and Singapore, both a tie with leaders active in 34 additional boards and Seoul, with leaders active in 28 more boards.

The report also noticed a very high level of correlation between GainingEdge’s intellectual capital rankings and the consulting firm’s International Convention Destination Competitive Index 2021 global rankings. The top 20 cities in terms of intellectual capital are all among the top 30 most competitive destinations in the said Competitiveness Index.

The research underpinning this report identified the relative strengths of 350 destinations in 2021 via the presence of their local intellectual leaders in the governing bodies of international associations that organise large conventions of 500 and more attendees, as well as smaller meetings of between 200 to 499 delegates.

Previously, the inaugural report only looked at large conventions with 500 and more attendees.

Milovanovic said: “This additional data will enable us to do Intellectual Capital Segmentation where we filter the available intellectual capital of each city by the size of the meetings, and also provide insights into the available intellectual capital in the industry sectors the destination is particularly interested in.

“This means that destinations with fewer resources can focus on priority segments and achieve improved results in business development and improve their ‘hubs of excellence’ branding.”

The report also found that among the top 50 cities, three European destinations – Prague, Dublin and Lisbon – led with the highest Harnessing Ratios, which is the correlation between a number of international association meetings hosted or booked over the last four years (2018-2021) and the number of local intellectual leaders on boards of international associations).

In Asia Pacific, Bangkok stood out as the Asia Pacific destination with the highest Harnessing Ratio, while North America had two Canadian cities with high ratios, Montreal and Vancouver.

GainingEdge developed the concept of Harnessing Ratio to help meetings destinations assess how effectively they are leveraging their intellectual capital of local leaders to bid for association meetings and bring business to their shores.

Jon Sivertson, GainingEdge’s CEO, said in a press release: “Cities need to explore who are their local leaders with a strong international reputation, and how to engage them.

“Our Harnessing Ratio provides a great starting point for assessing how to leverage intellectual capital and what action destinations should take to increase its use. By identifying sectors that the destination wants to support and promote, convention bureaus can choose to bid for meetings of associations that strongly contribute to the development of these sectors and take a lead in the strategic implementation of the city’s economic development.”

For example, Italy, ranked fifth in the country/territory Index. The Italian meetings industry recently created the Italian Knowledge Leaders programme. The programme highlights the country’s scientific achievements, and creates a formalised network of professionals elected to run international associations in their business areas and scientific fields.

Tobia Salvadori, director, Convention Bureau Italia, shared at the virtual press events: “We are using Italian knowledge leaders to attract more meetings and congresses to Italy.”

Sivertson concluded: “All meeting destinations aspire to increase their conversion or bid win rate. In order to achieve this, destinations should undertake ‘smart’ bid strategies. A very effective tool is to engage local leaders with a strong reputation to support their bids.”

GainingEdge’s Leveraging Intellectual Capital Report 2021 can be downloaded here.

Myanmar reopens e-visas to tourists

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Bahrain takes MICE approach in tourism ambitions

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Bahrain International Exhibition and Convention Centre

Bahrain has her eyes firmly set on key Asian markets as part of her tourism recovery plans – and with the Middle East’s largest conference centre slated to open there, the kingdom is hoping to take a huge chunk of the business tourism pie.

In December 2021, Bahrain Tourism launched the second pillar of its tourism strategy to capture 19 new key markets throughout 2022. Traditionally, the destination has focused on Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Russia and India. However, it is expanding its reach to across Asia, Europe and other Middle Eastern markets.

Bahrain International Exhibition and Convention Centre

Maryam Toorani, marketing and promotions director at Bahrain Tourism, said: “These are ambitious goals but we feel Bahrain has the tourism potential to reach them. We selected the markets in terms of tourism traffic and existing direct flights with our national carrier.”

Across Asia, Bahrain Tourism is targeting China, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines and Malaysia. Within 1Q2022, it signed agreements with 75 tour operators across the 19 markets and has already started awareness campaigns in each.

At this year’s Arabian Travel Market, Toorani told TTGmice: “We want to create a buzz in terms of awareness. It’s been a crazy time for tourism but we’re already seeing uplift in traffic compared to the two Covid years.”

This year will be spent working on digital campaigns and recruiting social media influencers and celebrities from each of the markets. The tourism board will also carry out marketing campaigns directly through travel companies in the key markets.

Meanwhile, the 4Q2022 opening of Bahrain International Exhibition and Convention Centre will form part of the kingdom’s push to become a leading global destination for large-scale conferences, exhibitions and events. The venue, said to be the Middle East’s largest conference centre, boasts 95,000m2 of exhibition space spread across 10 halls. There are also a 4,000-seat tiered auditorium, 95 meeting rooms, and a 250-seat restaurant.

Toorani said: “This is a really exciting product. We want to cement ourselves as a quality MICE destination, and key markets in Asia will play a major role in this.”

