Corporate travel in Bangladesh will get a shot in the arm this year when the first SATTE, organised by Informa Markets India, will be held in Dhaka from August 19-20 and incorporate a Corporate Travel Day by CTC (Corporate Travel Community).
Describing Bangladesh as “an extremely new emerging market with corporate travel management in its infancy”, Benson Tang, CTC executive director, said the event would be a “very simple travel management 101 introduction”.
The corporate travel management sector is in its infancy stages in Bangladesh, with room for growth; Dhaka, Bangladesh’s capital city pictured
CTC, he added, was looking at flying in travel managers to showcase case studies on corporate travel management, starting from scratch to the more sophisticated.
According to a recent World Economic Forum report, Bangladesh’s GDP growth rate in 2020 is forecast to be eight per cent and the economy is diversifying. Apart from the garment trade, the services sector – including microfinance and computing – makes up more than half of the country’s GDP.
Hong Kong-based Florence Robert, regional travel manager Asia-Pacific, Ericsson, said that Bangladesh’s “(corporate travel) market is still immature”, adding that there were “no easy forms of payment and online corporate tools”.
“There is only basic access, limited (booking) tools and it is difficult to get LCCs or Internet promotional fares,” she noted.
Commenting that his company’s Bangladesh corporate travel programme is “quite basic and manual”, a Shanghai-based corporate travel manager called it “sufficient, as the footprint and number of travellers are small”.
He noted that Bangladesh was “considered a country with elevated risk for travellers from a security perspective, and general safety during the rainy season.”
“Travel there is restricted to those with a real need, and there are very few expatriates based there. Outbound is also limited as the office there is small, with less than 100 trips in and out,” he added.
A Singapore-based corporate travel manager whose company did not have a full office yet in Bangladesh, said travel there was “project-based” or involved major milestones like vendor qualification, before the award of the contract, then maybe once or twice in the life of a one- to two-year project.
“But I can share that the region is a hotbed for outsourcing and centralisation of services, so it is probably becoming quite a popular business destination,” he commented.
The Seoul Convention Bureau has indicated that it will be signing four more partnerships with secondary South Korean cities this year – in addition to Gwangju – building on the first-ever MoU signed with Gangwon province in 2019.
Last year, close to 7,000 MICE participants utilised the co-marketing support programme provided by Seoul and Gangwon for their incentive group tours.
Gangwon (pictured) has welcomed from more incentive groups since the signing of the MoU
Gangwon was first propelled into the MICE spotlight with the hosting of PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games.
MICE planners in Indonesia (77 per cent), followed by Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, and Cambodia, were the top few South-east Asian countries to send corporate groups to the two Korean cities.
For instance, an Indonesian lifestyle products company sent 1,500 of their employees on a trip which included winter activities such as curling and riding on sleds, as well as exploring Korean culture in Seoul such as visiting a palace in Seoul wearing a traditional hanbok.
In 2020, Seoul and Gangwon is set to welcome more groups together, starting with a group of 5,000 participants coming from Indonesia in February.
Gateshead Quays conference centre slated for 2023 opening
ASM Global (a merger between SMG Europe and AEG Facilities) has been confirmed as the venue management provider for a new £260 million (US$341.5 million) arena, conference and exhibition centre on Gateshead Quays in England.
Set to open in 2023, the development includes a 12,500-pax arena; 6,300m2 of conference and exhibition space; two hotels, bars, restaurants and car park. Upon completion, it is estimated that up to 300,000 new visitors will be drawn into the region each year boosting the economy by up to £30 million annually.
Mandarin Oriental announces outpost in Dallas
Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group will be managing a luxury hotel, as well as branded residences, in Dallas, Texas, once it opens in 2022.
The new development will comprise a 25-storey mixed-use tower located in the Turtle Creek neighbourhood, close to the CBD.
Mandarin Oriental, Dallas will have 176 guestrooms and suites, four restaurants and bars including an all-day dining option, a lobby lounge, MO Bar and speciality restaurant. There will also be meeting and function facilities, alongside other recreational facilities include a spa, fitness centre and an outdoor swimming pool.
Rimini clinches environmental conference
The Palacongressi di Rimini in Italy has won the bid to host the 26th Conference of the European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE).
Held from June 22-25, 2021, the European scientific association will bring together 1,200 experts – the majority European – who are active in environmental, climate and resource economics. The agenda will include the circular economy, low carbon transport systems, and the decarbonisation of buildings.
