Asia/Singapore Saturday, 27th December 2025
Page 463

Singapore’s third pilot tradeshow targets 2,500 participants on-site

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The CG5 Servbot for temperature scanning which will be deployed at ABS 2021. Photo credit: CEM

With business events scaling upwards, the 7th Architecture & Building Services (ABS) 2021 is aiming to host up to 2,500 attendees at Sands Expo & Convention Centre – and another 5,000 online – from June 30 to July 2.

It will be the third and largest tradeshow among pilot business events that Singapore is testing, as the country carefully reopens its borders.

The CG5 Servbot for temperature scanning will be deployed at ABS 2021. Photo credit: CEM

Edward Liu, CEMS’ managing director, said: “We are not aiming for big numbers at the exhibition. We all want to be safe, and adopt measures that are relevant and proven to be useful. However, should there be foreign companies wishing to take part, in compliance with the safe management measures (SMM), we will be happy to appeal to the authorities for consideration of their participation.”

Comprising a slate of seven tradeshows and 12 conferences in the built environment and related sectors, organiser Conference & Exhibition Management Services (CEMS) estimates a bigger audience of 5,000 attendees online, with physical visitors mostly residing in Singapore.

The exhibition will occupy four zones in Halls E and F of Sands Expo. There will be four cycles of four groups touring the showfloor between 10.00 and 18.00 each day. Sub-groups totalling 50 trade visitors will rotate through the halls in two hours; i.e. 30 minutes per zone.

Concurrent conference and seminar sessions will run on the upper floors with the same formula of 50 pax per zone and no intermingling between events. Most of the constituent events are already well established, but Design Asia is new, which will focus on interior design.

The organisers are still discussing and assessing various event technology applications, including those used at the recent Geo Connect Asia. But a confirmed SMM feature is CG5 Servbot, a robotic terminal that integrates temperature screening, facial recognition and visitor registration through embedded QR for authentication.

Andrew Phua, executive director, exhibitions & conferences, Singapore Tourism Board, said innovative solutions are being tried in the learn/test/build framework.

Citing ABS 2021, he added: “We are progressively resuming such (larger) events with rigorous protocols and innovative solutions for the end-to-end visitor journey.”

Bernadette Panton joins Delegate Connect

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Virtual and hybrid events company Delegate Connect has hired Bernadette Panton as head of industry engagement in the Asia Pacific.

Panton joins Delegate Connect from Talk2 Media and Events where she was the hosted buyer manager for Asia Pacific Incentives and Meetings Events (AIME).

Based in Melbourne, her role will support the company’s expansion into international markets, both within Asia Pacific and through Europe, the UK and North America.

Panton added that she had joined the company because of the growth and promise of the hybrid and virtual events sector in a post-pandemic world.

“Our industry has seen rapid and irreversible change over the past year and our shift towards a hybrid, virtual and digitally-enabled future has been accelerated dramatically.”

Brave step forward

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How did pulling Geo Connect Asia 2021 off compare to a normal exhibition? Where did the support come from?
The scale of work in comparison to a normal exhibition is quite high (because our efforts were) succinctly put into 2.5 months (instead of over a year).

People genuinely want to return to face-to-face events, but for that to happen you need safe measurements in place. This is only possible with incredible support from the government and relevant associations.

You, in Singapore, are very lucky in how advanced a lot of your systems already are, and the support systems within the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) are brilliant.

STB didn’t just give us Safe Meetings Measures (SMM) advice. They were like an extension of our team. It wasn’t their job to contact us after office hours, but they did. That showed real commitment to bringing back Singapore’s MICE industry and recover general tourism.

We had the same fantastic support from the Singapore Land Authority (SLA) and GeoWorks, which is the geospatial initiative under the SLA.

I also think that what we were able to achieve with Geo Connect Asia 2021 was impossible without monetary support. The subsidies offered through programmes like Business Events in Singapore scheme, which we tapped into, got us through this challenging period.