STB celebrates 17 MICE organisations in awards ceremony

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This year's awards celebrates the extraordinary resilience, innovation and dedication shown by our tourism stakeholders and businesses

A total of 17 business events organisations were recognised at the Singapore Tourism Awards 2022 yesterday for demonstrating resilience, innovation and service excellence amid the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Organised by the Singapore Tourism Board (STB), and held at the Shangri-La Hotel, the Singapore Tourism Awards presentation ceremony was graced by Alvin Tan, minister of state for trade and industry, and culture, community and youth.

This year’s awards celebrate the extraordinary resilience, innovation and dedication shown by Singapore’s tourism stakeholders and businesses

Capella Hotel Singapore, Singapore Expo, Resorts World Convention Centre, and Sands Expo and Convention Centre picked up the award for an Outstanding Event Venue Experience, while Constellar Exhibitions received the Outstanding Event Organiser accolade for Industrial Transformation Asia Pacific – a HANNOVER MESSE Event.

Five events held during the pandemic were also presented with the Outstanding Business Event award – Huawei Cloud Spark Founders Summit by Resorts World Sentosa; SMF X IBTM Wired by Reed Exhibitions and SACEOS; Let’s Connect by ENGIE South East Asia; PCMA Convening Leaders 2021 by the Professional Convention Management Association; and Singapore FinTech Festival 2021 by Constellar Exhibitions.

In the area of Outstanding Busines Innovations, Copthorne King’s Hotel Singapore; Sands Expo and Convention Centre; The Intan; and Zouk Singapore triumphed.

Lastly, for Outstanding Marketing Ideas, Explore the City by Capitaland
Mumcation by Fairmont Singapore, and The People’s Gallery by National Gallery Singapore were duly recognised.

STB chief executive Mr Keith Tan said: “The efforts of all the award finalists and recipients spur the entire tourism industry to greater achievements. Their spirit of resilience and creativity will become more important as we emerge from the pandemic to recapture demand and ensure Singapore remains a world-leading leisure and MICE destination.”

Speciality & Fine Food Asia organises mega F&B tradeshow in June

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Speciality & Fine Food Asia (SFFA), organised by Montgomery Asia, will return to Singapore from June 22-24, 2022.

SFFA will occupy nearly 6,2000m2 of Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre and is expected to host 5,000 in-person visitors and over 150 exhibitors showing new products and the latest industry innovations across the world.

A 2019 edition of SFFA

The fourth edition will also house co-located tradeshow Restaurant, Pub & Bar Asia (RPB Asia), and see the launch of three new co-located shows – Speciality Coffee & Tea Asia (SCTA), Meat & Poultry Asia (MPA) and Food2Go. In total, around 750 brands and new products will be featured.

Eight country pavilions will also be set up, with exhibitors and national trade representatives from Singapore, Australia, Belgium, Malaysia, South Africa, UK, US and Uzbekistan in attendance.

Visitors can look forward to a more well-rounded trade event experience, with food tastings now allowed at exhibitor booths in accordance with the latest regulations.

Other features include a Start-Up Village from up-and-coming companies, The Tap Room for newest brews, the Singapore National Coffee Championship, while The Fine Food Live Stage will feature several talks, butchery demonstrations, food preparation techniques and product launches.

The Innovation Stage will also boast a three-day programme on the latest trends surrounding food delivery and takeaway innovations, including panel discussions presenting the latest technological disruptions and food innovations that are shaping the world of F&B today.

Nosh on farm-to-plate oysters with Sydney Oyster Farm Tours

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Located in the pristine waters of the Hawkesbury River – a 45-minute drive from Sydney CBD – is an opportunity for corporate groups to learn more about oysters, their farming methods, as well as learn the art of shucking them.

Sydney Oyster Farm Tour’s half-day experience includes a boat tour out to the oyster farm leases, where corporates can learn about the evolution of oyster farms and take a closer look at the current cultivation methods used to grow both Sydney Rock and Pacific Oysters. For over 15 years, these oysters have also been supplied to the Sydney Fish Market.

Participants will then get the opportunity to don waders, and disembark at Tank Creek, to enjoy freshly-harvested oysters that are shucked while they are standing at the in-water table.

Travellers need to be independently mobile to access and disembark the boat and tour sites.

The Immerse Yourself Package starts from A$195 (US$139) per pax, and corporate rates are provided depending on group sizes.

The Oyster Elegance Tour includes all of the activities above, and an additional gourmet seafood lunch at a secluded beach.

Sheridan Beaumont, founder of Sydney Oyster Farm Tours and third-generation oyster farmer, shared that the company regularly handles 40 pax corporate groups, but has plans to “expands into the hundreds” due to the space the area affords.

