Asia/Singapore Saturday, 18th April 2026
Page 871

Risk of double payment if travel policies aren’t properly conveyed

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When it comes to adhering to corporate travel policies, employees want to follow the rules.

This may come as a surprise but is found to be true, according to a recent study conducted by GBTA and HRS Global Hotel Solutions, where 79 per cent of business traveller respondents indicated that the company’s travel policy plays the largest role when deciding bookings.

Convenience (71 per cent) and cost (70 per cent) are close contenders for the traveller’s priority, but the results are painted on the wall: nothing is perceived more importantly in the decision-making process of the corporate traveller than the company’s travel policy.

This is good news for travel managers, who want nothing more than for the policies to be adhered to. However, the study also found that non-adherence is prevalent.

Roughly one-half of travellers report receiving an alert when a hotel (52 per cent) or airline (45 per cent) selection they have made is above the policy’s rate cap or seat class specifications, while 41 per cent get a similar message if they are booking with a non-preferred supplier.

But a significant number of respondents (20 per cent) say they never get these types of alerts at all when making an erroneous booking. It is also within reason to think that many more cases might have gone undetected due to lack of early-warning technology.

On why this happens, what our research has found is that there are a number of disconnects between travel managers and the travellers for whom they are responsible for.

Closing these gaps are not just paramount because of compliance, but because doing so could result in saving not just time spent on enforcement, but on real dollars as well.

Our findings show that major gaps exist between what amenities are valued by travellers and what they actually use; the use of amenities and what is frequently built into preferred vendor contracts; and the frequency which travellers are reimbursed for ancillary expenses and the amenity being pre-negotiated by the company.

What happens then is that certain pre-negotiated amenities between the travel manager and the supplier (hotel, airline, car rental etc.) becomes unknown to the business traveller.

For instance, some companies have negotiated for fee waivers when changing names on air tickets, but an employee may not be aware of this and purchases a new ticket instead. This can cost a company thousands of dollars per ticket booked even though it is easily remedied.

Another frequently cited case of what our industry terms as “leakage” is the payment of pre-negotiated Wi-Fi. Travel managers often find reimbursement requests for Wi-Fi use at a hotel even though there is already an agreement for its waiver or that it is already included in the booking cost.

This boils down to effective communication to the end-user what a company’s travel policy already entails. It is not always the travel manager’s responsibility to communicate such details either, but this depends on who you ask.

About one-third of business travellers say someone from the human resource department is responsible for communicating the company’s travel policy (36 per cent), followed by travel managers (26 per cent), direct supervisors (26 per cent), and department heads (26 per cent).

According to them, such information is most often disseminated by email (49 per cent) or a company’s intranet (48 per cent), followed by in-person meetings (40 per cent) and via the employee handbook (39 per cent).

But according to travel managers, one-half (54 per cent) say they hold an annual, in-person meeting to educate travellers on their travel policy and any updates to it, while only one-fifth (20 per cent) of those surveyed indicate that this was the case.

Whether they didn’t attend, don’t remember, or something else altogether is irrelevant – the communication strategy put forth by the travel manager was not effective.

Likewise, if travellers feel their travel managers are sending emails about their travel policy every time a trip is booked (41 per cent) – even though one-fourth as many travel professionals report doing this (12 per cent) – the reality is that travellers report they didn’t see them, probably because of the inundating volume of emails they receive, exacerbated by the prevalence of auto-response emails that often go ignored.

Business traveller perception is business traveller reality and as illustrated by our findings, disconnects between the travel manager and the traveller is happening too often to ignore.

Closing these gaps presents an opportunity to increase compliance and save money while doing so. Companies must take stock of their own programmes and traveller behaviour in order to devise customised, realistic approaches to improving their practices in a way that works for them.

This article is based on a white paper study conducted by HRS Global Hotel Solutions through conversations with corporate travel managers.

Emmanuel Ebray is the managing director of HRS Global Hotel Solutions, taking charge of South-east Asia, South Korea and India. HRS is a global hotel solutions provider with more than 40,000 corporate customers worldwide, including Fortune 500 companies. Ebray’s core responsibilities include setting the business direction, driving organic growth with new and existing customers across the markets, establishing strategic partnerships, and talent development.

This article is written by Emmanuel Ebray

Hyatt Regency returns to Sydney with new event services partner

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With the official launch of Hyatt Regency Sydney last month came the introduction of its 1,000-pax ballroom and the announcement of Staging Connections as its in-house event services partner.