The association’s 2019 European Conference was held in Manchester, in June, the 2018 edition in Gothenburg and the previous year in Athens. In 2020 it will be Berlin that hosts the event.
CWT has appointed Scott Hace as vice president, enterprise strategy, reporting to Julia Kou, senior vice president, enterprise strategy & corporate development.
Together with his team, Hace will partner with key leaders across the business to accelerate strategic projects around growth strategies, operational efficiencies, and competitive differentiation. Additionally, the enterprise strategy team works closely with CWT’s leadership team to define near and mid-term programme priorities while evaluating corporate development opportunities for CWT.
This is not Hace’s first foray with enterprise strategy, having joined the company as director of enterprise strategy in 2015. From there, he was promoted to senior director, global supply chain partners in 2017.
Prior to joining CWT, Hace spent 15 years doing consulting in the high-tech and communications industries with companies like Avaya, Comcast, Cognizant, and Accenture where he managed large IT transformations, and developed new sales and go-to-market strategies.
Designed by world-renowned architect Kengo Kuma, the former Osaka Shin-Kabukiza theatre has been transformed into Hotel Royal Classic Osaka which dangles luxurious stays and a selection of contemporary event venues.
The property incorporates the facade of the former Osaka Shin-Kabukiza theatre, while the interior is now a tranquil and elegant oasis for rest and recreation.
Hotel Royal Classic Osaka
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There are 150 rooms and suites spread across the 12th to 19th floors within (there is no 13th floor), with doubles starting from 25m², right up to the 78m² suites.
There are four F&B options on-site. On the ground floor is cafe-lounge Koagari, while on the second floor is Yura Yura buffet restaurant, which serves international cuisine, and is able to seat 106 diners.
The restaurant on the 11th floor restaurant welcomes only hotel guests for breakfast, and can seat 92.
Finally, the Kumo bar and lounge can be found on the rooftop, where it serves up panoramic views of the Namba district and its surrounds.
Events are welcomed at the Hotel Royal Classic Osaka, with five main function rooms spread across the third to ninth floors. With no more than one function room per floor, events and gatherings are promised privacy. Each venue can accommodate standing events with up to 400 guests, with the seventh, eighth, and ninth floors offering private terraces for outdoor parties. There is also a 60-pax sky banquet room Rui, plus five private 10-seat function rooms.
Brenda Tay is a guest services agent at Pan Pacific Singapore, where she performs her duties in the linen department
“I’ve been in the hospitality industry for 35 years and I know that people are the key to success in our business,” exhaled Wee Wei Ling, executive director of asset, lifestyle and corporate social responsibility at Singapore-headquartered Pan Pacific Hotels Group (PPHG), as she settled comfortably into her chair at the start of the interview.
While that may be a common corporate declaration, Wee and her team at PPHG have set strong examples in their investment in people.
Brenda Tay (right) is a guest services agent at Pan Pacific Singapore, where she performs her duties in the linen department
PPHG has been practising inclusive hiring on an ad hoc basis with special needs schools for several years before it embarked on SG Enable’s Project IN, a School-to-Work transition programme for persons with disabilities (PWD), in 2017. The company has since taken its participation in SG Enable further by developing a structured recruitment and training process for PWD.
Today, PPHG employs 16 PWD across its Singapore hotels and serviced suites, with another 12 undergoing training.
To ensure integration with its regular workforce, PPHG’s hotels redesign processes around its PWD hires and carve out routine and structured tasks that are better suited for these individuals. For example, PWD hires may focus on folding linens or tagging uniforms with RFID.
“They perform important roles too, as they are helping to relieve our regular staff to focus on the more complex or laborious jobs, or those that require customer interaction,” explained Wee.
PWD hires are given the opportunity for career progression. Citing an example, Wee said: “We have an employee who started out clearing tables during breakfast service when we have manpower shortage. Today, she is able to take orders for coffee and tea.”
So, how does inclusive hiring translate into investment in its people and business success?
A six-month study conducted by Elijah Wee, assistant professor of management at Foster School of Business, University of Washington, and involving over 1,000 employees across all organisational levels from PPHG’s corporate office and properties in Singapore, found that the company’s inclusive hiring policy over the years has yielded positive outcomes at the employee and organisational levels. This is especially so when the effort is accompanied by experiential and reflection activities which reframe disability as a strength and help employees make sense of the implication and meaning of the policy in their day-to-day work.