Sydney Oyster Farm Tours began in February 2020, one month before the pandemic. But due to Covid, tours were put on hold, but in the next year, Beaumont and her family also had to deal with heavy flooding that killed off most of the oyster stock. But she is optimistic about the future, and welcomes corporate enquires of all sizes.

The Sydney Oyster Farm Tour can be combined with a ride onboard a 30-minute seaplane ride with Sydney Seaplanes, which will take corporates right to the oyster site at Hawkesbury River.

New chef joins The Westin Resort Nusa Dua, Bali team

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The Westin Resort Nusa Dua, Bali, has appointed chef Matthias Mittnacht to lead its culinary team.

Mittnacht will take on the role of executive chef, and will also oversee the catering services for the Bali International Convention Centre.

Prior to his move to Bali, Mittnacht served as executive chef in Bangkok’s Renaissance Hotel Ratchaprasong for the last five years.

Back in 2009, Mittnacht received his first executive chef position with the Opera Hotel, Luxury Hotels of the World in Kyiv, Ukraine. Three years later, he moved to Asia, where he spent two years in Koh Samui and 15 months in Bangkok spicing up his culinary repertoire before helming the Pullman Saigon City Centre kitchens.

Days of catching helium balloons

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The world is opening up – how is this impacting Hilton properties across Asia-Pacific?
Broadly speaking, very well. Asia, as a word, is a minefield, as it suggests just one place when we know it is five different regions.

South-east Asia, India and Australasia are almost back to normal, with India and Australia slightly ahead of South-east Asia just because there is much more domestic business. In fact, this month we are back to 2019 levels in India and Australia.

But I must say that in the last three to four weeks, South-east Asia took a massive step forward. The catalyst has been the removal of Covid testings, which has given people a peace of mind, knowing that they would not get stuck somewhere because their results came out positive.

Japan, as usual, is more cautious. If you go back to the triple disasters in 2011 (when Japan was hit by earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown in March), it took time for confidence to return. So, we expect things to move a little slower in Japan. Restrictions have lifted across the country, and (domestic) leisure is strong. Corporate travel is starting to come back.

That leaves China. China had a really good year in 2021, when tourism was broadly normal. Restrictions kicked in around the Olympics (Olympic Games Beijing 2022, February 4 to 20) and going into the government meetings in March, and now China is facing challenges with Omicron. We are hoping that restrictions would relax in late-May, and have that lead to a positive 2H2022.

What we are seeing now is played out again and again in the Americas, Europe and Asia. You see leisure starting first, with staycations near home, and then gradually getting bigger and wider with corporate travel coming back. Next, small meetings will return and then large meetings. In Australia now, for example, large meetings have started to come back.

South-east Asia MICE business will grow at a CAGR of about 8.6 per cent over the next few years to 2025 – that’s incredibly positive.

I had 60 people here (in Singapore for a Hilton internal meeting) plus 50 joining us virtually from China. It was the first time I got my leadership team together in the last 2.5 years. Hilton has some really big internal events lined up, and we see more and more companies are doing that now because they have not done stuff together with their teams in 2.5 years, so everybody is really keen to get out and come together.

Is the pace of recovery anything like what you’ve expected?
Back in 2020, it was as if everything stopped overnight, and it was nothing like we’ve ever seen before.

Then, as vaccination rates climbed, we thought things would be good; that did not kick off travel as we thought it would.

When in and out PCR tests changed to ARTs, that improved things. When all testings stopped, that was the turning point.

Things are coming back up so fast. We have been telling our hotels that when business comes back, it will come back very fast. Even so, the pace of recovery was ahead of what we thought!

We say that in 2020 we were trying to catch a falling knife; this year we are trying to catch a helium balloon (laughs).

That’s really positive.

Hilton gained extensive media attention for the opening of its largest hotel in Asia-Pacific, here in Singapore. It is a massive hotel with many event spaces. Will there be another massive Hilton with this many function rooms in the pipeline for the region?
Yes. There are a couple of big ones that we are really proud of. They came around similar timings actually.

We opened Conrad Shanghai in January this year, which is our second largest Conrad globally. It has 2,500m2 of meeting space and 728 guestrooms. It is a beautiful property in a great location, and is doing really well.

From a Hilton perspective, we opened (this month) the Hilton Hotels Embassy Manyata Complex in Bangalore, whose event space is double the size of Hilton Orchard Singapore. There are about 5,000m2 of meetings space and about 600 guestrooms (266 keys at Hilton Bengaluru Embassy Manyata Business Park and 353 keys at Hilton Garden Inn Bengaluru Embassy Manyata Business Park).

That is our first convention hotel in India. The complex has both a Hilton and Hilton Garden Inn so it covers price points across both ends of the market – great for large residential meetings.

There is no debate that hybrid events are here to stay. How else do you expect meetings and events to evolve in a post-lockdown world?
Well, can we have that debate? I’m not with that.

