Asia Pacific Incentives and Meetings Event (AIME) has unveiled the Associations Round Table – an industry-first initiative, designed specifically for associations attending the 2020 event.
The Associations Round Table is an invitation-only event connecting C-suite executives from over 40 organisations across the globe. Sessions will include discussions, debates and workshops – to create new community and business models that drive association innovation.
Knowledge Exchange 2020 will focus on the fundamentals of relationship building; a speaker at Knowledge Exchange 2019 pictured
In collaboration with Melbourne Convention Bureau, the Associations Round Table will be held over half a day at the 2020 Knowledge Program.
Jay Martens, event director of Talk2 Media and Events, said in a statement: “Traditionally, associations worked independently, focused exclusively on member’s needs. Today, they face common challenges that unite them all. We want them to leave AIME with models that can be applied to their associations in their regions.”
AIME will be held at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre from February 17-19, 2020.
Come 2021, the Darwin Convention Centre will be welcoming members of the International Society for the Study of Iron in Biology and Medicine (BioIron Society) to the Australian city.
The Darwin Convention Centre worked in close collaboration with Northern Territory Business Events to secure the event, trumping other international cities bidding for the opportunity to host more than 300 international delegates.
Darwin’s waterfront precinct
Darwin Convention Centre’s general manager, Peter Savoff, called the win “vital to tourism” as it proves the region’s ability to host international conferences, while helping to promote research and advance public education in this field.
Northern Territory Government’s minister for Tourism, Sport and Culture, Lauren Moss welcomed the announcement of the successful bid, and said in a statement: “The Northern Territory Government is proud to support business events like this which generate significant economic benefit for the region.”
Nathan Subramaniam, Australian board member of the BioIron Society, said the congress will be an opportunity for delegates to have a truly authentic Australian experience.
“The Congress will provide delegates from all around the world the opportunity to experience the Top End of Australia while meeting in world class facilities to present and discuss the latest research in this field,” added Subramaniam.
Tarsus births Egypt division and housewares tradeshow Tarsus Group has joined forces with Amr Shawki, a leading figure in the Egyptian exhibition industry and chairman of local organiser Egytec Partnership, to launched Tarsus Egypt.
The new Tarsus division will create a new B2B events platform for local and international customers who are keen to access the dynamic Egyptian and North African markets.
The first event to be delivered by Tarsus Egypt will be Zuchex Cairo, a replica of Zuchex Housewares and Kitchenware Fair Istanbul, the leading trade housewares buying exhibition in Eurasia.
According to the organiser, Zuchex Cairo will adopt a new format and be held at the Cairo International Convention Centre from November 11-13, 2020.
As the first event of its kind in the region, Zuchex Cairo will see 150 exhibitors from Egypt, Africa, Turkey and Asia taking over 3,400m2 of showfloor. They will meet with over 5,000 professional buyers.
BCD M&E acquires Chicago-based L37 Creative BCD Meetings & Events (BCD M&E) has acquired L37 Creative, an event production and creative media agency headquartered in Chicago, to strengthen its US event solutions offering and enhance its global creative and engagement services.
BCD M&E will welcome employees in San Diego, Las Vegas, Chicago and New York, and customers can expect expanded services including full-service creative production, media content development, name entertainment (MC and speakers), audiovisual and more.
Scott Graf, BCD M&E global president, said: “This acquisition enhances our robust creative and engagement offering with in-house production to give our customers agency-level services backed by the power of BCD M&E.”
“This partnership isn’t new,” said Christine Erickson, senior vice president, U.S. Event Solutions and Sports at BCD M&E. “Our teams have been working together as strategic partners for 15 years, servicing customers seamlessly. This acquisition only streamlines that service so we can continue supporting customers focused on their attendee experiences across the end-to-end attendee journey.”
This is the latest in a line of strategic acquisitions for BCD M&E to diversify its business and round out its service offering.
Yotel checks into Edinburgh Europe has scored its first Yotel opening with a property on Edinburgh’s Queen Street, close to the city’s world-famous historic hotspots and the charming neighbourhood of Stockbridge.