The 892-key hotel was launched after a A$250 million (US$190.2 million) redevelopment of the former Four Points by Sheraton. Through its new partnership, it intends to “build on our commitment to delivering an enhanced customer experience for… functions, conferences and meetings”, according to general manager Malcolm Zancanaro.

The new partners worked together on a cocktail event in the hotel’s 1,000-pax Grand Ballroom, utilising AV capabilities to cast hexagon images representing the Hyatt brand and hive logo, in addition to other creative projections.

As well, the night’s aerial acrobatic performances made use of newly installed dynamic rigging points in the ballroom. Other entertainment highlights include an indigenous fusion act and music from MC, singer and radio personality, David Campbell, while kitchen stations featured a 50kg tuna carved on demand and cheese tasting.

Tim Morgan, general manager – strategic partnerships – Staging Connections, said: “The team went above and beyond, providing all audio visual, theming, digital products, projection mapping, lighting, additional room features and a special request Kombi Van dessert area.”

Hyatt Regency Sydney features 3,700m2 of meeting and event space, including two ballrooms and 21 meeting or breakout rooms.

TCEB’s new campaigns head to Beijing

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Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau (TCEB), together with allied Thai partners, kicked off Thailand’s MICE United IV campaign in Beijing, China, as well as launched the country’s brand campaign, Thailand CONNECT: Your Vibrant Journey to Business Success.

Both campaigns were presented to more than 150 business event players at the Thailand CONNECT: China Business Events Road Show 2017 last week.

Thailand’s MICE United IV, now in its fourth edition, features 10 alliances, two of which are new – Airport of Thailand Public Company (AOT) and King Power International Company. The two new partners contribute to the Thailand CONNECT Welcome Packages, through discounts and perks for business event delegates.

TCEB is currently targeting business event groups in major cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, but is also reaching out to important secondary cities such as Shenzhen, Qingdao and Hangzhou. As well, Suzhou has been identified as an emerging source market.

The Bureau aims to grow Chinese business event delegate arrivals by five per cent this year.

China is a top source market for Thailand’s business events industry, contributing 127,390 travellers in fiscal year 2016 (from October 2015 to September 2016). These travellers generated 10,252.60 million baht (US$288 million) in revenue for the Kingdom.

Sabre enhances GetThere to better manage business travel

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Sabre has revamped GetThere, its online travel management solution, after conducting research sessions to evaluate what travellers and travel mangers wanted and needed out of a booking tool.

The newly redesigned GetThere features include a simplified and responsive design; an intuitive booking workflow powered by Sabre’s technology that is accessible and consistent on any device – desktop, tablet, and smartphone; and Sabre’s air merchandising capabilities to support airlines’ branded fares with existing travel policy.

Travel managers also have more options to use fare rules to identify Out-of-Policy fares and control whether certain flights are displayed within the search results. Business travellers now have access to the full breadth of available fares offered by the carrier, beyond the lowest airfare.

“Today’s business traveller wants the convenience of self-service solutions. Our new traveller-centric design in GetThere puts the user first with new mobile capabilities and relevant content that’s essential for a smarter travel programme,” said Wade Jones, interim president of Sabre Travel Network.

“Travel managers and travellers will also have access to more content and the ability to differentiate various fare offerings from airlines including branded fares – helping business travellers get the exact services and features that they need to be productive.”

CWT M&E ups travel security with International SOS partnership

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CWT Meetings & Events (M&E), a division of Carlson Wagonlit Travel, has launched the only global corporate meetings and events service to include International SOS services as part of its core customer offering.

While travelling to and attending meetings and events, CWT M&E customers can now access best-in-class pre-travel advice and integrate further International SOS Services such as Event Medical Support Plan into their programme.

Additionally, this agreement allows CWT M&E’s planners and customers to subscribe to medical and security alerts. Customers will also benefit from access to a bespoke Travel Risk Assessment Tool.

Singapore, Sydney sweep top spots for APAC meeting hotels

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In a ranking by cloud-based event management company Cvent, seven of the top 10 meeting hotels in APAC were from Singapore, and the remaining from Sydney, Australia.

The top 50 list was compiled by analysing meeting and event booking activity through the Cvent Supplier Network featuring more than 245,000 hotels, resorts and special event venues.


