Asia/Singapore Tuesday, 16th December 2025
Page 549

PCEB’s CEO elected ICCA Asia Pacific Chapter chair

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Ashwin Gunasekeran

Penang Convention & Exhibition Bureau (PCEB)’s CEO Ashwin Gunasekeran has been elected chairman for the ICCA Asia Pacific Chapter Executive Committee (EXCO) for the 2020-2022 term.

The first Malaysian to hold position in the EXCO takes over the outgoing Chairman, Jason Yeh, founder and CEO of GIS Group.

Ashwin Gunasekeran

Prior to his time with PCEB, Gunasekeran has been involved with ICCA for many years. He is also currently heading the ICCA Malaysia Committee.

Joining Gunasekeran in the EXCO are deputy chairs – Keiko Nishimoto (research fellow, Kyoto University Graduate School of Management Japan) and Eric Abramson (international project director, Guangzhou Yuexiu International Congress Centre China).

The committee was elected through an electoral process that was carried out from March 6-31, 2020.

Noor Hamid, regional director Asia Pacific said, “As the Secretariat, I congratulate these candidates for volunteering to take the lead in championing the Chapter. I would also like to place on record my grateful appreciation to the past EXCO, Jason Yeh, outgoing chair and current ICCA’s first vice president, Keiko Nishimoto and Anna Case, former deputy chairs who made meaningful impact and supported the growth of the Asia Pacific chapter. The new EXCO are here to continue that legacy and we look forward to working with the new leadership to serving the ICCA Asia
Pacific community.”

ICCA Asia Pacific Chapter consists of 289 member organisations in 16 countries and regions, and represents the largest membership in all the total of 11 Chapters. Penang currently has three ICCA members – PCEB, Setia SPICE Convention Centre and Hotel Equatorial Penang.

FCM strengthens financial position in response to Covid-19

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Bertrand Saillet

FCM Travel Solutions’ parent company Flight Centre Travel Group (FCTG) has announced a comprehensive package of initiatives to strengthen its balance sheet and liquidity position.

These initiatives mean that FCTG has secured a total A$900 million (US$576.8 million) through a mix of capital raising and new debt facilities. They complement previously announced cost reduction and cash preservation initiatives implemented by FCTG to help overcome the unprecedented travel and trading restrictions imposed by governments.

Saillet: funding will help FCM quicken pace of recovery, with China one of the bright spots

The additional funding means the group’s total liquidity position now amounts to over A$2.3 billion.

This will enable FCM Travel Solutions to increase its focus on key investments and to support all customers during prolonged challenging business travel trading conditions. The move also allows the TMC to execute its long-term strategy, expand its capabilities and service a significant number of new clients.

The TMC, which has a global presence in over 100 countries, is reporting strong customer activity in both sales and implementation.

Bertrand Saillet, managing director, Asia, FCM Travel Solutions, said in a statement: “The strength of interest from investors reflects the increasing recognition of FCM’s strong fundamentals in the business travel market. With this funding, it will allow us to quicken our pace of recovery, which we have already started to see in mainland China. We anticipate this momentum to continue and are excited to be able to optimise our resources and offer higher value and service to our customers.”

Mixed measures taken by CLMV nations in fight against Covid-19

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Lively New Year celebrations this month were absent in Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia due to Covid-19 fears

Mid-April New Year celebrations were cancelled in Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia in a bid to halt the spread of Covid-19, along with existing border restrictions on foreign arrivals.

While Cambodia is currently not under a lockdown, its borders with Thailand, Vietnam and Laos remain closed until further notice. A travel ban is in place for entry from Germany, the US, Italy, France, Spain and Iran.

Lively New Year celebrations this month were absent in Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia due to Covid-19 fears

International visitors must go into mandatory 14-day quarantine, with visa-on-arrivals currently postponed.

Bars, beer gardens, karaoke bars, spas and massage parlours have been closed, with restaurants, markets, hotels and other stores remaining open. During the cancelled Khmer New Year period, a one-week provincial travel ban was enforced.