Like its minimalistic and high-tech sisters in cities such as New York, Boston, San Francisco and Singapore, Yotel Edinburgh will target tech-savvy travellers who favour a fuss-free stay with its innovative style of hospitality and technology driven experiences.
The hotel offers 276 rooms, each equipped with signature Yotel features such as the space-saving adjustable SmartBed with Serta Gel mattresses, amenities from Urban Skincare, rain showers, multiple power and USB charging ports, free Wi-Fi, HD Smart TVs with Chromecast and more.
Amenities on-site include the KOMYUNITI bar with its programme of curated events from comedy nights to local live bands; KOHI cafe; and also Imaginex, a state-of-the-art, 360-degree projection space for film screenings, social events, product launches and meetings. There are also airline-style self-service kiosks, a 24/7 gym and two interconnecting creative meeting spaces equipped with modern audio-visual technology.
Centara Hotels & Resorts has opened the Centara Ao Nang Beach Resort & Spa Krabi, a brand-new upscale resort and the first branded beachfront property in Ao Nang, Krabi.
Centara Ao Nang Beach Resort & Spa Krabi
1 of 3
There are 179 rooms and suites on offer here, ranging from 39m2 to 81m2. Regardless of option, guests will be able to enjoy modern amenities such as including Smart TVs and complimentary Wi-Fi. Pool Access Rooms allow guests to step straight into the resort’s outdoor pool from a private terrace, while others feature private plunge pools. There are also Family Residences, which come equipped with bunk beds and kitchenettes.
For events, the hotel provides a 292m2 meeting room and pre-function area. Guests can enjoy a lagoon-style pool, spa, fitness centre, and kids’ club, as well as four F&B venues on-site.
Sangha Retreat by Octave Institute has promoted Eddy Ram to managing director of hospitality and The Village operations.
His promotion from general manager of Sangha Retreat to managing director involves overseeing At One Suites; At One Villas; Thought For Food Restaurant; and The Village, a live-work-learn community with spaces for communal learning, executive retreats, conferences, summits and festivals including Thought For Food Market, The Sanctuary meditative space, Fellow Traveller group learning space, and Sangha Residence apartment suites.
Prior to joining Sangha Retreat, Ram was vice president hotel operations at Imperial Pacific International. In total, he brings more than 28 years of international experience in the hospitality, aviation, wellness, and entertainment industries to the table.
Other positions he has held include chief operating officer at GWH-Mayar Group; assistant vice president and F&B manager at Resorts World Genting; director of F&B at Island Hideaway Spa Resort and Marina; commercial director at First Cambodia Airlines; and director of sales and marketing cum director of F&B at Sunway Hotel Phnom Penh.
Hertz Global Holdings has appointed Angela Brav as president of Hertz’s international division.
Most recently the CEO of InterContinental Hotels Group’s (IHG) European region, Brav has 25 years of executive experience with IHG in multiple operational and strategic roles in the US and Europe.
She is based at the car rental company’s international headquarters near London, and will report to Hertz’s president & CEO Kathryn Marinello.
With events management degrees and diplomas being scant in South-east Asia – often just a module in hospitality and tourism courses – planning and collective action by the industry may help address the talent crunch.
The MICE Capabilities Department of Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau (TCEB) collaborates with industry partners and academia. “The MICE Academy Pillar focuses on university students and faculty to build the groundwork of excellence and capabilities of future MICE leaders,” explained Orachorn Wongpan-ngam, the department’s director.
Orachorn Wongpan-ngam
The MICE curriculum is offered in 117 Thai educational institutions. Its international focus features all four areas plus events, and discusses global trends and best practices.
“MICE Student Chapters enable students to work with leading MICE companies, get training, obtain a scholarship or join a Youth Challenge, which is an opportunity to develop outstanding ideas for the industry,” Orachorn added.
