Asia/Singapore Friday, 3rd April 2026
Page 577

Capella Singapore welcomes Sherona Lau as EAM sales marketing

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Capella Singapore has named Sherona Lau as executive assistant manager, sales and marketing.

She brings over 20 years of global industry experience to the luxury property on Sentosa island.

Prior to joining Capella, Lau served as vice president and partner at Shanghai Yu Ji Hospitality Consulting Company, where she advised luxury hospitality companies on their practices.

Hailing from Hong Kong, Lau began her career as a management trainee at the Yinhe Dynasty Intercontinental Hotel in China before joining The Peninsula Hotels for 13 years, holding various positions in sales and marketing at the regional office, The Peninsula Bangkok and in flagship hotel The Peninsula Hong Kong. She has also cut her teeth with other luxury brands such as The Ritz-Carlton and Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group.

Her international sales and marketing experience was gained through stints in North America, Europe and Asia, where she actively participated in the resort, luxury and business segments.

New e-teambuilding concepts on the uptake in Asia-Pacific

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A crop of new teambuilding formats held online has begun to flourish as companies in Asia-Pacific adjust to telecommuting and scramble for new ways to connect their local, regional and global employees.

These innovative concepts include online team karaoke, virtual reality (VR) challenges, and virtual scavenger hunts, which are seeing increasing take-up in Asia-Pacific as more companies in the region have been forced to close their physical premises.

For instance, Wildfire Entertainment has branched out from its initial corporate event entertainment services to launch Lockdown Karaoke, an activity where employees can harmonise on a ‘live’ virtual performance, which will then be produced into a music video.

The concept is a spin-off from another product by Wildfire Entertainment and Musicland, Many Voices One Team, typically offered for three-day conferences featuring a recording booth and a final music video at the conference’s close.

Chelsea Curto, business director at Wildfire Entertainment, shared: “Our long-time friends at Usana Health Science Services have started the process with us. In lieu of entertainment at their event in South Korea in May – which was cancelled – Lockdown Karaoke will feature heavily in their virtual replacement event.

“We are working with a bank in Singapore to produce a video and ‘live’ virtual event in May, while several clients in Australia are in talks to put something together at the end of April. It seems that this is an idea that resonates with people.”

Debuted when global travel restrictions were first announced was Asia Ability’s cross-border VR teambuilding concept The Infinite Loop+, in which a company’s teams in Singapore and New Zealand collaborated on a VR puzzle by communicating via video conferencing.

“The communication issues and challenges highlighted by the activity were incredibly relevant and valuable to this client. (They saw) the need to break the silo and inertia, the need to reach out to initiate collaboration, and the value of frequently ‘checking in’ on partners,” shared David Fotheringham, director of Asia Ability.

As offices shift to telecommuting, Asia Ability’s programmes are “now geared at completely remote work settings, with participants joining in from their home workspace”, he described.

The first of such programmes launched in Singapore is Go Remote, an app-based platform that gives participants a collection of active and creative challenges conducted in and around their working spaces. One new challenge is titled Race Around the World, where breakout teams must guide their explorers on a virtual journey across the world, spending travel tokens and earning enjoyment tokens along the way. It is paired with teleconferencing breakout sessions that encourage team interactions and a facilitated review after the session.

Fotheringham noted: “We have been approached for remote events by a number of clients from telecommunications to banking to medical, and their objectives are strikingly similar – bringing teams together in this time of crisis.

“On top of the anxiety and discomfort caused by pandemic, the move to remote working arrangements has created instant upheaval in the workforce and our clients hope to calm nerves, strengthen relationships and build resilience in the new work dynamic.”

Curto chimed in: “It is a new idea and our clients are really only just coming to terms with the ‘new normal’ in light of the pandemic and the ways it has changed the MICE industry. This is an incredibly stressful time, but having the opportunity to relax, laugh and sing is important.

“Our clients are hoping that Lockdown Karaoke will bring their teams together and lift their spirits amid the stress of working from home and uncertainty around the virus.”