The event ended up with over 1,000 attendees in person? How does that measure against your expectations?
We cannot look at attendance like that anymore. We cannot put up a hybrid event and then talk about in-person numbers or what was achieved onsite. That’s what everyone is still doing but the whole industry needs to move on now. If it is a hybrid event, it must be (appraised) in its hybrid entirety.

We have to look at the quality of people who attended the event, the quality of contacts that were made, and the value of business opportunities.

In that line of thought, Geo Connect Asia 2021 achieved what it set out to do. We had people online and in-person from across 55 countries. Would a launch event in Singapore be able to get attendees from 55 countries? I’ve launched many events around the world, and I know to secure participants from 55 countries is a challenge, no matter where the event is held.

The show will remain open for another two months, so people can still sign in, view videos on demand, and connect with other delegates. At this point, I cannot tell you how many engagements Geo Connect Asia 2021 will eventually achieve.

Are we happy? Yeah, we brought the global community together and the turnout meant that those people bought into what we were doing – that we were truly bringing the global geospatial community together.

Having people from 55 countries signing into Geo Connect Asia 2021 now also means that when we come back next March, I hope a lot of them will be motivated to step onto a plane and attend the event in person. That is a great start, and it gave Singapore the publicity she needs for a MICE restart.

Business events are the one thing that disappears and affects so many other businesses and industries. When we bring MICE back to Singapore, we are bringing one per cent of GDP back along with 34,000 jobs.

Why do you think so much hope is pinned on Geo Connect Asia in restarting Singapore’s business events? Is it just because it is a valuable testament to the city’s ability to return to major events? Does the event’s subject of focus play a part too?
We know that Singapore has specific aims to establish itself as a technology hub, and geospatial industry has a place there. It is a very fast developing industry that is new-ish, but affects many industries that are long-standing. So, yes, the subject matter matters.

At the same time, I think everybody wants to see positive things developing. Did it make a difference that the show was done by us? I sure hope so! Montgomery was probably the first major events company in Singapore. We launched a show here in 1977 in a hotel carpark, which is now one of the largest events in the region. We later relaunched as Montgomery Asia in 2016 with the approach to bring our world-class events to this region.

It was lovely that so many companies were behind us on Geo Connect Asia 2021. But the truth is if the first major large-scale event to return to Singapore was organised by someone else, we would have been behind them too.

It does not matter who leads the restart. It could be the largest event company in the world, or a mom-and-pop outfit. We all just want the industry to restart and someone has to be brave to take the first step.

Were there international delegates in-person at the event?
We had international speakers, exhibitors and attendees. The current border restrictions are difficult but we had help from the government to clear necessary processes.

Once more travel bubbles are established, entry will become easier.

Singapore has had 60 events and just three major ones, such as TravelRevive and PCMA Convening Leaders, besides ours. That provides a gradual work-up (for Singapore’s safe meetings resumption) towards the massive World Economic Forum.

Montgomery Asia will deliver four more events in Singapore this September. We have plans for other things too, in Singapore, potentially within this year.

Geo Connect Asia was supposed to take place in 2020. Between then and now, has any aspect of the programme or business direction changed as a result of the pandemic?
Would Geo Connect Asia 2021 have been an online event without the pandemic? It would not. Would it have had online business matching? Yes. We’ve run online business matching at our events for years, and I’ve never had an event in Singapore that didn’t offer online business matching.

Would any of our staff have known how to run such an online, virtual experience had the borders not been closed? No. And that’s one wonderful thing about this situation. Challenging is perhaps the wrong word to describe our situation. It is a learning experience but it takes time to get people who are experts in traditional face-to-face events to run digital events. Not all of those staff are techies, but exhibitions aren’t meant to be ‘tech-y’ anyway. People attending exhibitions want to touch, see, smell and taste experiences – like they would want in a shop.

We had to deal with a lot of digital learning and data management. We had to discover that using an online event platform is like dealing with a separate venue but you aren’t sure what questions to ask.

How did you eventually determine those questions and get your answers?
Our venue, Marina Bay Sands (MBS), was amazing. The team has experience in hybrid events through the venue’s hybrid studio, which we did not use. But we did use the MBS audiovisual and tech team. Without them, we would still have delivered the event but the journey would not have been as smooth.