Marina Bay Sands in top spot

Marina Bay Sands Singapore topped the list, followed in order by Grand Hyatt Singapore, Shangri-La Hotel, Sydney, Hilton Singapore, Conrad Centennial Singapore, Fairmont Singapore, Hilton Sydney, InterContinental Sydney, Pan Pacific Singapore and InterContinental Singapore.

“Hotels have become increasingly focused on developing more meeting and event business, and as such, have become more sophisticated in competing for the most lucrative opportunities for their respective venues,” commented Kevin Fliess, vice president of marketing for Cvent’s Hospitality Cloud.

“(They) are increasingly embracing a data-driven approach to more effectively pursue the optimal meetings and events for their venue. This, coupled with another year of notable investment in renovation and other upgrades, have led to shifts in the rankings as competition remains fierce even in a robust market.”

View the full 2017 list of Top 50 Meeting Hotels in APAC.

Diaoyutai Hotel Hangzhou

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Diaoyutai Hotel Hangzhou

Diaoyutai State Guesthouse is well-known for offering a standard of accommodation reserved for foreign dignitaries and government officials. The residential-style hotel, managed by Diaoyutai MGM Hospitality, is mystery shopper-tested six times a year.

Located in the CBD, it 25 minutes by car from Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport, 20 minutes from Hangzhoudong Railway Station, 15 minutes from Chenzhan Railway Station and 20 minutes to West Lake and Liuhe Pagoda.

Diaoyutai Hotel Hangzhou

Rooms The rooms here are large. Deluxe rooms measure 60m2; premier rooms 60m2-80m2; grand rooms and executive suites 90m2; luxury suites 100m2-136m2; diplomat suites 128m2-136m2; the Ambassador Suite 200m2 and the Chairman Suite 315m2.

My Grand River View Room was one of the most beautifully-appointed and elegant rooms I have stayed in. The pops of colour and the home decorative items made my room warm and welcoming. The opulent bathroom was a treat and I had fun playing with the motion-sensors on the toilet seat.

On the old-style Chinese writing desk was another interesting discovery. What looked like a metal ruler unfolds into a cool desk lamp.

Finding a Nespresso coffee machine inside the armoire was also heaven sent when I needed a caffeine boost.

MICE application On the 18th floor is the 300m2 Sky Ballroom with floor-to-ceiling windows and a river-view balcony. It is connected to Qiantang Garden, named after the river it overlooks, a 680m2 garden for cocktails and private events.

The Qiantang Function Room in the north tower is a multifunction space with a bar and pantry on the first floor and a rest area on the second – both floors are connected by a swirling glass staircase.

Across the garden on the south side is the lavish two-storey Villa Hangzhou, which houses a 24-seater roundtable,  separate living, tea and mahjong areas.

Other facilities The hotel has three F&B options. The 154-seat Fangfei Lobby Lounge, serving Chinese and Western cuisine, is an all-day dining restaurant; Pinju Hangzhou is a 120-seat casual dining Chinese restaurant, with outdoor seating, serving Hangzhou and Shanghai cuisine; while Royal Court Chinese Restaurant, with nine private dining rooms, offers renowned Chinese cuisine.

Other facilities include a 160m2 state-of-the-art fitness centre with a yoga room and a 20m-long indoor heated swimming pool and jacuzzi.

Room count: 162
Star rating: Five
Email: dythz-reservations@dytmgm.com

China Silk Museum

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First opened in 1992, the museum, located on a 40,000m2 southern Chinese garden site, was given a facelift and reopened in time for the G20 summit in Hangzhou that ran from September 4 to 5 last year.

Concept Silk production in Hangzhou dates back to the 13th Century and the museum houses six permanent galleries showcasing the history of silk, the Silk Road, silk artefacts and modern Chinese and western silk fashion. There are also areas for sericulture, weaving and textile training and research.

The museum provides a look at raising silkworms, dyeing, weaving, the earliest pattern loom models and preserved silk items from China as well as European painted and embroidered silks mainly from the 18th and 19th Centuries.

Its interactive video wall at the entrance introduces silk and silk weaving from all over the world.

MICE application The museum provides a beautiful backdrop and its opening act after its renovation was a G20 spouses’ tour of the facility.

The museum is now considering how it can collaborate with meetings planners interested in using the venue.

For now, the Brocade Café and sunken open air space can be used for cocktails and receptions and visitors can do a bit of shopping and buy designer silk products at the Jingluntang World Silk Boutique and local silk products at the Sibo Silk Shop.