The need for virtual connection during this time will force companies to innovate and open up to new forms of technology, pushing the industry forward in the long term, said both Fotheringham and Curto.

They concurred that in the future, more companies with regional and global offices may be inclined to hold virtual conferences more often in lieu of flying. However, employees will still have the “huge need to physically connect with each other” especially once the pandemic is under control, opined Fotheringham.

“We may get better at sharing our reports though video calls, but we will still want to be together to build our relationships. Some experiences are most definitely best shared and felt in person,” he remarked.

In the meantime, Asia Ability is working with its Catalyst Global teambuilding partners on more virtual events, such as remote wellness activities, strategic business and a computer-based version of The Infinite Loop without a need for VR headsets. The company is offering a free trial in April to selected clients.

Meanwhile, Wildfire Entertainment hopes to expand its Lockdown Arts Line to include a dance version and a theatrical version, as well as exploring a make-at-home and educational workshop version of its LuMen act product, where participants can code and choreograph a dance in their own customisable luminous costumes.

CINZ unveils post-recovery plan for MICE Industry

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Be Reconnected will emphasis will be on conversation and relationship building versus an expansive programme and exhibition floor.

New Zealand’s business events industry association, CINZ is looking towards post-Covid-19 recovery by launching a new event, BE Reconnected, to be held at the end of this year.

BE Reconnected will focus on reengaging and reconnecting vital industry relationships to help kickstart business recovery. It aims to maximise time with customers, and emphasis will be on conversation and relationship building versus an expansive programme and exhibition floor.

Be Reconnected will emphasise on conversation and relationship building 

To be hosted at Vodafone Events Centre in Auckland on December 1, BE Reconnected will replace this year’s multi-day MEETINGS exhibition which was supposed to be held in April. The CINZ 2020 Conference and Annual General Meeting will follow on December 2.

CINZ chief executive, Lisa Hopkins, shared that New Zealand’s business events industry – which was valued at around NZ$500 million (US$294.6 million) per year – has suffered immense losses and must be given every opportunity to recover.

“We have been looking at different ways to reconnect our members with customers, channels and each other, as part of the industry’s overall business recovery strategy.

“BE Reconnected will be a vital step in helping to secure business leads and super-charging the sector’s recovery. We want to engage buyers in multiple face-to-face opportunities over a short time, building new relationships and rekindling old ones,” she said.

At the start of 2020, New Zealand was on the cusp of enormous business tourism growth with the opening of new conference venues, four and five-star hotels, national infrastructure, expanded airlines routes and new attractions. Instead, for many, there has been no business or revenue.

“As a key economic driver for our country, it is our organisation’s responsibility to plan and prepare for the recovery, for the sake of our clients, employees, community, regions and the industry.

“Our plan is to show both domestic and international clients that we are stronger, more passionate and more committed than ever to reconnect our customers with the incredible destinations, experiences and people of New Zealand, when a handshake, a hongi or a hug is no longer prohibited,” Hopkins concluded.

Singapore Expo to house recovering Covid-19 patients

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Singapore Expo is being prepped to house Covid-19 patients

The Singapore Expo Convention Hall and Exhibition Centre is currently being turned into a facility to care for recovering Covid-19 patients who are on the road to recovery, Singapore’s health minister Gan Kim Yong has confirmed.

According to TODAY, Gan was responding to a question related to the matter during a press conference held by the Covid-19 multi-ministry task force on April 5.

Singapore Expo is being prepped to house Covid-19 patients

Once completed, it will join D’Resort NTUC in Pasir Ris as the second such “community care” facility. Patients who have mild symptoms may be sent to the community care facilities to be monitored, and will only be sent to hospitals if necessary.

Although Gan did not give a timeline of when the community care facility at Singapore Expo will be ready, or how many patients it will be able to house, he said the authorities are “preparing it for this purpose”.

A spokesperson from the Singapore Expo told TODAY that this is “the first time in its history that the venue is being repurposed”.