Similarly, we couldn’t have been able to get through the long list of SMM without the MBS team. We would have gone in blind. Event organisers need the venue to write their SMM plan with them.

In the past, people in our industry used to say, oh, we are all partners. That statement was really about having some form of relationship. Now, if it wasn’t truly a partnership, the event wouldn’t work. Nobody can write an SMM plan without a true partnership with the venue or with STB.

We know conferences can benefit from a hybrid format – an expanded global audience, for instance. How does this work for exhibitions though? You said earlier that attendees typically expect to see, feel and taste the experience?
Exhibitions are there for face-to-face contact and interactions. To look at a product purely online is not what people are looking for in the longer term. People don’t want to spend all day looking at pictures of huge mining equipment, enormous wood making machinery or food and drinks all day online. They want to touch, feel, interact and experience those products. That is the joy of exhibitions, we excite those senses which in turn encourages business deals to get done.

Montgomery Asia has a further line-up of events for the rest of the year – one in Kuala Lumpur this June and four more in Singapore again come September. Is planning ahead for events this year more certain than in 2020?
Forward planning in 2020 was not nearly possible. I don’t think there was a single exhibition company in the world that didn’t re-forecast every month (laughs).

This year, we can see light at the end of the tunnel. Events are launching this year, and Montgomery is a part of that. We have many events happening in many parts of the world, and we are taking bookings again. We just sold our biggest stand for an event that has been around for 40-plus years, after Boris Johnson said events could come back.

Can we plan for 2021? Yes. We have moved our June event in Kuala Lumpur to November because we felt we needed a little more gap. That decision has been very well received, and we have started selling stands.

We are also taking bookings now for our speciality shows in Singapore. The signs are clear – we are really moving forward and are planning for growth.

The travel crisis and disruption to business events have shown how dependent the world economy is on knowledge and trade exchanges. Has this ‘awakening’ changed the way government agencies or professional associations appreciate the value of future trade shows and conferences?
Singapore is actually a shining example of government agency involvement in trade events. They offer great link-ups, and this has been happening for many years.

But I do think that professional associations and organisations are talking a lot more to one another now because communications have gone online. For Geo Connect Asia 2021, we saw an enormous pick up in support from Singapore associations (and organisations) wanting to be partners. They include the Singapore Institute of Surveyors and Valuers, Infocomm Media Development Authority, and Association of Aerospace Industries. I believe that came from associations (and organisations) talking a lot more to one another.

Does Montgomery Asia have its own ‘awakenings’ too? Are there, perhaps, other industry trade events that the company wishes to pursue and develop in Asia, beyond the ones already in the pipeline?
We launched Montgomery Asia to be a regional office based in Singapore. We intend to have events outside of Singapore as well as in Singapore. Singapore is a great hub for events, and we will definitely do more events and are open to co-locates here.

We launched events in Malaysia because we see great opportunities there. We are also very ready to look at other shows elsewhere in Asia.

Montgomery works in food, drinks, arts, photography, mining, wood machinery, humanitarian aid, promotional products, processing and packaging, security and a number of other industries around the world – it is quite wide, really. That won’t change anytime soon.

At this point in time, how do you think Asia’s business events industry would fare for the rest of the year?
As more events launch and relaunch this year, there will be an intense land grab from event organisers. This can be superseded by tourist boards that are desperate to win events for their country, whether they are conferences, exhibitions, meetings or festivals. The tourist boards know how influential events can be for other businesses (in terms of spend).

I think subsidies will play a huge part in tourist boards’ ability to win over events because many exhibition companies have had a tough year with very little or no income.

We can also expect intense competition among countries to reopen quickly and safely for business events.

TTG Conversations: Five Questions with Chetan Kapoor, Safe Travel Barometer

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Greater understanding of the Covid-19 virus has allowed more airlines to establish sensible safe travel standards today, through partnerships with healthcare specialists, immigration authorities and government agencies.