The museum organises public lectures by industry experts and offers hands-on experience for visitors, who can try their hands on the looms to create items made with different types of yarn, dyeing, etc.

In addition, the museum, which owns the most advanced technology in textile conservation in China can show visitors how silk treasures are treated, repaired and packed for joint projects with partners like the British Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Service The escorted service for the site inspection was efficient, insightful and professional.

Le Méridien Putrajaya

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Le Meridien Putrajaya Ballroom

Opened in August 2016, this is the third Le Méridien property in Malaysia.

Conveniently located 25 minutes from Kuala Lumpur International Airport, attractions within walking distance include the 18-hole Palm Garden golf course and IOI City Mall, the largest shopping mall in the Southern Klang Valley.

Le Meridien Putrajaya Ballroom

Rooms There are 353 rooms in total. I stayed in the spacious club room on the 17th floor which offered a panoramic view of the golf course. The room furnishings and décor was modern and tastefully appointed with a warm shade of beige, and brown being the dominant colour.

I enjoyed the experience of working at night as the lights were bright and conducive. Getting my laptop connected to the Internet was a breeze.

Sleep came easily that night as the softness of the mattress and the pillows were to my liking.

MICE facilities The hotel features 15 meeting spaces including a 9,742m2 pillarless ballroom with mood lighting and smaller spaces between 206m2 and 1,485m2 in size. All the meeting spaces, spread across three levels, offer natural light and most have stunning views of the well-manicured golf course. As well, the spacious foyer can easily accommodate 10 booths of 3m2 each.

The kitchen stations on the meeting floors provide a free flow of snacks, coffee and tea for meeting delegates, making it very convenient for them to grab a drink or a snack when they feel hungry.

The hotel can also create teambuilding packages and spousal programmes utilising facilities within the mall and on the golf course. The mall itself boasts facilities such as an Olympic-sized ice-skating rink, a bowling alley and an indoor adventure park.

Other facilities There are two restaurants onsite – Le Mei, a contemporary Chinese fine dining restaurant, and Latest Recipe, an all-day dining establishment.

Leisure facilities include a 24-hour gym and swimming pool. For club guests, the Club Lounge on Level 20 provides a bird’s-eye view of Putrajaya. In the far distance, you can also see landmark buildings in Kuala Lumpur such as the Petronas Twin Towers.

Room count: 353 rooms
Star rating: 5
Contact:
Address: Lebuh IRC, IOI Resort City, Sepang, Putrajaya, Malaysia
Email: reservation.putrajaya@ lemeridien.com
Website: lemeridien.com

District 21

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District 21

Spanning more than 6,500m2, District 21 is the largest indoor adventure park in Malaysia. It is fully air-conditioned and located within IOI City Mall in Putrajaya.

Concept The year is 2066. The world has been almost destroyed by war. The décor is rust coloured and props are made up of old tyres and oil drums to symbolise the after effects of war. District 21 is the boot camp of the future where teams go through obstacles that has them climbing, jumping, riding and sliding.

District 21

MICE application Teambuilding activities usually take three to four hours, revealed the park’s manager Kent Siew, and is suitable for group sizes from 20 to 120. The team is divided into groups, where each group has a maximum of 15 people. There is a briefing session followed by 10 minutes of warm up-exercises, before starting on the activities.
Activities include free falling from a 9.1m-high platform; having a go on the roller glider which is a hybrid of a zip-line and coaster; as well as an interactive climbing area – where many of the walls require problem solving as part of the climbing challenge.

There are also eight meeting rooms spread over two floors. Planners can book these rooms to hold private events or for participants to have their lunch break. Food from the F&B retailers within the mall can be delivered to District 21.

The entire place can be booked at a rate of RM8,000 (US$1,802) an hour. Group packages costs RM53 and RM58 per pax on weekdays and weekends respectively. Moreover, having an indoor event in an air-conditioned setting means organisers do not have to worry about bad weather.

Service I was lucky because on the day I went, a corporate company was holding their teambuilding activity. The participants were happy with the guidance and encouragement shown by the trainers when the going got tough. They also appreciated that safety was always a top priority.

I also noticed that all participants were given gloves and socks to use, as some activities required them to remove their shoes.

Operation hours: 12.00 to 20.00
Contact: district21@ioigroup.com
Website: www.district21.com.my

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