Many participants join the industry upon graduation. TCEB isn’t perturbed if they don’t, or only stay a while. “Our investment isn’t lost since they could use their knowledge to evince multiplier effects within different sectors, which will return to MICE and the country as a whole,” opined Orachorn.
IMPACT Exhibition Management runs a certificate course with three Thai universities. Each year, some 40 to 60 students do two-month stints in operations, exhibition projects, sales, F&B or corporate communications at the convention and exhibition centre.
Thamita Chongswatvorakul, IMPACT’s director of human resources, said: “We make sure students get the best possible experience while completing their internship. They participate in various projects, supervised by senior executives and managers, and acquire valuable, real-world experience.
“Interns gain significant advantages that help them outshine other job candidates. After their learning-by-doing experience, we hope to welcome them to the fold upon graduation.”
Over the years, Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre has fostered collaboration with various institutions of higher learning to help nurture new talent. General manager Alan Pryor said these partnerships have evolved from participating in career talks and job fairs to developing an internship programme aimed at familiarising students with the business events industry and different career opportunities available.
“We also focus on talent retention through our Ambassador Programme, which provides part-time opportunities to young students and lets them earn additional income while expanding their skill set through comprehensive, in-house training initiatives. On-the-job experience can also lead to full-time employment at the Centre,” he added.
In labour-scarce Singapore, SkillsFuture Study Awards encourage Singaporeans to develop new skills and competencies, regardless of age. The Singapore Association of Convention & Exhibition Organisers & Suppliers (SACEOS) runs four subsidised certification and professional courses. It also organises the annual Singapore MICE Challenge for tertiary institutions.
Pico Group takes in interns but also gives employees varied opportunities to grow and learn, such as stints at the World Expo and job rotations from six to 24 months.
“The annual Talent Acceleration Programme brings together high-potential employees from our global network for two-week training. There are also local internship opportunities to get a flavour of the MICE industry. Several interns have become permanent staff,” said Pamela Dua, director, human resource, Pico Art International.
But for MICE companies, recruiting and retaining fresh graduates remains a challenge.
Andrew Chan, founder & CEO of ACI HR Solutions, said Deloitte’s 2017 millennial survey showed development and work/life balance outdid financial reward. “Personal learning and development are the first-choice benefit for millennials. Flexible working hours comes second, followed by cash bonuses.”
But ‘flexible working hours’ seems incongruent with the demands of running business events and keeping customers happy.
While Chan acknowledged the constraint, he said the industry could do better in personal learning and development. “This sector can actually offer that to millennial workers, provided business leaders take the time to communicate more effectively with their younger workers and adopt a mentorship approach to management, which they prefer.”
From left: Changi Airport Group’s Peh Ke-Wei; Royal Caribbean Cruises’ Angie Stephen; Quantum of the Seas’ captain Sindre Borsheim; and STB’s Keith Tan at the event to mark the tripartite collaboration to promote fly-cruises
Royal Caribbean International has entered into a new multimillion-dollar marketing partnership with Singapore Tourism Board and Changi Airport Group (CAG) to promote fly-cruises.
The five-year tripartite collaboration is expected to bring some 623,000 international fly-cruise visitors to Singapore, and generate over S$430 million (US$315.6 million) in tourism receipts between end-2019 and 2024.
From left: Changi Airport Group’s Peh Ke-Wei; Royal Caribbean Cruises’ Angie Stephen; Quantum of the Seas’ captain Sindre Borsheim; and STB’s Keith Tan at the event to mark the tripartite collaboration to promote fly-cruises
Angie Stephen, managing director Asia-Pacific, Royal Caribbean Cruises, is confident that the partnership will “extend beyond five years”. She told TTGmice: “This is because of the success that we’ve seen over the past 11 years. Cruising, and the awareness of cruising, is just getting started in Asia. I am very optimistic about the growth of cruising, (which is further) buoyed by a rising middle class.”
When asked if this partnership was targeting MICE or leisure, Stephen said: “Both. MICE is doing quite well, and from South-east Asia, MICE is one of our largest segments during the months outside of peak holiday family groups. MICE buyers are looking for new things to offer their clients, and cruises are new. It also makes things easier for the organiser to have one point of contact, and a whole team to help with the arrangements.”