Alvin Lim, the executive director of brand and customer experience at venue operator SingEx Holdings, said to prepare for this, the Singapore Expo and the Max Atria convention wing will be closed to the public from Tuesday.

Lim added that the Expo will also be implementing “strict entry and work infection control measures and precautions”.

All in it together

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These are very challenging times for the business events sector. In Australia, lockdown restrictions have just seen ICC Sydney shut its doors to the public. How would you describe the impact recent events have had on the venue?
Along with the rest of the industry – not just in Australia but all around the world – the impact has been catastrophic. We’ve never faced a set of conditions like this of what is now a pandemic combined with a serious economic downturn. Its management has been virtually not a day-by-day but an hour-by-hour basis, and our federal and state governments have been announcing new policies and new procedures. We’re just waiting to see what the next status change for the Australian and Sydney communities is.

Financially we have no events or revenue. That cannot be overestimated. At this stage, we are retaining our full-time staff but we obviously have no ability to roster or pay casual staff, so they’ve had to fall back on the safety net provisions that the federal government has put in place but those systems are sort of clogged and almost overloaded. We would expect that to be addressed over the coming days but at this stage and stressing at this stage only, we’re retaining our full-time staff while winding down things like (annual) leave and leave loading.

These meetings could also be using any tech company to meet their current needs and many are using webinars services. What benefit would meetings gain from meeting virtually through a convention centre like ICC Sydney?
There are many service providers and apps like FaceTime or Zoom. But what we’re providing is a full studio-quality where we can record messages and also service live messages from remote locations which can be re-transmitted as well. It’s just part of the mix of the solutions available to clients.

You’re also group director of ASM Global (Asia Pacific) which operates seven convention centres. Are they in a similar position where they can retain full-time staff?
No, each situation is different and depends on the structure of their ownership arrangements as well, both within our network and across other Australian venues. We’re endeavouring to take a collective industry group approach to the federal government through our peak body Business Events Council of Australia and we’re getting a very good hearing there in terms of being part of the recovery programme, as well as addressing issues like keeping staff that have been made unemployed.

Are you hearing of job losses within convention centres around Australia?
Absolutely. Everyone is different as I stressed. Some have had to let their full-time staff go, some have reduced staff hours. Everyone has a different financial structure and a different contractual structure with their ownership regimes.

You’ve nevertheless been able to use technology to still serve some clients who are happy to meet remotely. What size are these meetings and how are they being conducted?
In the very early stages, some of the larger events decided they didn’t want to travel even before travel bans started. A small number of those then looked at providing online, broadcast and telecast facilities to still get their agendas out to their audiences. Salesforce was one of those, for example, but what we’ve done in the meantime is set up virtual AV studios in one or two of our meeting rooms to provide that facility. We’ve had a number (of clients) that have taken us up on that and a few more that are interested, but that’s really just more as a fallback service. We don’t see that as a financial income stream.

In the meantime, it is difficult to be optimistic when we’re hearing about tourism businesses closing and many staff layoffs. How are you trying to keep morale up?
Morale would be at an all-time low, obviously. I mean people are suffering to extents that our community and communities around the world have never experienced before, certainly not in living memory. So really, the only effective and long-term strategy is to keep communicating with people, providing information on support services to our teams, counselling services, financial advice services, where to go to access either government support programmes or even charity programmes. And when we start to recover and can begin to re-employ, to keep them well-advised in advance.

In Australia, the lockdown could go on for six months. What impact or consequences do you see for the industry?
Part of the uncertainty at the moment is that the formal notice for events that can’t be held is actually issued under state government jurisdiction and in ICC Sydney’s case, that advice has been to (shut) through end June. But the prime minister’s statements in a general sense have said that these conditions could continue for up to six months. So the formal advice is three months but I think, to be perfectly honest, the answer is probably closer to six months.