However, communications between airlines and travellers are still fixated on pandemic-coping mechanisms and not enough attention is being paid to other critical travel aspects that have changed, such as traveller booking flexibility and service excellence.

In this new episode of TTG Conversations: Five Questions, we speak to Chetan Kapoor, co-Founder and chief strategy officer of Safe Travel Barometer.

Besides reviewing how airlines are delivering on safety promises amid a pandemic, Chetan also discusses how efforts have evolved with new information on the virus, airlines’ approach to health passports, and loopholes in Covid-19 testings and quarantine procedures that can weaken travel suppliers’ and immigration agencies’ attempts to limit infections.

Wellness matters

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Thailand is transforming herself into a land of healthy smiles as she emerges from the pandemic, with the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) setting a goal for the country to become the ‘Medical and Wellness Resort of the World’ by 2024.

The Thai government has also picked up on the wellness trend, listing wellness tourism as one of 12 targeted S-curve industries that will form the foundation for the country’s burgeoning Eastern Economic Corridor project.

More Thai hotels are coming up with wellness programmes for corporate groups

According to Chiruit Isarangkun Na Ayuthaya, president of the Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau (TCEB), Thailand’s globally recognised containment of the pandemic has also given rise to an outstanding opportunity for the development of business events in the medical, health and wellness sectors.

“To help realise this, TCEB is now working with the Ministry of Public Health, the TAT and the Thai Health Promotion Foundation to organise the Thailand International Health Expo 2021 from July 16 to 19 in Bangkok to showcase Thailand’s innovation in medical products and services, and to launch a business matching platform, both online and onsite, for entrepreneurs and buyers in this sector,” he shared.

Paul Hawco, corporate director of wellness at Dusit Hotels and Resorts, also sees Thailand’s shift from being primarily a spa destination to a health and wellness hub as a potential catalyst to build renewed interest and trust in the country’s business events sector.

“As more and more guests increasingly filter their travel experiences through a holistic wellness lens, MICE organisers and participants will increasingly become interested in destinations that have an authentic and holistic approach, and have confidence in countries with a proven track record in preventative measures and systems to deal with post-Covid expectations,” Hawco stated.

A growing trend
Business and personal challenges brought on by the pandemic, especially loaded upon the shoulders of C-suite executives, have led companies to realise the importance of caring for the well-being of their staff so as to ensure optimal performance.

“Companies around the world and in Thailand are trying to find ways to build wellness into their human resource tools,” observed Bruce Ryde, general manager and brand strategist at Kamalaya, Koh Samui.

The wellness sanctuary, known globally to wellness enthusiasts, has been getting more corporate enquiries. As a result, Kamalaya now expects corporate demand – from Thailand and overseas – to account for almost one-third of its business in 2022.

As Thailand recovers from its second wave of Covid-19, Sindhorn Kempinski Hotel Bangkok, which opened its doors in October 2020, has seen a pick-up in domestic meetings; clients are specifically requesting programmes with wellness elements.

“Instead of doing an indulgent cooking workshop, one of our recent clients asked if we can do a healthy cooking workshop. So, we offered our Middle Eastern vegan cooking workshop. Guided by our hotel chef, the group learnt to make hummus,” shared Aaishah Bohari, the hotel’s director of sales and marketing.

Another company, intent on fitness activities, arranged a post-meeting virtual cycling session for its executives, she added.

Holistic offerings
From helping companies adapt to the new normal with personalised programmes and online courses, enabling teams to de-stress and cope with the upheaval of the global pandemic, to wellness-themed meetings, Thailand’s hotels are sculpting a healthier landscape for business events.

Kamalaya is conducting Embracing Change programmes via its Kamalaya Connect platform, aimed at helping large companies build change management competencies as part of teambuilding objectives. The programme has seen strong support from local businesses, as well as global NGOs and medical professionals.

Kamalaya’s Embracing Change workshops are different from other similar programmes, stated Karina Stewart, founder and chief wellness director. “(Our programmes) are about embracing change within yourself – your behaviour, so you understand the people you’re making decisions about,” she elaborated.