The collaboration will be focused on key regional markets including China, India, Indonesia and Malaysia, as well as longhaul markets like Australia, the UK, and the US.
The partnership is also expected to generate at least 60 per cent higher tourism receipts compared to the previous partnerships combined. The first partnership ran from 2015 till 2018 to market Mariner of the Seas, followed by another three-year partnership launched in 2017 to promote Ovation of the Seas and Voyager of the Seas. Both partnerships generated a total of S$260 million in tourism dollars.
This announcement is in tandem with the cruise line’s five-year Quantum Class ship deployment in Singapore. To kick off the partnership, Quantum of the Seas has arrived fresh from her multimillion-dollar refurbishment for her six-month homeporting season in the city state – Royal Caribbean’s longest ever Singapore deployment for a Quantum Class ship – which is expected to carry some 150,000 overseas and local guests.
Royal Caribbean also announced new amenities onboard the refurbished Quantum of the Seas, including an escape room and glow-in-the-dark laser tag, which can be incorporated into corporate teambuilding programmes.
To introduce the ship and its events capability to the MICE community, Royal Caribbean Cruises worked with TTGmice to host an onboard showcase for Singapore-based event planners on Monday. The intimate event was attended by more than 80 buyers who experienced a fun ice-breaker, took a ship tour, and enjoyed a lunch party in a private venue.
Buyers taking part in an ice-breaker session onboard Quantum of the Seas on Monday
Aside from being a significant generator of economic benefits, South-east Asia’s cruise tourism sports a positive outlook, as the sector is expected to post growth of between 4.6 per cent and 6.4 per cent per annum to reach 4.5 million cruise passengers by 2035.
To support fly-cruises, a fast-growing passenger segment, CAG launched a seamless intermodal transfer service for passengers flying into Singapore and sailing out on cruise lines and ferries.
Passengers who take up this service will have their bags delivered from their arriving flights to their departing ship and enjoy facilities of the Changi Lounge located in Jewel Changi Airport, before being transferred to the cruise terminal. From December 1, 2019, Royal Caribbean guests sailing out of Singapore from China will be able to enjoy this seamless transfer service as part of the new fly-cruise travel packages.
Eland Cruise, one of the new unique venues selected for 2019. Photo credit: Seoul Convention Bureau
The Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) and the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism have added 19 new venues to their collection of qualified Korea Unique Venues across the country.
The updated list for 2019 now features 30 unique venues which are special locations determined to be able to satisfy the needs of business events and meetings while providing a diverse cultural experience. Such venues are non-traditional meeting spaces, and include museums, historical buildings, renovated factory facilities and more.
Eland Cruise, one of the new unique venues that made the 2019 list. Photo credit: Seoul Convention Bureau
The collection of Korea Unique Venues has undergone some changes since its establishment in 2017. While 20 unique venues had first made it to the list, only 11 were selected earlier in 2019 to remain.
With the latest update, the collection now welcomes new entries such as Bonte Museum in Jeju, Hyundai Motorstudio in Goyang, and Eland Cruise in Seoul.
Jo Deok Hyun, executive director of Korea MICE Bureau at KTO, emphasised the growing importance of unique venues in securing international meetings and events. He added that not only are the facilities and event operating expertise important, the experience and excitement provided to event participants are also a critical criteria when it comes to venue selection.
South Korean MICE authorities have plans to grow the number of qualified unique venues to 50 by the end of 2023, and invest in personalised support for existing venues to help them develop and improve the overall delegate experience.
The annual Global Travel Forecast was released recently and we finally received some good news. It seems that prices in the global travel industry are likely to slow down next year. Well, that’s good to hear. We can all relax a little. Falling prices will certainly put a smile on your buyers’ faces, as well as your customers, so maybe over the next six to eight months you can focus on other areas of the business that may have fallen by the wayside recently.