As a result, significantly higher levels of compassion, organisational pride and proactive customer service were observed, among other indicators. The research also showed that compassion is a strong predictor of the company’s financial performance.
“We think we are helping the needy, but in fact, we are benefitting far more from them,” remarked Wee.
“Through interactions with their special needs colleagues, our staff have become more like a family. They have become a lot more patient, and are more willing to help and watch out for one another,” she shared.
Having to design its work processes to accommodate PWD hires also “forced us to be innovative in our work system, looking at the usual process and finding a more efficient way to do the same old things”.
PPHG’s work in inclusive hiring has earned loyalty and improved retention among its younger generation of employees, who “rate their employers by how much they do for the society”, observed Wee.
PPHG’s investment in its people extends to its ageing workforce. The company has renovated back-of-house spaces, particularly in its older hotels, to include safety features such as handrails and non-slip tiles, reworked the job scope of its elderly staff, and moved them into roles with less physical responsibilities.
A yearly employment contract is also offered to staff who are past their legal retirement age, to provide option for continued employment for those who feel they are still able to work and want to.
“The new roles present opportunities (for our elderly staff) to learn new skills, while the opportunity for continued employment keep them active and allow them to feel they can still contribute to the company,” Wee remarked.
Having seen success in its inclusive hiring practices, PPHG is eager to encourage its business partners to do the same.
The company introduced its keycard holder supplier to the option of outsourcing some of its more repetitive jobs to people with autism, and even connected the company with the right organisation, set up meetings and facilitated the arrangement.
“We didn’t just make a recommendation and then took our hands off,” remarked Wee.
With the same objective in mind, PPHG also supports efforts to improve the employability of PWD through its work with adopted charity Extra.Ordinary People and Samsui Kitchen which runs a vocational training programme for final year students in special education schools.
As part of a fundraising campaign from September 25 to October 24, 2019, PPHG outsourced the making of three customised dim sum items that were supplied to and served at all its hotel dining outlets.
The pilot project provided special needs students with an opportunity to learn a real skill and prepare them for partial or full-time employment when they graduated in November.
PPHG’s inclusive hiring efforts tended to support students who were less likely to be employed after graduation, such as those with independence issues or have higher support needs.
“We select these students and place them (in our training courses) to help ease their transition. Instead of simply going home or be institutionalised (upon graduation), these children now have a chance at employment. It gives them dignity, and for their caregivers, hope,” she explained.
Understanding that hiring PWD is a long-term commitment that requires patience, PPHG spends six to nine months to settle a new hire in, and will redesignate the individual to another department or role should there be difficulties.
“We will keep trying, and we can afford to because in hotels, we have many departments and roles. We can keep moving the individual, say from stewarding to housekeeping, until he or she is happy,” said Wee.
Wee, who drives PPHG’s CSR work, dreams of setting up a school in Singapore that focuses on providing hospitality training to special needs children at an earlier age, so they can sooner discover what they are good at and have a better shot at employment when they graduate. Her dream may be fulfilled once inclusive hiring gets enough buy-in from other supportive employers who are willing to provide the right work environment.
PPHG’s active community work has motivated staff to do the same themselves.
“For example, we have staff who often provide ideas on how to further improve the work environment for their special needs colleagues, and what to do for homes throughout the year,” said Wee.
“I must say that while it is good to have CSR work starting from the ground up, deeper and wider assistance must come from the top. Companies must take the lead and be committed to do better and more useful things than just visiting homes or distributing goody bags during the festive season.”
Wee’s other passion is in the arts, and she drives PPHG’s support for local artists by purchasing and using their creations in the company’s properties around the world. PPHG has also produced a book that spotlights its regional local art collection as well as carved out an art gallery in the lobby of Parkroyal Beach Road Singapore for artists who need a platform to showcase their work.
“As a young girl, my father (Singaporean billionaire banker Wee Cho Yaw) told me that as his eldest daughter, I must have a big heart. Perhaps he has named me Wei Ling so that I will be willing (phonetically similar) to help,” she laughed.
European carriers avoiding Iraq and Iran. Photo credit: www.flightradar24.com
• More travel risk reports being run since the onset of US-Iran conflict
• Perceived safer airlines and air routes are favoured
• Duty of care priorities fuel continued demand for travel risk reporting
European carriers avoiding Iraq and Iran. Photo credit: www.flightradar24.com
Requests for corporate travel risk reports, alternative airlines and a preference for flights that avoid Middle Eastern airspace have spiked as Iran-US tensions mount, noted some corporate travel specialists.