In Myanmar, all international commercial flights have been suspended until April 30. Beaches have been shuttered early for the season, with the government recommending hotels in Mandalay and Bagan close. Many have reportedly followed the suggestion. Some hotels in Yangon have closed for April and May.

The government is encouraging people to stay at home until the end of the New Year holidays on April 20; while celebrations have been cancelled the public holidays remain in place.

Anti-Covid-19 measures are stiffer over in Laos. A lockdown came into effect on April 1, restricting people from leaving their homes except only to buy essential goods, visit hospitals or to work in limited essential services such as restaurants and cafes.

Hotels are allowed to operate but only to provide F&B services and accommodation. International and inter-provincial borders are closed to all movement apart from those transporting goods.

The measures are slated to be reviewed on April 19.

On April 1, Vietnamese authorities imposed a 15-day social distancing and stay-at-home order. It has said these will continue this for “some time” in regions considered high-risk while other areas will see restrictions relaxed.

From April 9, all visitors arriving at Ho Chi Minh City’s airports and train and bus stations must receive a Covid-19 test.

As of April 15, Vietnam has 266 confirmed cases and no deaths; Cambodia has 122 and no deaths; Myanmar 63 and four deaths; and Laos 19 and no deaths.

Skye Suites Green Square to open ahead of time

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Skye Suites is fast-tracking the opening of its third hotel in Zetland, New South Wales, located within the US$575 million architectural precinct, Infinity by Crown Group, in response to the surge in demand from the long-stay market.

Skye Suites Green Square is set to officially open as a hotel in July, but from next week, Skye Residences will offer luxurious serviced-apartment stays of three months or more to long-stay residents.

The other two Skye Suites hotels opened in Parramatta in 2017 and in Sydney’s Arc by Crown Group on Clarence Street in late 2018. All three properties offer a range of studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments.

Amenities include kitchens which boast SMEG cooktops, microwave ovens and a fridge, a washing machine and dryer, an enclosed balcony or courtyard, and second wall-mounted flat-screen TV in the two-bedroom apartments.

Keyless entry and “virtual concierge” tablets in each suite allows guests to access hotel services, with an option for mobile check-in.

Optimism is the best vaccine

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How are you dealing with the situation?
I joined in February, so I have known little else in the role except this unprecedented situation.

Currently, New Zealand is in lockdown and that has been tough on everyone. While we see the necessity for it, the economic impact on our industry has been nothing short of savage. New Zealand was staring at an incredibly bright future with some truly exciting new infrastructure and investment, which would have catapulted our industry forward. Right now, that is at a stand-still and the most challenging part is not knowing when it can kick back into life.

The team and I have kept ourselves busy in several ways, staying connected with our members being the most important one, and thinking, talking and planning what CINZ can do to support recovery.

There is no doubt that CINZ will play an integral part in the post-pandemic world in New Zealand, especially during a time when New Zealand’s entire ecosystem is being reviewed. Business events are critical to the economic recovery of the industry and our job will be to maximise that opportunity for our members.

Before Covid-19 happened, what were your plans in your new role?
Plans haven’t been shelved as such, but some have been postponed or altered slightly. We are moving ahead with a couple of things including a new business events data project which will give us unprecedented insight into the business events sector, even at a time like now. It is important that we understand and measure the recovery phase and use pre-existing data to help with some of that. We know data will be even more important than ever, especially when it comes to investment, which will be crucial for our future.

In the more immediate term, we have been working on a Recovery Framework which will take priority for some time, and that includes some of the plans I had hoped to instigate when I arrived.

Despite what has happened, the New Zealand business events industry, although comparatively small on a global level, is still considered very mature and savvy. I had planned to maximise my international experience and connections to help support taking it to the next level, and those intentions haven’t changed, just the timing of them.

Aside from Be Reconnected, what else does CINZ have up its sleeve to stimulate business travel?
We will be working very closely with our partners, Tourism New Zealand (TNZ) on the reimagining of our tourism strategies for domestic and international business, all of which will be designed to stimulate opportunities. This is a new way of working for TNZ, who have traditionally focused on international.

