Asia/Singapore Saturday, 20th December 2025
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TTG Conversations: Five questions with Subhas Menon, Association of Asia-Pacific Airlines

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Airlines are resuming some flights in the region but these are not enough to lift the beleaguered travel and tourism industry out of the woods, opine Subhas Menon, director general of Association of Asia-Pacific Airlines.

In this debut episode of TTG Conversations: Five questions video series, Subhas talks about how the resumption of flights will look in the near future, progress on the airline industry’s advocacy for evidence-based health and safety measures to support travel resumption, and why travel bubbles are so difficult to establish.

Langham Hospitality names first COO

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Suntec Singapore reduces headcount by 85

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Suntec Singapore cuts 85 jobs as Covid-19 takes toll on MICE industry

Suntec Singapore Convention and Exhibition Centre is laying off 85 employees, almost half of its workforce, according to Today.

The retrenched staff comprise 60 locals and 25 foreigners from all departments. Following this cut, its staff strength now stands at 89 locals and four foreigners.

Suntec Singapore cuts jobs as Covid-19 takes its toll on the local MICE industry

As events have been suspended since April, the company has deployed cost control measures such as hiring freezes and pay cuts. However, the retrenchment exercise had to be done to the severe impact Covid-19 has had on Singapore’s MICE industry. Moreover, it is still unknown when the situation will improve.

Affected and eligible employees will be receiving a month’s salary for every year of service as severance payment. Eligible staff will also be paid their pro-rated Annual Wage Supplement for the year and be allowed to encash their remaining annual leave entitlements.

All affected staff will also be allowed to use their entire notice period to attend job fairs, interviews and trainings.

China relaxes visa restrictions for European citizens

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Several European carriers have restarted and are restarting flights to Shanghai (pictured) and Beijing

Business event companies in China are optimistic the resumption of new visa applications for European citizens, suspended since March 28 due to the Covid-19 pandemic, bodes well for the return of international travellers soon.

In early August, China announced eligible foreign nationals from 36 European countries can apply for free new Chinese visas without having to submit an invitation letter.

Several European carriers have restarted and are restarting flights to Shanghai (pictured) and Beijing

Meanwhile, European and Chinese carriers are expanding services. Air France is planning to restart flights to Beijing, having relaunched twice-weekly services to Shanghai in June; Air China has resumed direct flights from Chengdu to Frankfurt; while Lufthansa is looking to operate some flights from Shanghai and Nanjing to Frankfurt and Zurich in September.

China and the EU have also been stepping up economic and trade ties in recent weeks.

Violet Wang, China head at Pacific World, commented the improvements in visa applications for Europeans is “definitely warming up the market”, even though there is no direct gain for business now as air capacity is still limited and there are 14-day quarantine measures are in place.

Wang said: “But the (resumption of visa applications for European citizens) is helping companies to make strategic decisions about launching international events in 4Q2020,” nothing that shows like CIIE (China International Import Expo) 2020, taking place in Shanghai from November 5-19, is on track.

Also eyeing a return of international travellers and new markets, Sarah Keenlyside, CEO and founder, Bespoke Travel Company, plans to include Europe in its incentive travel marketing plans.

Keenlyside explained: “Previously, we received a lot of American business, so we focused the majority of our marketing efforts on that region. We now plan to shift that focus to Europe and other Asian countries.”

“I think the (resumption of visa applications for European citizens) is a good sign,” declared Alicia Yao, general manager of IM&E Consulting, adding that the seven-day validity of Covid-19-free tests imposed by China would allow international meeting groups of 300 to 1,000 delegates to return by end-2020 or early 2012.

Yao shared that numbers from Spain and Germany are coming back and there is business travel demand from Austria, Hungary and Greece.

“What is most important is for DMCs to implement an SOP that ensures hygiene safety to prevent virus infection throughout the journey and for participants to keep good social distancing during teambuilding activities,” she noted.

TTG debuts video series on hot button issues

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A series of short videos on demand fronted by key industry leaders will kick off in September, with conversations centred on current issues impacting travel, tourism and business events industry stakeholders.