Bertrand Saillet, managing director of FCM Travel Solutions Asia, told TTGmice that his company “observed a 100% increase in the amount of risk reports being run by clients, showing the need for greater insights into risk reporting” at the start of the US-Iran conflict.
Saillet said client concerns deepened after Kyiv-bound Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 was mistakenly shot down by Iranian missiles in early January, shortly after takeoff from Tehran Imam Khomeini International Airport.
“There has been some corporate queries for alternative carriers and re-routing of flights via alternative safer airspace. Some corporates are taking precautions and have revised their travel policies to prohibit travellers from booking with certain carriers. Many travellers have also been advised to increase their vigilance in at-risk areas, as well as monitor the advice and warnings from foreign government offices,” he elaborated.
For now, FCM is proactively working with clients to take a wide variety of precautions including delaying or cancelling trips to the Middle East, tweaking their policies to only allow travel on certain airlines, as well as trip monitoring, to ensure that those planning to enter the region are supported with additional risk training and information.
While Jo Sully, vice-president & regional general manager, American Express Global Business Travel, Australia & South Asia, refrained from commenting on the impact of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752’s shot-down on business travel sentiments, she said: “In past instances, companies have removed travel options for staff based upon their own risk assessments. These evaluations are common practice for businesses with frequent international travellers.”
Peter Koh, Asia strategic sourcing manager, Travel & Professional Services, Corning Singapore Holdings, shared that some of his travellers have asked not to fly with Middle Eastern carriers due to real or perceived travel risks.
“Beyond that, there hasn’t been a spike in travel risk enquiries by my travellers. This could be due to the regular travel risk alerts we provide (through our agency International SOS), so our travellers feel sufficiently confident and secure that they are taken care of,” opined Koh.
Confidence in proactive airlines, aviation authorities
Corning Singapore Holdings’ Koh suggested that quick precautionary measures taken by several commercial airlines could have also helped to calm frequent business travellers.
In the aftermath of the Ukrainian passenger jet incident, Singapore Airlines, Vietnam Airlines, Taiwan’s Eva Air, Malaysia Airlines and Australia’s Qantas announced flight route adjustments, diverting routes from Iranian and Iraqi airspace.
Singapore Airlines moved quickly to publish a travel advisory on its website on January 8, stating that “all Singapore Airlines flights to and from Europe have not been flying over the Iranian airspace since 6 January 2020”.
It explained that the “new routes do not significantly change flight times for these flights”, and emphasised that its flights have not operated over Iraqi airspace since 2012.
While the US Federal Aviation Administration and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency have issued their own restrictions and guidelines on airspace usage, Saillet noted that “not all commercial carriers have that choice (of change)”.
“Qatar Airways continues to operate over the airspace of Iran and Iraq due to its navigational limitations over neighbouring Gulf Arab states,” he said.
When asked if the Ukrainian passenger jet incident had made business travellers more aware and inquisitive of the routes their flights take, Koh said: “I have not seen my travellers asking to know what flight paths their airlines are taking. Frankly, there is little use of having such information on hand because the flight paths are determined by the aviation authorities and the airlines. We have to trust that these entities (make the right decisions on behalf of passengers) as they are a lot more aware of travel risks now in such a volatile world.”
Duty of care trumps
While ongoing political conflict around the world has fuelled greater concerns around travel risk, travel management company (TMC) chiefs say clients’ demand for travel risk reporting has also risen on the back of greater awareness around the need to provide duty of care for their travellers.
“Savings and efficiency may be the initial reason why many corporates engage a TMC but at the end of the day, the safety and well-being of the travellers matter just as much,” he said.
Sully agrees, saying: “During times of crisis, it is normal that concerns about business travel are heightened. But traveller safety should always be a company’s main priority. As business travel experts, TMCs work with businesses to achieve that goal with technology and robust travel policies.
Ultimately, travel decisions, such as what airline or aircraft type employees can use, is taken by the company. Safety almost without exception trumps price.”
Singapore Expo and Max Atria, operated by SingEx Venues, unveiled a refreshed brand, as well as a host of new facilities and services, during the Expo 2.0 Launch Festival last Thursday.
Themed Your Community EXPOrience, the event was attended by some 1,000 guests from the MICE sector. New offerings include FleX, a modular breakout room solution; ApeX, a plug-and-play high-tech plenary hall; and Xpert, an in-house event planning service.
