Asia/Singapore Monday, 20th April 2026
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Korean expo in September to boost traditional medicine, local biotech industries

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Jecheon in central South Korea will be hosting the World Korean Medicine-Bio Industry Expo next month.

Themed Recreation of Korean Medicine-Evolve into the Korean Medicine Bio Industry, the event will be held at the Korean Medicine Expo Park, and will begin on September 22, running for 19 days.


Expo to boost global natural product market

The expo will focus on Korean medicine and biotech industries, and comes six years after an inaugural international fair on hanbang (traditional Korean medicine) in 2010.

The exhibition is expected to bring together 800,000 people, including 40,000 foreign tourists, with representatives from 250 South Korean and foreign companies to hold business and export negotiations with more than 3,500 buyers.

Joung Sa-whan, secretary-general of the organising committee, said the exhibition will provide a boost to the global natural product market, closely related with the Korean medicine industry, given that the industries of Korean medicine, biotech and natural products are expected to take the lead in the development of the fourth industrial revolution that is underway worldwide.

The global natural product market, estimated at around 1,000 trillion won (US$890 billion), is forecasted to grow at eight to 10 per cent per annum, Joung added.

The regional government and Jecheon municipality will co-host the exhibition, while 19 government agencies and public institutions, including the Ministries of Industry and Trade, Interior, Culture and the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency, will play supporting roles.

Panda Hotel releases new meeting package

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Panda Hotel in Hong Kong has unveiled its all-inclusive Meet & Stay Conference Package.

The package is priced at HK$999 (US$127) per person, and includes a one-night stay in a Deluxe Room, complimentary breakfast, and two coffee breaks. Lunch is also included, and delegates can choose from a Chinese set lunch or international lunch buffet. The package also includes complimentary Wi-Fi, and the use of state-of-the-art audio visual equipment.

Panda Hotel’s Grand Ballroom

Upgrades to the package can also be done. For example, providing all-day coffee and tea will cost an extra HK$39 per person, while a Western set lunch can be arranged for an extra HK$59 per person. It will also cost HK$390 per room per night to upgrade to an executive room.

This package is only applicable to group bookings with a minimum of 20 rooms and above, and valid until December 31, 2017. For bookings with more than 50 guest rooms, a host of extra privileges such as free welcome drinks or a free room upgrade for every 10 paid rooms will be offered.

Panda Hotel has over 900 guestrooms and suites, and facilities onsite include four F&B venues, an outdoor swimming pool, health club, business centre and executive lounge.

Increasing security concerns present challenges and opportunities for travel managers

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With global travel facing an ever-growing number of security threats, corporate travel buyers are dealing with a growing number of traveller concerns, and are struggling to adopt the tools necessary to address them.

But according to new research from the Association of Corporate Travel Executives (ACTE), underwritten by American Express Global Business Travel (GBT), travel managers increasingly recognise they have a central role to play in fulfilling their company’s duty of care obligations to travelling employees. ACTE and American Express GBT collaborated to identify research questions and key themes, seeking to take a comprehensive look at the most pressing issues facing the corporate travel industry.

The study, Take the Lead on Duty of Care for the Modern Business Traveller, conducted as the third instalment of ACTE and American Express GBT’s Meet the Modern Business Traveller research series, showed more than a third (37 per cent) of travel managers saw a rise in enquiries relating to traveller safety. Another 35 per cent said enquiries have remained stable – after a majority had already reported increased concern in April 2017.

But it appears that a significant number of organisations do not have the systems required to quickly address these concerns.

More than a quarter (27 per cent) of travel managers claim not to have had a detailed emergency plan in place in the six months up to June 2017. The absence of these plans may be connected to the fact that planning meetings are uncommon in many organisations. Some 39 per cent of travel managers report that meetings do not take place, have happened just once or occur only irregularly. Only 14 per cent of organisations convene key stakeholders for planning meetings once or more per month.

“Travel managers cannot afford to be complacent when it comes to worst-case scenario planning,” said Greeley Koch, executive director of ACTE.

“The status quo for many organisations is to react to a crisis – but this leaves travellers in danger and ultimately does not lead to replicable procedures for the future. Proactive planning is an absolute necessity in an evolving global threat environment.”