First, I think this is a question in time. I said earlier that I’ve just had my leadership meeting, and it was a hybrid event not by design. I was hoping to have everybody together in Singapore, but I had 50 leaders in China who could not travel. So, the hybrid format was needed.

Our hotels can do hybrid events very well, but these events are complex and require a significant amount of effort not just in terms of technology and setup. You need multiple cameras, and to test that technology well ahead to make sure everything works. Even the speakers have to have a set of skills that is different and be really in the game to engage with people who are not in the physical room with them.

People underestimate the complexity of hybrid events.

Second, we want to be in the same room. People thrive on interaction. The energy I felt from being in the same room as everybody was brilliant and infectious. It was so much fun to be around people. I don’t think we will ever get away from that. Person-to-person contact is ultimately what our business is in for.

Hybrid events will be around for as long as they are needed, because of restrictions. When people can travel again, they will want to get back to face-to-face events.

Now, there may be a profit and loss question. For example, are you going to fly someone from Australia or New Zealand to New York for a three-day meeting? But that sort of question existed even before the pandemic.

With these views in mind, how is Hilton evolving its hardware and services to better support corporate event clients today and tomorrow?
One of our responsibilities is to ensure our customers are comfortable, safe and secure when they are with us. In 2020 we launched Hilton CleanStay and Hilton EventReady, which were predominantly about what we do to ensure customers’ well-being. We will continue to (implement enhanced cleaning procedures) to give customers peace of mind, but we may dial back on the vernacular around clean stays because this is now expected.

A meeting room is a meeting room, but the quality of event technology is evolving. If hybrid events do stay, the technology to support such events will get better and our venues will facilitate that.

That’s just the hardware and service side of things. On the other side, how do we make things easier for customers? We are used to booking bedrooms online, but customers don’t traditionally book meeting rooms online. We have started to expose our meeting room inventory online.

Now, would you be able to book a function room for a wedding with 500 people and lots of complexities? That would probably be a step too far, and I don’t think people want that. They would want an actual conversation with the venue provider. However, they would want to be able to look online and see that this Hilton hotel can take weddings, and see great visuals of the space.

If you want to book (small meetings), well, you can start doing that online. At the end of 2021, we launched a dedicated call centre where there are people to talk customers through hotel options based on their event needs. This is now available in 28 hotels across South-east Asia and Australasia. This service is available both online and via the call centre. We have to be omni-channel to make life easier for event bookers.

Flexibility in space usage and contracts was something that many event planners wanted in the early part of event resumption during the pandemic. Now that more of the world is opening up with certainty, how do you see that level of flexibility changing?
It won’t, that’s my short answer.

One of the things we did really well at the start of the pandemic is to be one of the first hotel companies to not hold people to cancellations. If you have to cancel for whatever reason, fine, don’t worry about it. If you are a Hilton Honors member and your tier status is expiring end of this year, don’t worry, we have a moratorium on the expiration of points or tier status.

We want a long relationship with our customers. You can only have that if there is trust on both ends, there is peace of mind, and there is ease in transactions.

The days of draconian clauses in contracts are over.

Bleisure is not new, but the blend of business and leisure is stronger than ever today, with many business travellers taking the opportunity to extend their trip to rest and relax alone or with loved ones. What are your hotels doing to cater to this intensifying bleisure demand?
Bleisure is a catchword of the moment, but it isn’t something we have not known of before. If you go back eight or 10 years ago, we were already thinking about persuading people to go for a meeting and then stay on over the weekend after – or before the event.

It is a dream of hoteliers to maximise business.

But take a step back and think of ourselves – after a week of business travel, all you want to do is just get back home.

With the Covid pandemic, because there has been quite an investment from people who go away, either they’ve had to do quarantine or testing, they want to make the most of the trip and stay on for a few more days. So, I think, bleisure is an opportunity now.

How long it will stay like this? Well, normalcy is coming back, so we may well revert to the travel trends we saw in 2019. That does not mean there is no more bleisure opportunity. We have the Hilton Honors app, which inspires travel dreams and shows experiences that our guests can enjoy in the destination where they will be travelling to for meetings. So, instead of just staying in the destination for three days for the meeting, the traveller may end up staying six as a result of our CRM and recommendations.

We curate these experiences with destination partners. Some of the things we did pre-pandemic included a chance for Hilton Honors members to use their points to attend a honbasho (sumo tournament) in Tokyo and meet sumo wrestlers, or join a sake tour around Osaka. We also have a relationship with the McLaren Formula 1 team, and customers have been able to use their points to buy a package in Shanghai.

Editor’s note: Hilton has clarified that Conrad Shanghai has 2,500m2 of meeting space, not 316m2 as it was initially stated; and that it is Hilton Hotels Embassy Manyata Complex’s event space that is double the size of Hilton Orchard Singapore’s, not in terms of overall facilities

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