Even when the lockdowns are lifted, there may be a fear of people going back to the norms for awhile. Is that something you’re preparing for, or do you believe there will be pent-up demand?
Probably both factors will apply. We are already starting to exercise our minds and develop our recovery programme, and other things we need to do once this ends. And these things do end, I think we need to stress that. So when there’s a clear end in sight, we will have a time and costed recovery programme with a whole range of initiatives and activities ready to go, probably from four to six weeks out.

But there will be some reticence for people to travel. There will be some inability because of the enormous financial and economic toll that this will take, but there will also be pent-up demand and a desire in associations and corporations to get their audiences together to meet face-to-face as well. I will be endeavouring to assist with that process as much as we can.

The federal government has announced A$83 billion (US$50 billion) in two stimulus packages, and I believe we are expecting more. How positive are you that the sector will get the help that you’re calling for?
We’re getting very well heard within government circles and the federal tourism department. So again, we’re very, very comfortable with the relationships and the response that we’re getting. The government is limited to the fact that it’s got to support all business sectors, and you know it has a relative limit on those funds that they can apply as well.

But we’re quite satisfied with what’s been put in place so far although more will be needed and some will need to be invested in the recovery programmes.

Editor’s note: Since this interview was conducted, the Australian government has announced a third stimulus package, adding a further A$130 billion to support employment conditions.

It looks like the road ahead will be long. How long do you think it’ll take for the industry to recover?
I wouldn’t even begin to guess that. I think as the rate of infection plateaus, declines and then finally stops, and we’re watching that very closely, we will have a better idea of how we then sort of superimpose our recovery programmes and recovery timetable on that. But we’ll be feeling the effects of this well into next year, obviously.

However, business events is one very good opportunity for governments to get the economy flying again because what comes into convention centres and venues is also shared across hotels, restaurants, retail, shopping, tours, and all the other aspects that make up a convention package and a delegate’s experience. I believe we’ve got a good understanding within the government that getting business events back has got a multiplier impact across the community and economy.

Finally, if there was a message you could give to the business events sector at the moment, what would that be?
To stay strong, to support people to the extent we can even if it is only with information about all the (support) services available and referrals to those services, and also to be ready to be part of the recovery programme when this terrible epidemic and pandemic finishes, as they inevitably do.

Oakwood opens third property in Jakarta

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Oakwood Apartments PIK Jakarta has opened its doors in the Pantai Indah Kapuk (PIK) neighbourhood, northern Jakarta. This marks Oakwood’s third property in the current Indonesian capital, and the first service apartment under an international brand to open in PIK.

Featuring 151 fully-furnished studio to three-bedroom apartments with unobstructed city and ocean views, the serviced residence is located within a 15 minutes’ drive from the Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

Guests who prefer to whip up meals in their apartments can opt for the two- and three-bedroom apartments, which come with wet and dry kitchens. Meanwhile, other apartments feature either a kitchenette or an open-plan kitchen.

In addition, all apartments from the one-bedroom deluxe tier onward feature a separate living and dining space, with the larger ones featuring more spacious areas, suitable for private dinners.

All apartments are also furnished with Nepresso coffee machines, at least one washing and drying machine, as well as complimentary Wi-Fi.

Facilities include indoor and outdoor swimming pools, a kids’ swimming pool and playground, a fitness centre, the Oakwood Restaurant, and meeting rooms.

Oakwood hires first female regional GM for Cambodia, Myanmar and Thailand

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Oakwood has promoted Lina Abdullah to the role of regional general manager, Cambodia, Myanmar and Thailand.

This dual-role is in addition to her current position as general manager of Oakwood Hotel & Residence Sri Racha in Chonburi, Thailand.

In her new capacity, Abdullah will oversee a cluster of six operating properties in Thailand, as well as pre-opening projects in Cambodia and Myanmar, while maintaining the growth of Oakwood’s portfolio in these countries.

Abdullah began her Oakwood journey in March 2015, where she was tasked to manage the former Oakwood Residence Garden Towers Bangna, Bangkok, with her remit including the Bangna Convention Center and Food Camp by Oakwood. She went on to open Oakwood Hotel & Residence Sri Racha in 2017.