Companies have also chosen to weave Kamalaya’s tailored personal development programmes into their incentive packages, resulting in a pick-up in wellness incentive programmes.

“Pre-pandemic our corporate derived mix was around seven per cent. We see that building up to between 10 and15 per cent in 2022,” Ryde said.

Hawco observes a new model emerging: smaller bespoke offerings and events, with higher levels of flexibility enveloped in a greener approach, something Dusit Hotels is now developing as part of its business events offerings. This follows the hotel group’s introduction of #meetwell@dusit, a proactive wellness approach taken for meetings that support optimal performance.

“People now expect to continue their healthy lifestyles and wellness routines when they are away from home. Business event attendees and organisers will expect nothing less,” said Hawco.

Wellness-themed meetings at Dusit properties include breakout sessions with breathwork and stretching, nutrition-based menus and minibars, and supplementary holistic activities like environmentally-friendly silent concerts, gong baths on the beach, and a variety of physical and mental health sessions, workshops and classes.

“These elements help participants replace fatigue and stress with a calm head, sharp mind and a growth mindset, resulting in higher team engagement and productivity. We see an amazing opportunity to drive tourism while also exporting the approach of what is a highly relevant wellness offering. Thailand as a wellness destination can kickstart tourism in general,” he concluded.

TCEB spearheads move to heighten health and safety measures in MICE cities

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Thai government officials, 10 provincial representatives, and TCEB officials at the launch of Unlock MICE Cities with High Standard of Safety

The Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau (TCEB), 12 organisations, and the 10 MICE cities have signed an MoU to upgrade the hygiene standard across the country.

The new initiative, named Unlock MICE Cities with High Standard of Safety, was launched by TCEB’s president Chiruit Isarangkun Na Ayuthaya.

Thai government officials, 10 provincial representatives, and TCEB officials at the launch of Unlock MICE Cities with High Standard of Safety

Billed as the largest inter-organisational MICE collaboration in Thailand during Covid-19, the initiative heightens the safety standards in the 10 MICE cities to boost the confidence among domestic event planners in holding MICE events there. Target groups include venues, organisers, accommodations, transport services, restaurants, retail outlets, department stores and other-related MICE businesses.

The 10 cities are Bangkok, Khon Kaen, Chiang Mai, Nakhon Ratchasima, Phitsanulok, Phuket, Songkhla, Surat Thani, Udon Thani and Pattaya. Meanwhile, the 12 organisations include the Department of Health, Tourism Authority of Thailand, as well as the Airports of Thailand.

Currently, Bangkok has been gazetted as a red zone with a high risk of infection following the third wave of Covid-19. Hotels and MICE venues remain status quo however, where events can still go on with safety measures in place.

Meanwhile, Pattaya has been gazetted as an orange zone, while Songkla and Khon Kaen are yellow zones.

Following the launch, TCEB organised a seminar in Songkla for MICE stakeholders to meet, and provide perspectives and ideas to ensure business events could take place safely in the province.

TCEB, the Mekong Institute, and their partners also jointly hosted GMS Logistics Forum in Pattaya to help highlight Eastern Economic Corridor as a destination for national conferences, seminars and tradeshows of the logistics industry.

According to Thai Stop COVID Plus, a self-evaluation under the Department of Health, 100 per cent of convention and exhibition centres, and 99.1 per cent of hotels, have passed an assessment of hygiene and safety at their venues.

TCVB highlights hygiene guidelines, good practices for safe resumption of events

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Guidelines by Tokyo serve as an adaptable blueprint for event planning, on-site management, and post-event considerations

With Japan in the global limelight ahead of the summer Olympic Games, Tokyo Convention & Visitors Bureau (TCVB) is intensifying efforts to welcome MICE business.

Last month, the TCVB hosted its first online seminar for international associations, meeting planners and conference organisers, where its business events team introduced the recently launched content on its “Safe Events in Tokyo” webpages.

These guidelines serve as an adaptable blueprint for event planning, on-site management, and post-event considerations

Resources include guidelines on how to hold a successful business event in Tokyo, details on venues offering hybrid events and examples of best practice in holding in-person, hybrid and socially distanced events.