This is still very much in its development phase. The others are initiatives I’m not able to announce just yet as details are still being worked through, but I am excited about the possibilities and what it will mean for our sector.

Is the MICE sector getting help from the government to tide through this period?
All businesses are being given the same support, irrespective of industry and we have been encouraging everyone to maximise what relief is available.

However, I don’t believe it has gone far enough. We have members who have seen a 100 per cent drop in business, and despite many events being postponed and not cancelled, the way our industry works financially means many won’t see the revenue from postponed events for quite some time.

We have seen what other countries have done, with some acknowledging the critical economic importance of organisations that are reliant on business events to generate income, like PCOs and associations, by providing up to 75 per cent of revenue they have lost.

We are a small industry, but we pack a mighty punch. Business events typically generate over NZ$455 million (US$276.3 million) per annum and the flow-on effect culturally, socially, economically is paramount. We know that while New Zealand is an incredible country, for many visitors, it is often the pull of an event which brings them here initially. The added attraction of visiting other regions while here is what makes what we do so invaluable.

Businesses have shut their doors, or they have hibernated or reduced their staff count to the bare bones. These aren’t just SME businesses; it has affected some of our largest members as well, so the situation is not at all prejudiced to size or scale.

We continue to lobby hard to the government to support our industry, along with travel, tourism and hospitality. With one in every eight people employed in these sectors, the government can’t afford not to pay attention to the specific needs of the industry.

Do you think there will be pent-up demand once all restrictions are lifted and the world slowly goes back to normal?
Through the gloom, I think we can find opportunity. When the world goes back to whatever the new normal will be, I believe we will see a couple of things.

Firstly, if we, as an industry, country and world don’t learn from this, then everything we have endured and all who have sacrificed would have been for nothing. So, we must quickly figure out how we would respond when – not if – this happens again, and how we can stay resilient to the catastrophic impact on people and business. This must be industry-led, we can’t and shouldn’t be reliant on government support. We need to be able to manage our own destinies.

Secondly, we will see brand new sparkling opportunities lead the way to how we reconnect. Online, offline, hybrid, digital, social. We must be open to the new platforms that will give organisations new ways to reconnect. The trick will be to find clever means to monetise some of these platforms.

My fear is that investment will shrink for some time, so that will mean more collaboration and partnerships in areas of core strength and expertise. Those that make it through this will be less inclined to put money into new infrastructure, training or revenue streams. Instead, we will see an increase in savings (which will also impact cash rates and inflation), but there is a golden opportunity for some organisations to work together, in strong partnerships, helping each other grow.

New Zealand’s MICE sector was growing yearly at a constant clip, but this situation has brought everything to a halt. How long do you think the sector will take to recover?
There was no doubt New Zealand was riding high and had an incredibly bright outlook until Covid-19 literally knocked the stuffing out of all of us! The extraordinary amount of hard work, dedication and effort by many incredibly smart, passionate and creative people just came to a screaming halt.

The good news is we still have those people in New Zealand and around the world, and being a people-oriented industry, that means we have the talent to learn from this, weave them into revised or new business models and grow again.

The challenge both nationally and globally is that there are so many dependencies. Firstly, our industry lives or dies on being in a state of confidence. How quickly we respond is hugely dependent on that sense of optimism; it will influence our recovery economically, socially, culturally and environmentally.

Secondly, we need connectivity and that means putting the planes back in the sky. We will see many changes at the borders and there is talk of whether we will need to carry some sort of health guarantee to gain access into another country. But then again, we all experienced increased security post 9/11 and that has now become a normal state.

Lastly, we need to have a sustainable business events industry which can support the people and infrastructure who operate within it.

Unfortunately, what we don’t have is a guide to how long this will take, but we are hoping sooner rather than later.

What message would you like to share with the MICE sector at this point?
We have been using the Māori saying ‘He waka eke noa’ which loosely means ‘We are all in this together’. It’s a beautiful sentiment but when you watch your business dissolve, or let go staff or find that you yourself have been stood down from work, sentiment is not what you need.