Moreover, the changing security environment has yet to lead to widespread changes in corporate travel policies. The September 2016 Modern Business Traveller survey revealed that more than half (54 per cent) of travel managers had tightened policy in response to traveller safety concerns. The most recent data, however, tells a different story: Today, 58 per cent of travel managers have not made any changes to policy in the last six months as a direct response to safety concerns.

“Travel is changing at an accelerated rate, but corporate policymaking moves much slower,” said Evan Konwiser, vice president, Digital Traveller with American Express GBT.

“Organisations of all sizes must identify ways that travel policies can be nimbler and adapt to new challenges. Having the right partners and tools in place can be a huge advantage when new disruptions emerge.”

 

Travel Managers seek to right the ship 
Despite the slow pace of corporate policy change, many travel managers have already started to act, introducing or enhancing several measures intended to alleviate traveller anxieties.

The vast majority (83 per cent) leverage traveller locating technology, and 79 per cent provide proactive safety communication to travellers. Additional tools used by most travel managers include safety training, emergency check-in technology, safety and security services from their travel management company (TMC) and detailed emergency action plans.

 

Cost and awareness of offerings pose significant challenges
Three areas emerged where a significant proportion of travel managers would like to do more. Almost half (45 per cent) want more support from their TMC, 40 per cent would like to provide more safety training, and 38 per cent want to implement emergency check-in technology.

However, respondents said the cost of increased support from TMCs and implementing emergency check-in systems was holding them back, as was their own lack of knowledge about available products and services. Travel managers should remain in close dialogue with TMCs to mitigate these challenges.

One area where travel managers encounter fewer barriers is proactive safety communication. Here, 60 per cent believe they deliver adequate communication to travellers today; a further 27 per cent are working to improve in this area. 

 

Travel Managers should seize the opportunity
While room to improve duty of care exists, corporate travel managers are well-positioned to fill travel policy gaps, as well as prepare their organisations for future safety challenges.

“Proactivity is the key to success in duty of care, and there are some turnkey ways to make security a priority with travellers and stakeholders,” said Konwiser. “It may be as simple as putting a quarterly meeting on the calendar for HR, IT, compliance and senior leadership to discuss the organisation’s travel policies and emergency preparedness.”

Added Koch: “Business travellers have a clear-eyed view of their needs while on the road. Knowing the travel manager has their back at all times – and is always looking to implement best practices to better support and protect them – helps build trust, enables productivity and keeps the business engines running.”

New focus for K&A enables it to shine with incentive programmes

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Leading Taiwan PCO K&A International is focusing on building up its DMC arm to promote incentives and tapping into a network of established partners in the region.

Its president, Kitty Wong, who is the immediate-past president of the World PCO Alliance, said K&A is now working with Malaysia’s Asian Overland Services, Singapore’s East West Planners, Thailand’s Conference & Destination Management and Vietnam’s Phoenix Voyages.

Kitty Wong

“These partners cover Asia but not Taiwan. By working with these people who know me and whom I have known for a long time, K&A becomes an ‘extra product’ they can put on their shelves,” Wong told TTGmice.

“Incentives are coming to Taiwan and the Taiwan Visitors Association is interested in tapping the segment. But apart from travel agents taking on the business, there are very few DMCs handling incentives. With the return of Edwige Chang, who worked with me on ITF (Taipei International Travel Fair), as DMC department director, K&A can now focus on this neglected segment.

“We get incentive enquiries all the time but were not able to respond in the past. Since the refocus late-last year, K&A has exceeded its targets in a few months.”

Wong now wants the Tourism Bureau to pave the way for DMCs to have access to organise events in Taiwan’s many museums, temples and other venues and to expand limited outside catering services.

K&A was set up in 1995 to run ITF and the DMC was set up in 2006 when it stopped organising the fair.

ICC Sydney achieves gold environmental rating

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ICC Sydney has been awarded Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Gold rating, in recognition of the centre’s approach to sustainability.

The LEED ratings system, developed by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), is the foremost programme for buildings that are designed, constructed, maintained and operated for improved environmental and human health performance.


ICC Sydney

The LEED Gold certification recognises ICC Sydney’s work in sustainability including:

– Reuse of 100,000m3 of concrete from the original brownfield site
– Use of 96 per cent recycled steel in its Exhibition Halls
– Highly efficient Central Energy Plant and Building Management systems
– Australia’s largest electric car charging station for 25 vehicles
– A community funded solar array, the nation’s largest in a CBD, providing five per cent of the venue’s energy – enough to power 100 homes.