Prior to joining Oakwood, Abdullah was with Onyx Hospitality Group where she was the general manager responsible for opening the Amari Dhaka in Bangladesh in 2014.

She first began her hospitality career with an eight-year tenure at Marriott properties in Malaysia and the UK. While in the UK, she joined Thistle City Barbican in London as hotel manager before being promoted to acting general manager. Abdullah accepted her first general manager role at Holiday Inn Northampton West in Northampton, before venturing to the Middle East to open the Holiday Villa in Bahrain in the same capacity.

Shikoku awakens

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A sleepy mountainous island south of Hiroshima, Shikoku is looking to the upcoming Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games in May to bring in a stream of events and meetings, with its tourism board and stakeholders gearing up to raise awareness of the island’s many charms.

This comes as the nearing Games are expected to drive up crowd density and hotel prices in Tokyo, a concern that may potentially turn business away from Japan altogether, expressed Tadashi Kaneko, executive vice president, Japan National Tourism Organisation (JNTO).

Kikugetsu Tei teahouse in Ritsurin Garden

To mitigate this impact, JNTO is focusing on promoting local gems in outlying regions through a 100 Experiences in Japan book. One of such hidden destinations is Shikoku, which comprises four prefectures: Ehime, Kochi, Kagawa and Tokushima.

Rolling out the welcome mat
Kagawa Prefecture’s Takamatsu is one of Shikoku’s main cities that have carved out space for hosting business events and exhibitions.

Located along the Seto Inland Sea, Takamatsu has come to be known for its maritime transportation industry. The city offers planners the Sunport Takamatsu convention centre, which houses a main hall with 1,500 seats, two small halls, 12 meeting rooms, as well as an exhibition space. Recent notable events held here include the 27th National Ambulance-crew Symposium in January 2019 for more than 6,000 pax; the 2018 joint 14th iCACGP Symposium and 15th IGAC Science Conference; and the G7 ICT Ministers’ Meeting in 2016.

Conventional venues are not the only locations of interest in Takamatsu, as the city is populated with historical and cultural facilities available for event use. These include Hiunkaku, the second house of the 12th feudal lord of Takamatsu; outdoor museum and Kabuki theatre Shikoku-Mura at the foot of Mt Yashima; and the scenic Ritsurin Garden, where the conserved Sanuki Guest House and Kikugetsu-tei Teahouse are available for conference and meeting bookings.

The Sanuki Guest House, also known as the Commerce and Industry Promotion Hall, hosted the G7 Summit’s luncheon.

Kagawa Prefectural Government and the Takamatsu City Convention and Visitors Bureau provides financial assistance worth up to 10,000,000 yen (US$91,108) to support incoming conventions and other events.

Kagawa International Hall, the main venue of the G7 ICT Ministers’ Meeting in Takamatsu, Kagawa

A good mix of business and leisure
Meanwhile, the city of Kochi is hoping to leverage its strength as a holiday destination to build up its business event appeal.

Taichiro Oogi, staff, department of inbound tourism, Kochi Visitors & Convention Association, lamented: “We do not have enough facilities, and we have not had any big and international business events yet. Kochi has always been a leisure destination.”

However, Kochi’s leisure appeal makes it ideal as a pre- and post-event destination for corporate groups. Kochi Visitors & Convention Association has collaborated with Singapore-based ABCDE Fitness on a marathoner package that includes flights, accommodation at the new Mont Bell Mountain Lodge, warm-up sessions with a local running group, passes for the Kochi Ryoma Marathon in February 2020, private tours and workshops, and a dinner party with local residents.

Such creative collaborations are essential to attract visitors today, opined Takanori Asai, deputy director, Kochi Representative Office in Singapore.

He expressed: “It has become really hard to promote a destination through traditional means, so we’ve had to come up with new ways to promote Kochi.”

In addition, Taichiro believes that the city would require more promotional efforts and information exchange on the business events front, as well as venue development, before it is able to truly flourish as a business destination.