What you need is some assurance that this is but a moment in time, and that better days will come. When we have some clarity on what the future will look like, I expect the brilliance of the industry will rise to the top and we will see businesses reinvent, repurpose or reposition themselves. There will be opportunity to start with a new slate, to make changes and demonstrate resolve.

I have 100 per cent belief and confidence in our industry, its resilience, the extraordinary knowledge and talent of the people who drive it, and the desire of both organisations and associations within New Zealand and around the world to be once again immersed in an event. In the meantime, our skies have become even cleaner, our birdsong is louder, our waters are bluer, our food tastier than it has ever been.

On behalf of everyone in the New Zealand events, tourism, travel and hospitality industry, I want to say to the world: we can’t wait to meet again, let’s work together ‘to carve a path forward into the future’ – ‘He para i te huarahi ki tua’.

Trio appointed to bolster Ayana’s exco

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From left: Stefan_Fuchs; Christian Jacquier; Michi Sonoda

Ayana Hotels has made three appointments to its executive committee covering the Indonesian islands of Bali and Flores.

Stefan Fuchs has been named general manager of Ayana Hotels in Bali. His new role involves projecting the company as a strong and reliable luxury hospitality service provider on a local and international scale.

From left: Stefan Fuchs; Christian Jacquier; Michi Sonoda

Fuchs headed operations for the Islamic Conference and Asian Games in Doha, Qatar, and was part of the opening team of several Ritz-Carlton hotels in Russia, Japan, China and Bahrain. Between 2006 and 2014, he was with the Jumeirah Group.

The German native was in charge of diverse F&B projects such as the Expo 1998 in Lisbon and at Formula 1 Grand Prix events.

Next, Brazilian Swiss-Chinese Christian Jacquier has been hired as hotel manager of Ayana Hotels in Bali. Previously executive assistant manager of rooms in 2015, he will now support Fuchs in overseeing 775 guestrooms, suites and private villas.

Lastly, Michi Sonoda will assume the position of executive assistant manager sales and marketing at Ayana Hotels in Bali and Komodo.

The Japanese was promoted from director of sales and marketing to her current role, where she will be responsible from initiating to managing the sales and marketing strategy for Ayana Hotels and also aligning all strategic activities of sales, marketing communications and events and reservations with that of the owning company.

Sonoda traces her hospitality roots to a career in spa and retail with The Ritz-Carlton Bali in 1997.

A destination with heart

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Business events continue to hold significant weight in Singapore’s tourism balance.

In 2018, the country welcomed more than 2.9 million business visitors, which accounted for S$4.7 billion (US$3.4 billion) in tourism receipts. With more business travellers seeking increasingly personalised and customised experiences, the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) has launched the In Singapore Incentives & Rewards (INSPIRE) programme.

Oriental Travel & Tours takes visitors into Ang Mo Kio, where they can interact with a bird-singing group and meet a bird-cage maker

Aimed at small- to mid-sized corporate groups, INSPIRE offers a selection of 63 complimentary incentive experiences designed as accompaniments to the main programme. Previously offered to corporate groups in South-east Asia and other selected regions, INSPIRE has been extended to markets such as the Americas, North Asia and Oceania.

The specially curated programme for corporate groups features four categories. Besides Singapore’s dining, entertainment, and nightlife, which the city-state is known for, groups can explore its constantly evolving, tailored attraction-based experiences. The two other categories that groups can opt for are thematic tours and learning experiences; as well as distinctive teambuilding activities.

An example of the experiences offered under the category of tailored attraction-based experiences is the making of bespoke cocktails at the UNESCO World Heritage site, Botanic Gardens; a tour around one-north, Singapore’s Silicon Valley; or attend a private, after-hours Garden Rhapsody show at Gardens by the Bay.

INSPIRE is open to corporate groups travelling to Singapore between now and December 31, 2021, with a minimum of 20 foreign event attendees staying for at least three days in Singapore.