Guest speakers for the September season include (from left) Subhas Menon, Carl Jones, Fransiska Handoko and Robert Hecker

The debuting September season of TTG Conversations: Five Questions video series will feature guest speakers such as Subhas Menon, director general, Association of Asia-Pacific Airlines; Carl Jones, vice president and head of travel, Asia Pacific and Greater China, SAP Concur; Fransiska Handoko, director, government and organisation relations, Bali Hotels Association; and Robert Hecker, managing director, Pacific Asia, Horwath HTL.

Each episode will run for 15 to 20 minutes, with the guest speaker tackling five questions that will allow a concise insight into a specific topic.

TTG Conversations: Five Questions content will be circulated to TTG Asia Media’s global audience via the weekly TTG Asia e-Daily and biweekly TTGmice e-News, and hosted on TTG Asia Media’s YouTube page.

MyCEB has its work cut out for it; lays out future plans

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Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture Malaysia, Nancy Shukri giving her welcome address at Malaysia Business Events Week

The corporate sector in Malaysia has been urged to play a bigger role to support the local business events industry by organising incentive trips, conferences, meetings and exhibitions domestically.

Malaysia Convention & Exhibition Bureau (MyCEB) CEO Abdul Khani Daud said he has been encouraging the business events sector to start thinking more creatively to help stimulate the economy.

Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture Malaysia, Nancy Shukri giving her welcome address at Malaysia Business Events Week

For example, Abdul Khani said a small board of directors meeting can be held in a green setting such as the Belum Rainforest, instead of a boardroom in the city.

Currently, MyCEB is researching, developing and identifying such niche products and unique venues that are suitable for business events.

In addition, MyCEB plans to organise roadshows to the country’s major MICE destinations – Penang, Selangor, Melaka, Johor, Sabah and Sarawak in coming months.

Recently, the first business exchange session was organised in Kuala Lumpur in conjunction with MyCEB’s annual flagship event, Malaysia Business Events Week. This sixth edition incorporated a B2B trade component for the first time.

Abdul Khani has also been encouraging venues to invest in upgrading their technology, as technology will drive the business events industry forward.

When asked how large-scale events might take place in the future, he envisioned: “Take for example a hybrid meeting for 5,000 participants. Two thousand of them could be in Kuala Lumpur, another 1,000 in Penang, 1,000 in Sabah and 1,000 in Sarawak. After the conference, they could go for post tours and enjoy themselves in their chosen destination.”

Abdul Khani also plans to revamp MyCEB’s website to make it a user-friendly, one-stop information centre on business events-related matters in the country, which includes information on various MICE venues.

MyCEB will also assist and support potential homegrown events so that such they can grow in size and stature and pull in an international audience when the situation improves.

Pushing the digital frontier

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Hot idea
Develop a flexible and reliable virtual platform that can offer attendees the best possible experience online


Brief
Organised in partnership with the Society of Rehabilitation Medicine (Singapore), CAREhab 2020 was originally scheduled for February 2020.

While some large-scale events in Singapore managed to push through before the full blow of Covid-19, CAREhab’s participants – comprising physicians, residents, allied health professionals, full-time academics and healthcare innovators and providers ­– were faced with the sudden spike in daily frontline emergencies, and the event was postponed to July 2020.

However, as the number of confirmed cases continued to climb, SingEx decided to bring the event online. The CAREhab community expressed eagerness for continuous learning and connections that participants could establish in their own time, as well as updated information on the best practices and latest innovations in the rehab space.

To address these existing and newly-surfaced needs, SingEx set out to curate and design an event platform from scratch, which resulted in the creation of a CAREhab GO digital platform on which the entire two-day event was hosted.

Highlights
More than 1,200 members of the healthcare community logged onto CAREhab GO, compared to just 900 in 2019. This year’s digital edition also saw greater international participation – 20 per cent of attendees represented more than 30 countries, including Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia and Australia.