Geoff Donaghy, CEO of ICC Sydney, noted that the LEED Gold certification will help attract more business events to the venue.

He said: “Today, the business events industry is more focused than ever before on ensuring we act in an environmentally sustainable and responsible way, and this is something we are seeing translate into client requirements.

“ICC Sydney has secured over 850 bookings to date and we expect this accreditation will help us increase our competitive advantage on the global stage and continue to foster the NSW visitor economy.”

Meet and be well at Shangri-La Singapore

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Meet Well Be Well Shangri-La, Singapore

Shangri-La Hotel, Singapore has launched a wellness Meet Well, Be Well package for corporate guests.

For bookings of at least 20 rooms or more in any of the newly-renovated events spaces at the Mezzanine level of the brand new Tower Wing, guests will receive the following privileges: wellness-enhanced coffee breaks; option for participants to enjoy a healthy two-course lunch; room-delivered Breakfast Power Pack or buffet breakfast at The Line; complimentary room with Horizon Club access per night for every 20 confirmed and paid guestrooms; complimentary meeting package for every 20 confirmed and paying participants; 20 per cent savings on treatments at the spa; and a meditation group session.

Meet Well Be Well Shangri-La, Singapore

Guests who are in the hotel for meetings may also register for any of the following morning experiences: a 45-minute morning run on September 5 to Singapore Botanic Gardens led by a member of the hotel’s management team; 30-minute private yoga session at Banyan Deck; 30-min AquaSpin class; or 30-minute neighbourhood power walk. Advance notice of seven days has to be given.

This package is valid for bookings until December 30, 2017.

Contact hazel.lim@shangri-la.com or call (65) 6213 4919.

Flight Centre snaps up two NZ travel firms

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The Flight Centre Travel Group (FLT) has fully acquired two travel businesses in New Zealand – the leisure-focused Travel Managers Group (TMG) and corporate travel management company Executive Travel Group (ETG) – for an undisclosed sum. The deals are expected to formally settle during 1Q2018.

FLT managing director Graham Turner said the acquisitions would strengthen the company’s New Zealand operations, which is now the company’s fifth largest business globally by sales behind Australia, the US, UK and Canada.

Flight Centre Travel Group

“Executive travel and travel managers are profitable businesses, generating earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation in excess of NZ$3 million (US$2.2 million) annually, with solid growth trajectories and good track records of success,” Turner said in a press statement.

This latest announcement comes back off the company’s recent acquisition of BHMAsia in Asia and Olympus Tours in Mexico.

Representing FLT’s first acquisition in the home-based sector, TMG provides systems and support services to a network of more than 180 individual brokers, as well as a 22-shop franchise network, which includes 12 TravelSmart shops and 10 non-branded stores. It was established in 2002 and generated about NZ$120 million in total transaction value (TTV) during its 2017 year.

EMG, established in 1978, is the largest independent corporate travel management firm in New Zealand and generated about NZ$60 million in TTV during the 2016 calendar year.

Both businesses were privately owned, with former FLT New Zealand employee Kevin Weston co-owning ETG and being a major shareholder in TMG.

Weston and his business partners, Nicola Jamieson and Dave Wallace, will continue to oversee both businesses’ day-to-day operations and will report to FLT New Zealand managing director David Coombes.

Pan Pacific to bring serviced suites to Indonesia

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Pan Pacific Hotels Group (PPHG) has announced its first serviced suites property in Indonesia, slated to open in the capital city by 2020.

Located along Jalan Thamrin in the CBD, Pan Pacific Serviced Suites Jakarta will offer 161 units across levels 47 to 58 in the North Tower of Indonesia 1. The tower is part of a 19,000m2 mixed-development, which comprises offices, commercial spaces, and entertainment and retail offerings.

PPHG’s openings this year include Pan Pacific Melbourne, which just opened last week, while Pan Pacific Beijing and Pan Pacific Yangon will debut in their respective cities in September.

Large corporate events waitlisted as pre-Tokyo 2020 travel demand spikes

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A slew of large-size corporate incentives booked into the main cities of Japan leading up to the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics, as well as Japan’s brisk leisure travel business and tendency among quality merchants to operate small outfits, have made it increasingly challenging for the destination to confirm current enquiries.