The “Hygiene Safety Guidelines” are intended to act as “a blueprint that can be adapted and implemented throughout the event-planning, site management and post-event (stages),” Masahito Tsukiyama, an assistant manager with TCVB’s Business Events Team told the 30 event attendees. The document will provide “a clear image of what to prepare for,” he added, pointing to the detail on everything from communications policies to crowd-control measures.

The guidelines are based on medical advice from professionals in the field of infectious diseases and feature the safety measures and precautions recommended by both the Japanese and Tokyo metropolitan governments.

Other new content that has been launched on the site are Tokyo’s range of new and adapted venues for hybrid events, including conference centres, hotels and studios. Some facilities, such as Tokyo Port City Takeshiba, were opened as recently as autumn 2020.

There are also 15 accommodations in the city that hold either a Safeguard Label or a GBAC Star facility accreditation, two of the highest health and safety standards globally, according to the site.

The TCVB also showcased products it has been developing for use at hybrid and online events. Options include a digital tour of Shibuya, which has proven popular as a post-event activity or break-time activity, according to the TCVB’s Inaho Hamaguchi. Performances can also be pre-recorded and shown as digital content, such as tezuma, a traditional form of magic that combines illusion, acting, music, costumes and stories.

New event formats and KPIs, revised support schemes to drive Singapore’s events recovery

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Reduced foreign attendance at business events during the Covid-19 pandemic has driven the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) to revise its business events strategy and action plans, with the adoption of new event formats and business model being the prime focus.

Andrew Phua, STB’s executive director, exhibitions & conferences, told TTGmice that the organisation’s priority now is to “get domestic events in place” to keep the city-state’s business events sector going as border controls keep international delegates out.

Phua: STB schemes could also help event organisers tackle higher costs from SMM implementation

Through the enforcement of Safe Meetings Measures (SMM) for events last year, Singapore has been able to conduct about 60 pilot events that saw close to 9,000 attendees.

But with its vision set on the eventual return of international events, STB has also been piloting several events to perfect its processes for conducting large-scale events in a safe, trusted and innovative manner.

These pilot events include TravelRevive in November 2020 and Geo Connect Asia 2021 last month – both utilising a hybrid format of online and in-person attendance.

Phua said having to engage the community digitally could present new opportunities for the destination.

“Take Geo Connect Asia for example. The number of online attendees was larger than the in-person turn-out. We have the opportunity to (entice) this captive virtual audience, and get even more people to come to Singapore (for the next edition) when travel lanes are up and safe travel protocols are in place next year,” he said.

Currently, in-person events in Singapore have to abide by strict SMM requirements, which include mandatory on-site Antigen Rapid Test for participants and separating delegates into zones and cohorts for safe distancing.

At the Singapore Tourism Industry Conference this morning, for instance, delegates were grouped into clusters of five within various zones. Interaction was limited to members of the same cluster.

When asked if SMM would have to eventually relax to allow spontaneous face-to-face interactions among event delegates, which is a key objective of business events, Phua said that would happen progressively.

“When SMM first started, it allowed events with cohorts of 20 people. Today we allow cohorts of 50. That will step up over time, especially as more of the population gets vaccinated,” he explained.

“Meanwhile, what do we do to ensure there is quality interaction in a safe and trusted manner? At some tradeshows, we have put in Plexiglas dividers and microphones to allow interaction between exhibitor and buyer – and they can even speak for up to 30 minutes. Before the next buyer comes along, that Plexiglas is sanitised,” he added.

Admitting that face-to-face interaction is harder to manage at hybrid events, Phua said work to develop creative ways to facilitate interaction continues.

In light of new event formats and business models, Phua shared that STB is reviewing its current event support schemes to keep them relevant.

“In terms of our Business Events in Singapore scheme, we will have to first and foremost review our KPIs (key performance indicators). In the past, our KPIs were mostly tourism receipts and number of foreign attendees. With border restrictions in place, we have to tweak these KPIs.