Edward Koh, executive director, conventions, meetings & incentive travel, Singapore Tourism Board, said: “The INSPIRE programme will assist meeting planners in organising activities for their meeting groups. Our value proposition of mixing business with leisure means the ability to conduct serious business, while providing access to leisure activities.”

Hitting the heartlands
Adding to the crop of unique corporate experiences are guided tours into Singapore’s heartlands. Offered by local operators and hotels alike, these increasingly popular tours may seem out of tune with the city’s gleaming, all-business image.

Oriental Travel and Tours offers tours that take groups through the peaceful residential blocks of Ang Mo Kio to meet a bird-singing club, a bird cage-maker, and to view a mock-up of a local home. Another operator, Tribe Tours, has launched a photography tour focusing on Singapore’s prolific government flats.

Jasmine Tan, co-founder, Oriental Travel and Tours, said: “Our clients are mainly from Europe and America, and they are looking for something different to do beyond attractions like the Merlion and Sentosa, especially those who have visited Singapore more than three times. There are many pockets in the island that they can explore.”

This opportunity is not lost on the local hospitality sector, which has similarly responded by offering heartland experiences to customers, which include their business guests.

Six Senses Maxwell has partnered with Jane’s Singapore Tours to offer excursions to locales such as MacRitchie, Botanic Gardens and Tiong Bahru. Meanwhile, guests of Ramada by Wyndham Singapore at Zhongshan Park have the option of picking up a guide to Balestier, which provides a trail through the historic residential district to discover monuments, landmark buildings and vanishing trades.

Getting the inside scoop
Corporate groups on the hunt for activities with a more business focus are also in luck, as the rise of “localised” tours has sparked a niche group of such products, geared towards innovators and entrepreneurs.

Last year, tour operator Woopa Group launched a new brand, UBE Singapore, to cater to the city’s burgeoning events industry. UBE debuted with the Silicon Valley of Singapore Insider Tour, where participants can gain insight into thriving businesses in Singapore’s innovation parks, One-North and JTC Launchpad, and sit in for exclusive sharing sessions by founders of successful enterprises.

TY Suen, founder & CEO of Woopa Group, describes UBE Singapore as the “pioneer” of business innovation and start-up tours in Singapore.

“We aim to offer unique localised experiences (where groups can interact with) creative start-ups and businesses from key industries,” said Suen.

What lies ahead
Moving into 2020 and beyond, given a robust pipeline, the business events industry is likely to continue to shine.

Over the two-year period of 2020 and 2021, Singapore will host software company SAP’s Field Kick-Off Meeting, as well as – for the first time – the International Trademark Association’s 142nd Annual Meeting, which is expected to attract 8,000 participants.

Next year, Singapore will welcome the Asia-Pacific Life Insurance Congress and Million Dollar Round Table Global Conference.

However, the Covid-19 outbreak that erupted in January has given event businesses in Singapore “a very rough start” to 2020, said Aloysius Arlando, president, Singapore Association of Convention & Exhibition Organisers and Suppliers (SACEOS).

Numerous global and regional events, such as the Sweden-Southeast Asia Business Summit and the Aviation Festival Asia, have placed their bookings on hold or postponed events. As such, Arlando believes 2H2020 will see a “bunching up” of postponed events, many have been rescheduled to May and July.

Industry stakeholders are also expect Singapore’s events industry to make a comeback in 2H2020, after the spread of Covid-19 is stemmed, and international meetings and events resume regular programming.

China’s large business cog starts up again, but full recovery remains to be seen

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Green shoots started sprouting in Asia last week where domestic travel and business deals showed strong week-on-week growth in China and other major Asian economies.

Benson Tang, executive director, Corporate Travel Community, told TTGmice on April 8, eight travel managers were on a CTC China Taskforce call, with some reporting that demand for domestic travel was 50 per cent higher compared to the week before.

Signs of optimism abound in the industry as China starts to get back on track; Shanghai pictured

Tang continued: “But of course the baseline the week before was low, so in terms of actual numbers it is still on the low side,” noting some travel was via high speed train instead of air travel. With many countries still imposing restrictions international travel was stagnant, he added.