The two-day live event featured keynotes, conference tracks, sandbox sessions, networking and collaborative activities, as well as a virtual exhibition showcase. Thanks to AI architecture, participants were provided personalised dashboards on the platform, which streamlined sessions based on each attendee’s indicated interests and fields of expertise.

Boosting the networking component were recommended connections between attendees based on mutual fields of interest, facilitating more than 200 meetings conducted over both days. The platform also offered video on demand, which allows delegates to access event content until 2021.

“We are seeing a huge appetite from the healthcare community, not just for learning and connecting, but also for unique experiences online,” noted James Boey, executive director of SingEx Exhibitions.

He continued: “With new demands placed upon them from Covid-19, it is essential for them to have access to continuous content and community engagement in their own time. Virtual offerings like CAREhab GO will become permanent augments to the physical when in-person events eventually return.”

Challenges
Although SingEx had a suite of digital engagement tools that traditionally complemented its physical events, constructing a digital platform to host an entire event with long-term engagement features was an unprecedented move.

Emily Chong, content producer (project management), SingEx Exhibitions, described: “Adapting a two-day physical event into a digital platform was a race against time, not to mention adapting our own mindsets to think about engagement beyond a physical event. We also had to build trust from our stakeholders.”

The organising team pulled together its core of being customer-focused, and “combined with team spirit and grit”, and successfully launched CAREhab GO.

“The journey is only beginning as we navigate this new normal together with our partners, stakeholders and customers. We look forward to continuing the conversation as one community,” expressed Chong.

Event CAREhab 2020
Organiser SingEx Exhibitions and Society of Rehabilitation Medicine (Singapore)
Dates July 17-18, 2020
Attendance More than 1,200

 

MyCEB breathes new life into AACVB

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Abdul Khani: calls for closer regional collaboration to bring MICE events back to Asia

The Malaysian Convention & Exhibition Bureau (MyCEB) is taking the lead to revive the Asian Association of Convention and Visitor Bureaus (AACVB) to foster regional cooperation in developing Asia’s business events industry.

The main role of AACVB is to bring business events to the Asia region, and support the development of MICE capabilities, particularly for member destinations. However, collaboration has become more imperative than ever, since the onset of Covid-19.

Abdul Khani: calls for closer regional collaboration to bring MICE events back to Asia

AACVB was first formed in 1983, but was never formally registered. The association currently comprises convention bureaus from China, Hong Kong, Macau, South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines and Singapore.

MyCEB’s CEO, Abdul Khani Daud, shared that MyCEB is in the process of getting AACVB formally registered in Malaysia.

According to Abdul Khani, contributor bureaus have also agreed that the head office will be in Malaysia and MyCEB has agreed to host the office within its premises.

Once the association has been formally registered, its focus, as agreed by pro-tem members, will initially be on research and later expanded into other areas as the need arises.

Abdul Khani said: “We want to know more about the opportunities and forward booking patterns to further assist member bureaus to create their own marketing strategies and programmes based on the research.

“I would like the association to collaborate and bring more business to the region rather than compete for business with other member countries.”

Malaysian Association of Convention and Exhibition Organisers and Suppliers president, Vincent Lim, opined that the need for AACVB to play an active role in research and promotions of this region will be even more crucial post-pandemic to identify mindset changes in the new normal and meet post-pandemic demands of business delegates.

He stressed on the need for members to work together to create win-win opportunities that will ultimately uplift the business events sector among member countries.

GICE makes move into Tianjin

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The Binhai Cultural Center

Pico Far East Holdings’ subsidiary, Global International Convention and Exhibition (Tianjin) (GICE) have entered into a strategic alliance with Tianjin Binhai New Area Cultural Center Investment Management, for the development of the Binhai Cultural Center at Tianjin’s Binhai New Area.

Established in May 2020, GICE aims to catch onto the growth momentum of the exhibition and convention sector in Tianjin.

The library within the Binhai Cultural Center

The alliance will cover three areas.