“Therefore, in our last two pilot events, TravelRevive and Geo Connect Asia, it was no longer about the number of foreigners but the total attendance, the local business spend to the whole industry, and the knowledge and thought leadership value,” Phua detailed.

He added that STB’s Business Improvement Fund now looks at helping business event owners pivot digitally and to build up technology capabilities.

When asked how would knowledge and thought leadership value be measured, Phua told TTGmice that it was indeed “harder to quantify” than other KPIs.

However, he suggested that the presence of A-list speakers, new announcements from the event, and international media value could be good indicators.

“We want people to associate (high-profile) events like the World Economic Forum and the Trump-Kim Summit with Singapore,” he said.

Indonesian MICE veteran Ketut Salam passes on

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Ketut Salam

The Indonesian business events industry has lost a veteran player with the passing of Ketut Salam, vice president director of Pactoconvex Niagatama (Pacto Convex).

Ketut passed away last Saturday after a heart attack at his home in Jakarta, and he was buried on the same day.

Ketut Salam

Apart from leading the financial team Ketut was always at the forefront of Pacto Convex’s major events and shows together with the company’s president director, Susilowani Daud. The business events industry in Indonesia has long viewed both Ketut and Susilowani as a pair of leaders who complete one another.

Susilowani described her professional relationship with Ketut as ‘Tom and Jerry’. “We can argue like anything, but we have proven to always come to the best decisions in the end.”

Ketut was also an active member of the Indonesia Congress and Convention Association (INCCA), where he also led the INCCA institute.

Singapore introduces certification for large-scale events

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SG Safe Events Certification to help MICE sector prepare for the eventual resumption of activities

The Singapore Association of Convention and Exhibition Organisers and Suppliers (SACEOS) has launched a safety certification programme, as the city-state ushers in the return of events of more than 1,000 attendees.

To achieve the SG SafeEvents Certification, MICE and event companies must uphold a set of hygiene benchmarks and safe-distancing practices. These include having a risk management plan, documenting identified hazards and necessary control measures that have been implemented before and during events, having a cleaning and disinfection plan for venue operators, using contactless technology as well as implementing protocols to contain and manage emergency situations.

The certification will help Singapore’s MICE sector prepare for the eventual resumption of activities

More details on the certification process and panel of certification bodies will be announced in May 2021 through an industry briefing, for which SACEOS is now accepting registrations of interest.

To ensure the certified standards are upheld at events, SG SafeEvent Ambassadors trained by SACEOS and the National Trades Union Congress Learning Hub will be deployed on-site. SACEOS aims to train a pool of 1,000 ambassadors by mid-2021, when more and larger events are expected. Currently, 700 trained ambassadors are ready to be mobilised.

Aloysius Arlando, president of SACEOS, said: “We are confident that this will help provide a competitive edge for Singapore as a MICE destination and our MICE enterprises as they re-think and re-calibrate their business operations for a Covid-safe marketplace.

“Adherence to the national standards provides a mark of assurance to the industry and the global community that events organised by certified organisers and suppliers, and held at certified venues, are recognised under the programme to be safe; and the health and well-being of all involved are managed with the utmost care and consideration.”

Announced at the Singapore Tourism Board’s Tourism Industry Conference, the SG SafeEvents Certification is based on Technical Reference (TR) 84, “Safe event management for the MICE and events industry”.

TR 84 is a paid guide that lists recommended best practices in hygiene and sanitisation, safe distancing and emergency management for business events, beyond the government-mandated Safe Management Measures.

It was developed by the Singapore Standards Council and overseen by Enterprise Singapore, and closely references the Events Industry Resilience Roadmap released by SACEOS in October 2020.

Director-general (quality & excellence) of Enterprise Singapore, Choy Sauw Kook, said: “The certification programme provides the added assurance that enterprises in the MICE and events industry have implemented the necessary measures to address and minimise any risk of Covid infection or its spread. TR 84 also lends confidence to overseas organisers holding large-scale events in Singapore when they know our enterprises adhere to best practices in developing customised hygiene, crowd management and emergency protocol systems.”

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