According to Aurojyoti Bose, lead analyst, GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company, business deals are also showing growth signs.

Bose revealed that the number of deals announced in Asia-Pacific increased by 56.7 per cent – during the week ending April 5 compared to the previous week – and described it as “a sign of revival of optimism”.

Deal activity increased in most of the key markets with China posting an increase in volume of 52.3 per cent, and Japan, India and South Korea by 68.6 per cent, 93.3 per cent and 38.9 per cent, respectively.

Sectors such as healthcare (including pharmaceuticals and medical equipment), and travel and tourism, also witnessed week-over-week improvement in deal activity.

However, the latest poll conducted by the Global Business Travel Association (GBTA) between April 1 and 4 with responses from 974 GBTA global member companies, is sobering.

Scott Solombrino, chief operating officer and executive director, shared that member companies which responded had cancelled or suspended almost all business travel regardless of country or region.

On the impact in Asia, GBTA members reported their companies cancelled or suspended “all” or “most” business trips to China – 99 per cent, Hong Kong – 99 per cent, Taiwan – 98 per cent, and other Asia-Pacific countries (Japan, South Korea and Malaysia) – 98 per cent.

“Almost every GBTA member company (98 per cent) reported cancelling and/or suspending all international business travel,” Solombrino noted.

On who should get the ball rolling for corporate travel to recover – the airlines waiting to see demand or corporates waiting until capacity, frequency and route networks get up and running, Peter Harbison, chairman emeritus, CAPA – Centre for Aviation, commented “it is a case of chicken and egg”.

“I think Asia will come out of this faster than the rest of the world as some countries have been better prepared. Domestic markets will recover fastest. Then international will take some time, and this will be where the value of some of the emerging search technology data can be tested.

Harbison: Asia’s business events sector, especially China, is raring to go once this crisis ends

“Smart airlines will be watching to see what people are looking for – where they’re ‘shopping’ online, and will do their route planning accordingly.

“For corporates, there are some conflicting forces at work. Travel is an easy area to make savings on when things are tough versus when executives need to be out and about selling after the hiatus.

“The word we’re hearing is that some companies are already looking for ways to get on the road, especially from China-based groups. Once the options of travel re-emerge, the road warriors will be back on flights,” Harbison elaborated.

This is because B2B simply doesn’t work well for doing new business, and sharing a virtual meal or late-night drink won’t ever get down to the sort of informal discussion that so often leads to success with the real thing.

On what will change when the Covid-19 pandemic is under control, Harbison noted: “We always talk about sitting next to people on an aircraft, where the air is well purified, but a greater risk is often the crowded atmosphere of airports, so passenger flows are going to have to be much better monitored, and testing on departure and arrival will probably be essential.

“That means major infrastructure and process changes. Think post-911 inconvenience of security changes and multiply that by three.”

Adriana Nainggolan, travel programme manager, Asia-Pacific, Autodesk, thinks the airlines, hotels and countries wouldn’t start back up so soon, and maybe only after three months or so.

“It is hard to tell. But if things are slowly getting back to normal, businesses will start planning again and carefully consider business travel. Perhaps to the key cities but it won’t be all at once,” she said.

On what would give peace of mind to travellers, Nainggolan opined travel insurance policies that allow travellers to get home when there is a pandemic or if Covid-19 returns. She also wanted clear airline and hotel evacuation policies should an outbreak occur again and hospitalisation and medical coverage that includes an air ticket home.

Jane Sim, commodity manager, South-east Asia, Siemens, opined airlines can make the first move to kick start corporate travel recovery with promotion deals, including value-add consideration for corporates, as “corporates are unable to plan when there’s a lack of frequency or routes”.

Malaysia’s MICE stakeholders innovate now for later

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Malaysia's MICE stakeholders discuss ideas on how they plan to survive the economic downturn Covid-19 has brought

Covid-19 is pushing Malaysia’s business events industry players to innovate as they explore different business ideas to survive the economic blow the pandemic has brought.