Well, unfortunately you absolutely cannot afford take your eye off the current situation for a second, and here’s why.
Corporate travel managers who manage to stay ahead of the market will be able to buffer these global headwinds
There are myriad factors causing this economic slowdown in every region across the globe. Rising oil prices, trade wars and slow GDP growth are just a few contributory reasons. Despite this, there are areas that are less affected and continue to prosper. Asia-Pacific is one part of the world that enjoys slow but steady growth, due in no small part to its overwhelming sense of optimism. That said, tight financial conditions make this area just as volatile as the rest so this could change very quickly.
For 2020, prices in the global travel industry are expected to slow down, with flights rising by just 1.2 per cent. That’s the overall report from CWT. Look a little deeper however and you’ll find plenty going on in the aviation world that will ultimately affect prices. These industry moves need to be monitored very closely. It’s likely that we’ll see spikes in air fares over the coming months that will hit buyers hard and if agents and TMCs fail keep on top of them it will eat into their margins.
Growth markets
India is enjoying strong economic growth which is boosting demand for business travel and driving up prices. For the last few years reports like this have made headline news across the world and, as per the forecast, airlines will mark a five per cent increase in fares.
Unfortunately, that claim is becoming increasingly unsupportable. According to The Economic Times in India the country is not growing at the rate claimed by the government and is in fact stagnating or in some cases declining. If this report is correct, then it won’t be long before industries start to see the reality of the situation and prices will fall as a result. If that happens you need to be ready to take advantage.
New low budget airlines
Earlier this year Vietnam announced Bamboo Airways, the country’s third budget airline which is now heightening competition between other budget carriers like VietJet Air. These new low-cost players are pushing down fares in what is becoming an overcrowded aviation market across the globe. However, in the case of Vietnam, the economy is growing and the demand for air travel will surely increase. It’s likely therefore that fares will also rise, and agents need to be ready and in a position to grab the best deals.
Political factors
The current China/US trade war, uncertainties and confusion after Brexit and other political factors across the globe need to be closely monitored.
In the case of Brexit, the many complex factors that make up airfares mean that it’s difficult to say what will happen or actually figure out the precise degree to which Brexit would affect airfares compared with other factors. Airfares in Europe are already under huge pressure for decarbonisation reasons so it will be hard to ascertain what will cause price fluctuations, but these factors will undoubtedly make a difference.
Fare optimisation
The point is that you can never take your eye off the ball because it’s constantly moving on a global scale. Economic reports vary and misinformation can hit the business hard, with wildly inaccurate forecasts.
However, whatever the reasons may be, it is possible to take advantage of fluctuations in airfares and big savings can be made. Airlines have traditionally focused on how to price core tickets, however an increasing percentage of revenue now comes from ancillary items. Airlines optimise total revenue by taking attribute-level customisation further – bundling tactics, product-suggestion analytics, and dynamic pricing to create customised recommendations for additional purchases. This is both at the original point of sale and over the course of the travel journey.
This is where automation will help. Programmes that continuously monitor airlines inventory and reserve the lower fare as soon as it becomes available. In fact, up to six per cent of potential reservations are being optimised to an average value of 75 euros (US$82.60) per reservation. By applying office IDs (PCCs) for various markets, agents and TMCs can benefit from differences in point-of-sale inventory control as a lower reservation class may be available at another location.
This industry, like many others, is awash with reports, forecasts and predictions. You need to decide what’s likely to hit your business the hardest. Automated systems can rub alongside these decisions and ensure that when the results of industry or economic changes move down the chain you’re ready and in a position to strike next year.
Maxim Sevastianov is the CEO of Traveknowledgy, a travel technology company he founded in 2015 that automates post booking processes for TMCs and OTAs.
Sevastianov first embarked on a career in travel in the mid-90s as a travel agent in an IATA travel agency in Stockholm, Sweden. Following a couple of years with Sabre GDS, working with customer implementation, he started a fare management company Rekult where he specialised in the management of airline private/negotiated fares in external databases for various agents.
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.