Susan Maria Ong, MICE director, Asia Pacific with Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO), told TTGmice: “We have many large corporate incentives led by insurance, banking finance and pharmaceutical companies coming in the main cities of Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto for 2018 and 2019, and with the Games happening in 2020, the next three years have become quite difficult for companies now planning to take their events to Japan.”

Tokyo

The situation has led to enquiries being waitlisted, according to Ong, who believes it will ease once the Games are over.

Hiroshi Iizuka, director of sales and marketing, MICE, international travel division of Nippon Travel Agency, shared the same observations.

He said: “Japan’s main cities are always popular and crowded, and it is getting even more so as we head closer to the Games in 2020. Our cities aren’t just for business events, they also welcome (leisure) tourists and support local residents.”

Ryoichi Yamada, director of marketing & sales, MICE Division of JTB Global Marketing & Travel, added that as most incentive groups preferred to visit Japan during peak travel season – such as when the cherry blossoms are in bloom – clients are faced with both capacity issues and high rates.

Adding to the capacity challenge are “traditional businesses that serve small groups, preferring to focus on high quality, personalised service instead of volume”, opined Akihito Saito, general manager, international travel division of Nippon Travel Agency Hokkaido.

He said: “This presents a problem when our clients need a special restaurant for dining events.”

Planners who are determined enough to confirm a large-sized corporate group in Japan in the coming years, will have to split delegates up across different accommodation and hunt down venues large enough for group dinners, according to Iizuka.

“It is a relief that the Japanese government has started to permit private hire of ancient castles and parks which have capacity for larger groups,” said Iizuka.

While Ong said the capacity issue is a “good problem” that demonstrates Japan’s strong demand, she admitted that it is still a problem that needs resolution.

“This is why we are doing more to introduce overseas event planners to tier-two destinations across Japan. Destinations like Kanazawa and Tottori are ready for business events. They can help alleviate the jam in the big cities and take on the overflow,” she said.

JNTO’s intensifying promotions of tier-two destinations are also targeted at encouraging more repeat groups.

However, the capacity challenge does not go away with programmes done in the less crowded, smaller cities.

“In such areas, local hotels tend to be afraid of accepting large groups due to language and cultural differences. Also, Japanese business owners believe that they need to prioritise regular clients over one-off large volume bookings,” commented Mika Tanaka, assistant general manager of Japana Planning.

Yamada said a group of 30 to 40 delegates is a “comfortable size” for corporate events in the smaller cities or towns, and anything more than 100 will be too big.

Bali’s Alila Seminyak on a mission to sell its location as the next event destination

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Alila Seminyak

Luxury Bali hotel Alila Seminyak has embarked on its first roadshow in Australia, and its representatives are determined to promote Seminyak as a viable alternative event destination to Nusa Dua.

The hotel’s general manager, Pierre Lang, and director of event curation, Demy Suryadewi, are touring Melbourne and Sydney this week, meeting with travel agents, conference organisers and journalists.

Alila Seminyak

“The MICE sector is a very important market for us and we can cater well for small to medium-sized events,” said Lang. “We have unique spaces and would like to showcase these to Australia since (it is) only a few hours away by flight. Plus, Seminyak has so much to offer with easy access to great restaurants, bars and shopping”.

Most corporate events are currently held in Nusa Dua, where Bali’s only convention centre is located. But Lang is on a mission to educate event planners about Seminyak as a viable alternative.

Alila Seminyak has 240 rooms, making it one of the hotel chain’s biggest properties. “We have a dedicated events creation team,” said Lang. “We like to customise every enquiry. We can easily host 20 to 500 guests with extended facilities”.

The hotel can also fully customise audiovisual experiences and create unique coffee breaks. “For example, we can tailor for a picnic-style break or take meeting participants in one of our restored 1980 VW Kombi vehicles fitted out with karaoke facilities so they can sing their way through Seminyak’s streets,” he shared.

Lang dismissed concerns about traffic bottlenecks that may be problematic on roads leading to Seminyak. “We have secret ways to assist in traffic control. It’s also important to plan around peak hours,” he opined.

The hotel’s roadshow to Australia will be an annual event in addition to those the hotel already conducts in Singapore and Hong Kong.

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