This move will also help companies prepare for the post-Covid-19 period which will also bring about a change in travel trends, behavioural patterns and meeting requirements.

Malaysia’s MICE stakeholders discuss ideas on how they plan to survive Covid-19 by thinking out of the box

Allen Tan, managing director, IDA Exhibition Services, shared that he is looking into temporarily changing his business model from being an exhibition contractor and go into interior design for offices and corporate companies.

This is because Tan does not expect the exhibition business to recover in the next six months, and currently, there is zero revenue for the company’s core team of 15 employees.

But he can only start actively looking for business after the country’s Movement Control Order (MCO) is lifted. The MCO, put in place as the country fights the spread of Covid-19, started on March 18 and was recently extended to April 28.

“We are not rehiring new people, but upscaling the existing team into another area of work, and when the business events industry recovers, we will return to the exhibition business,” he pointed out.

He was speaking at a recent webinar organised by PCO Place Borneo, moderated by its managing director, Mona Abdul Manap. The webinar was titled Business Events: Business Impacts and recovery ideas for industry players post Covid-19.

Another speaker, Gracie V Geikie, director and principal consultant at Planet Borneo Group, shared that while events for this year have been totally wiped out, the company is looking at events from next year onwards.

Planet Borneo Group has kept all existing staff, but will be reskilling them in this downtime. She elaborated that staff will see a realigning of workscopes where everyone contributes to business development.

“We have to take this opportunity to look at new revenue streams such as managing hybrid conferences. It will require a change of mindset of our employees. We have to reskill staff to sell virtual conferences, which I believe will grow in the future,” shared Geikie.

Mok Venia, managing director, Cat City Holidays, said she was looking at providing virtual tours as she believes that post-Covid-19, the DMC business will evolve with more demand for virtual everything – conferences, meetings and even tours.

She shared: “We will need more specialist guides, such as historians and botanists, to conduct virtual tours which in a business events setting could be pre- and post tours for those who participate in virtual conferences.”

Venia hopes to source for the right talents, and look for a vendor to set up a secure portal, among other things, but all this can only be done once MCO ends.

As for Borneo Convention Centre Kuching’s CEO Eric van Piggelen he shared that the company is developing its non-core businesses until the business events industry recovers.

Piggelen also predicts that in a post-Covid-19 world, there will be more emphasis on health security screenings in convention venues, as well as the an increased number of live streaming of conferences and events.

AsiaWorld-Expo installs CLeanTech disinfection system during downtime

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AsiaWorld-Expo (AWE) is said to be the world’s first exhibition and event venue to deploy the CLeanTech disinfection installation and advanced air purification technology, in a move as it readies itself for the eventual turn in business once Covid-19 blows over.

CLeanTech is a three-in-one disinfection installation combining a suite of technologies including BioEm Air Sanitising and Purifying technology, Aegis Intelligence and negative room pressure design.

Visitors will encounter the device prior to event halls, and the door will open automatically once they pass through the built-in temperature check. The device will also help sanitise visitor’s outfits and carry-on items of visitors in 12 seconds.

In addition, BioEm is a natural botanical disinfection solution that can kill a variety of viruses, while Aegis Intelligence is used to purify venue facilities such as doors and door handles at major entrances, escalator handrails, washrooms and chairs in the restaurant. The cleaning will also be done for the uniforms of frontline staff.

Sammy Tsui, founder and managing director, BioEm Air Sanitising Technology, said that he hopes this disinfection technology will “strengthen the confidence of exhibitors and visitors alike, contributing to the acceleration of the economic recovery of the Hong Kong C&E industry”.

Irene Chan, CEO of AsiaWorld-Expo Management, added: “Once Covid-19 is under control, we are fully ready to bring back various large-scale exhibitions and exciting events in collaboration with our stakeholders.

“A safe and healthy environment is equally important as the state-of-the-art facilities. AsiaWorld-Expo has maintained close communication with organisers and we have high confidence in the future prospects.”

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