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ApeX, the plug-and-play plenary hall
Aloysius Arlando, SingEx Holdings' CEO
BEAT'ABOX group performing in front of the 54m-long screen
FleX modular spaces
FleX open-stage concept
FleX modular spaces
Digital MICE Community Wall
Sustainable barramundi dishes
FleX is a collection of sustainable and acoustically treated ‘building block’ spaces that can adopt different themes, and be configured with different layouts to suit a customer’s requirements. FleX is designed to accommodate the growth of hybrid events where versatile meeting and conference spaces and break-out and entertainment areas are required alongside exhibitions.
Complementing the modular meeting village is ApeX, a plug-and-play high-tech plenary hall that integrates experiential and digital components. Featuring telescopic seating and a stage with a 54m by 5m configurable screen suitable for opening events and major presentations, ApeX can be utilised concurrently with FleX, other halls at the venue, or the 32 meeting rooms should organisers wish to hold conferences and conventions alongside exhibitions and break-out meetings.
Meanwhile, through Xpert, new customers to the events space will be able to access to a team of experienced planners. Some recent events that took advantage of the Xpert service include the Singapore Health & Biomedical Congress 2019, ESTRO meets Asia 2019, public events for former US president Barack Obama and former first lady of the US Michelle Obama, and the upcoming Alzheimer’s Disease International Conference 2020.
As part of Xpert, exhibitors will also have access to a new online portal, the Exhibitor Service Centre, which allows them to conveniently book a range of services online, from booth set-ups to F&B and technology services.
The venue’s F&B offerings have also been given an upgrade. New elements comprise the Kinetic Kitchen, the central production kitchen with research and development (R&D) capabilities; K2, a private dining room where VVIPs and special guests can partake in bespoke meals; and one77°, a bistro café showcasing fusion Singaporean cuisine. F&B Colony, an urban food hall showcasing some of Singapore’s ‘hawkerpreneurs’ and F&B concepts, is also set to open later this year.
Singapore Expo and Max Atria has also made a commitment to source ingredients from local farms and suppliers, as well as employ a farm-to-table approach to its food. Some of the sustainable ingredients sourced from local suppliers include homegrown barramundi farmed in the waters of Singapore’s south coast from Kühlbarra; locally-produced soft-shell crab from Crab Lovers Farm; and vegetables from Veggie Life, grown at Singapore’s first indoor vegetable farm.
This entire refresh comes on the back of SingEx Venues’ successful tender bid in November 2018 to continue operating Singapore’s largest MICE venue for up to 10 years.
Aloysius Arlando, CEO of SingEx Holdings, said in a statement: “We are tremendously excited to introduce these new offerings as we believe that they are imperative to us creating multi-sensorial experiences for future communities and bringing Singapore Expo and Max Atria to new heights. This refreshed version of the venue is going to profile Singapore as a true leading, progressive MICE destination.”
Xiamen will be hosting the next ICCA AP Summit; Xiamen Shimao towers dominate the city landscape
The second edition of ICCA Asia Pacific Summit 2020 will be held in Xiamen, China, on July 23 and 24 this year, said the association in a press release yesterday.
The event will see ICCA Asia Pacific Chapter – the largest chapter in ICCA’s global membership with nearly 300 members – enabling Xiamen to showcase its local expertise to international attendees to encourage collaboration, innovation and business exchange. In turn, Asia-Pacific delegates will be provided with opportunities to advance their knowledge from networking and exchanging views from their industry peers.
Xiamen will be hosting the next ICCA AP Summit; Xiamen Shimao towers dominate the city landscape
As one of China’s four special economic zones opened in 1980, Xiamen has long been an important hub city open to foreign trade. She is the host city of the ninth BRICS Summit and many other international events.
Jeoven Wong, director general of Xiamen Municipal Bureau of Convention & Exhibition Affairs, said in a statement: “I am delighted that ICCA Asia Pacific has chosen Xiamen as the host city for the next Annual Summit so that we can showcase Xiamen – a garden city which is one of China’s top ten cities suitable for human inhabitation featuring her high development in culture, education, economic prosperity and picturesque scenery.”
The ICCA Asia Pacific Chapter Summit was started in 2019 with its inaugural edition held in Penang, Malaysia.
A polished urban retreat designed for business travellers, Hyatt Regency Kuala Lumpur at KL Midtown combines thoughtful design, seamless service, and exceptional facilities.
The five-star property excels in backing its expansive facilities with seamless service and personalised attention, setting the benchmark for luxury in Bangkok.