Firstly, the alliance will activate high-quality cultural tourism projects to raise the profile of the Binhai Cultural Center. The alliance will also manage creatively themed events and brand promotion projects.

Next, venue and project operations services. For projects under the alliance, GICE’s operations teams will offer clients venue services and value-added features. The Binhai Cultural Center will provide venue, publicity and other infrastructure support.

Lastly, GICE will work with Tianjin Binhai New Area Cultural Center Investment Management to create smart venues and improve their exhibition and convention management capabilities.

The alliance will also explore providing operational services for tech-enabled venues, the performing arts industry, and for exhibition and convention industry development. The ultimate aim is to create a high-quality, high added-value, high-traffic ecosystem for the cultural, tourism and business sectors.

The Binhai Cultural Center is the largest single cultural complex in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, with an area of 120,000m2. The complex includes facilities such as an art gallery, a science and technology museum, a public library, a performance centre, an activity centre and a cultural corridor.

Moving with courage and curiosity

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Thailand has decided not to reopen its international borders this year for most inbound and leisure tourists. How can MICE players move forward strategically and with confidence?
We are all going through a very uncertain period. What makes it more difficult is that we cannot plan ahead as no one knows when this pandemic will end. However, the MICE and hospitality industries have shown amazing resilience.

The government has a range of support and relief assistance for tourism businesses and operators, (and we) have been very cooperative with all its programmes. (There was a) significant number of hotels and guesthouses that participated in the We Travel Together campaign as well as the Safety and Health Administration (SHA) certification project.

Moving forward, MICE venues must be more flexible and dynamic with their business models. Venues must also be in constant touch with their guests and customers to understand their concern and address those issues. Right now, the focus is on the domestic market.

How different is the domestic MICE market from the international ones?
The Thai MICE market is more price-conscious, more inclined towards modern venues and accommodation, and has shorter lead times. Taking into account that delegates of these groups will be travelling locally, venues need to ensure that ample parking spaces are available.

As Thai people tend to travel with their families when attending local events, venues with wide-ranging facilities would be more attractive.

Finally, venues have to keep in mind that the local market is more conscious of safety standards and would feel safer in venues that abide by the government’s safety requirements. Receiving the SHA certification and achieving the Thailand MICE Venue Standard can greatly enhance the confidence of both local event organisers and visitors.

What is Royal Cliff Hotels Group doing to attract domestic business events?
We have developed Royal Cliff’s Prevent and Protect Program, which consists of strong measures that would assure planners that our venues are safe. We are also using the government app Thai Chana…to help with (contact tracing).

We have upgraded our technology infrastructure to support video conferencing. We are entering an era of hybrid meetings where people meet physically and virtually (so) we have designed our meeting rooms and venues to accommodate this style of events.

As a large resort with abundant spaces, we facilitate outdoor meetings and functions. Such setups eliminate concerns of being around other participants in an enclosed space. For those who prefer to stay in their room and attend the functions virtually, we have supporting in-room technology, be it Zoom, Microsoft Teams or Google Hangout. We also have fast Wi-Fi speed for online meetings to run smoothly.

Our accommodation and meeting packages are offered at very competitive rates.

What’s the biggest lesson you have learnt during this period?
We need to continually improve our digital knowledge and diversify. We are using this time to explore new business models, experiment and try new things by asking ourselves what we are good at and how we can take that online. During the lockdown, we built a platform for online food delivery and was able to gain significant revenue from this new initiative.

Another important lesson is to be flexible and never give up. There is always a way out if you persevere.

Reviews

Hyatt Regency Kuala Lumpur at KL Midtown

A polished urban retreat designed for business travellers, Hyatt Regency Kuala Lumpur at KL Midtown combines thoughtful design, seamless service, and exceptional facilities.

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Arena @ Expo, a multipurpose concert hall at the Singapore Expo is a flexible space for high octane concerts and lifestyle events.

Amari Bangkok

The five-star property excels in backing its expansive facilities with seamless service and personalised attention, setting the benchmark for luxury in Bangkok.