Thriving connections
Travel to Shikoku is set to become even more accessible, with China Airlines’ flights between Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport and Takamatsu Airport recently coming online, and a new highway connecting Kochi Regional Airport and Kochi City currently being constructed.

Meanwhile, for companies with a more relaxed travel policy, or corporate travellers who wish to extend their stay in Japan, one option is a programme offered by All Nippon Airways (ANA) and Japanese accommodation provider Address. For a flat monthly fee, this partnership offers applicants unlimited nights in Address properties, which are refurbished homes across Japan, as well as two sets of discounted ANA domestic flight tickets every month.

MACEOS urges government to utilise tourism funds to prop up MICE industry

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Lim: Malaysian government needs to financially help small- and mid-sized event companies to avoid them going belly up

The Malaysian Association of Convention and Exhibition Organisers and Suppliers (MACEOS) has called on the government for assistance to save the business events industry from going under by making use of two separate funds – the tourism tax fund, and the money set aside for Visit Malaysia 2020 campaign.

As the Visit Malaysia Year 2020 campaign has been deferred, the more than RM2 billion (US$458.2 million) fund meant for the campaign should be reallocated to save the business events industry and help it avoid retrenchments, MACEOS’ president, Vincent Lim, said.

Lim: Malaysian government needs to financially help small- and mid-sized event companies to avoid them going belly up

Currently, Malaysia’s business events industry is reporting RM1.5 billion in losses due to event cancellations and postponements due to Covid-19, Lim shared.

And based on a recent survey by MACEOS, at least 32 per cent of small- and medium-sized enterprises in the business events sector will be forced to wind up if the pandemic stretches beyond June.

“This will have a multiplier effect on the country’s economy if intervention is still not forthcoming despite two stimulus packages. By May or June, another 21 per cent of the business event organisers and related companies will wind up,” stressed Lim in a press statement.

In the worst-case scenario, the survey also showed that only 12 per cent of the companies in the sector will be able to survive beyond six months.

In addition, MACEOS recently submitted its proposal to the Malaysia Convention & Exhibition Bureau (MyCEB), outlining a number of areas that the government could do to assist the industry to recover.

It proposed that the government cover 75 per cent of workforce salaries and waive an employer’s contribution to the Employees Provident Fund for six months – effective April 1 – and to subsidise exhibition venues in the wake of 2020’s postponement or cancellations.

MACEOS has also requested for a special grant through MyCEB to support local SMEs to bid for more international events to be hosted in Malaysia, and to provide an incentive of RM6,000 per DMC to stimulate more corporate events and encourage incentive group travel to second-tier cities after the dust has settled. The association also called for the establishment of an incubation programme to assist homegrown trade exhibitions, conferences and lifestyle events.

If Covid-19 cannot be contained by April 14, the supposed end-date for Malaysia’s Movement Control Order (MCO), industry stakeholders fear the impact will be even more pronounced.

For example, Jay Ishak, event specialist, trainer and consultant at 6E-Events, shared that a number of teambuilding events and corporate annual dinners have had to be postponed indefinitely which resulted in a delay in payments.

She lamented: “My main worry now is cash flow. We are not generating any income during the MCO, yet there are staff salaries and fixed monthly expenses to pay.”

Eric van Piggelen, CEO, Borneo Convention Centre Kuching, shared that the compulsory closing of the centre due to the MCO resulted in 15 events being either cancelled or postponed. He suggested the government should also consider introducing a job retention scheme and an increase in domestic spending to assist recovery.

137 Pillars names Anne Arrowsmith corporate GM

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Anne Arrowsmith has been promoted to corporate general manager for 137 Pillars Hotels & Resorts, which owns and manages two luxury properties in Thailand.

In her new role, Arrowsmith will oversee all aspects of operations for both 137 Pillars Suites & Residences Bangkok and 137 Pillars House, reporting directly to the owners and working with them on several potential new properties that are currently under development.

The British national joined the group in 2016 as general manager at the luxury all-suite 137 Pillars House Chiang Mai, which opened in March 2012 and was refurbished in 2019.

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