Marco Polo Hotels has appointed Liu as regional director of sales, Shanghai for the hotel group. She joins from Park Hotel Group where she was assistant director of sales – regional sales office.
Juni Rahardja
Rahardja is now regional director of sales, Singapore with Marco Polo Hotels. She has over 30 years of experience in Singapore’s hospitality industry and has worked with several reputable international hotels.
Heidi Kleine-Moeller
Kleine-Moeller, formerly the hotel manager at Millennium Hilton Bangkok, has been promoted to general manager.
Brandon Chan
Chan will lead The Appointment Group’s newly formed Singapore office. He has vast experience in the hospitality, travel and events industry, and was previously director of sales and marketing with Design Hotels, Asia-Pacific.
Kidzania Singapore puts serious face forward for business events
KIDZANIA Singapore, a new 7,600m² interactive indoor edutainment centre for children, is opening its doors to corporate clients, touting its ability to support venue buyouts for a range of events.
Opened last week on Palawan Beach in Sentosa, the air-conditioned attraction offers 60 role-playing activities in a kid-sized city.

Leong Yue Weng, KidZania Singapore’s general manager, said: “Demand for unique venues in Singapore have been consistently high, especially given Singapore’s small geographical land area. Home to many global and regional headquarters, Singapore is favoured as a MICE destination. KidZania Singapore is perfectly positioned to leverage on this demand, and is able to offer a unique event space by delivering an entire city instead of a venue.”
When asked about the type of corporate bookings they have received so far, Leong said: “Interest in KidZania Singapore has been overwhelming, and we have received bookings for a range of events, including corporate staff retreats and dinner-and-dance.”
Its first first park buyout is for a corporate teambuilding event.
Leong opined that the attraction is also suitable for family days, product launches and cocktail receptions.
Incentive groups in Kyushu rerouted, cancelled after transportation disruption
MICE infrastructure in southern Japan has escaped relatively unscathed from the recent earthquakes, and hundreds of aftershocks that have rocked the region, although disruptions to transportation in the region has led to some incentive programmes being rerouted or cancelled.
The quakes, which have caused the deaths of at least 45 people and more than 1,100 injuries, were centred on the city of Kumamoto in Kyushu.
The initial tremor, with a magnitude of 6.2, struck on the evening of April 14 and was followed less than 48 hours later by a magnitude 7.3 quake. The second earthquake was the most violent quake to strike Japan since the 9.1 Great East Japan Earthquake, which devastated large areas of northeast Japan on March 11, 2011.
“Transportation in the region has been severely affected, with railways and highways closed and flights to and from Kumamoto also disrupted,” said Moe Sasaki, operations coordinator for Destination Asia’s Tokyo office.
The DMC has incentive groups onboard six cruise ships and those that were due to dock at ports closest to the epicentre have been rerouted. Sasaki told TTGmice e-Weekly that affected groups have since been sent on to Fukuoka in northern Kyushu, a city that gets most of the business events traffic into Kyushu.
“Some MICE facilities in the city have received calls from overseas event organisers who are concerned about the earthquake,” confirmed Ken Ueda, head of the MICE section in the Fukuoka City Government.
“But we have been quick to reassure them that we are a long way from the area that has been most seriously affected and there have been no reports of damage to any of our infrastructure or MICE facilities,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Japanese NTO has set up a page on its website to provide information on transportation and safety. Further information is available in English, Mandarin and Korean between 9.00 and 17.00 on (81)-3-3201-3331.
PCEB launches destination brochure and MICE guide
PENANG Convention & Exhibition Bureau (PCEB) has launched two publications – theDestination Experience Brochure and the Penang MICE Guide 2016-17 – a mere three months after the bureau’s establishment.
The Destination Experience Brochure showcases Penang’s rich culture, heritage, colonial, nature and artistic aspects, while highlighting the diverse conventional and unique venues for business and leisure events.
Complementing the brochure is the Penang MICE Guide 2016-17, which features a comprehensive list of more than 50 venues such as luxurious hotels and grand convention centres from all over Penang. It also provides useful information such as the capacity and facilities of each venue.
Both publications were produced in-house by the PCEB team.
Chief minister of Penang and chairperson of PCEB, Lim Guan Eng, said: “I believe these publications will garner the attention of MICE buyers, associations, and meeting and event planners worldwide. (These will help to) position Penang as the preferred MICE destination in this region.”
PCEB also launched its website in early April, complete with an easy-to-use RFP function and essential information on destinations within Penang and infrastructure for MICE events.
Refreshed InterContinental gives hotel wings to meetings pursuit
A SERIES of six unique showcases in March and April held to present the renovated facilities within InterContinental Singapore has resulted in an uptick in enquiries from meeting planners, with two high-level ones already materialised.
The hotel’s area director of sales & marketing, Rex Loh, told TTGmice e-Weekly in an interview: “The renovated Presidential Suite was used to showcase the new features of the hotel and how we can support business events. When planners at the showcase saw how meetings can be done differently with us, especially in such a unique space as our Presidential Suite, they got excited.”
Loh said the two materialised events were held in the Presidential Suite, one for a private corporate party and the other for a meeting.
At 259m2, InterContinental Singapore’s Presidential Suite is said to be the largest of its kind in the country. It is suitable for gatherings for 10 to 50 guests.
“Other refreshed aspects of the hotel, such as the renovated guestrooms, also gave us good exposure to new and potential corporate clients, and we found that many are keen to come and have a look. That helps to get the conversation going, and we have several new leads,” said Loh.
Loh added that the hotel is also playing up the rich heritage of the neighbourhood to attract corporate meetings and events.
“This area has so much to offer. Meeting groups can experience the neighbourhood through our Guided Heritage Trail. Clients used to think that the hotel is too far from the city centre, too inconvenient, but the arts and cultural draws around us are changing perceptions,” he said, adding that event bookings this year are “good” and “maintaining 2014 levels”.
The Guided Heritage Trail is a two-hour walking tour around the arts and cultural districts of Waterloo Street and Albert Street, calling at the National Design Centre and The Church of Saints Peter and Paul. While the tour is offered only on Saturdays for hotel guests, the hotel can arrange private group tours for meeting delegates.
HKTB extends MICE agent awards to South Korea
THE annual Top Agent Awards by the Hong Kong Tourism Board (HKTB) has been given a new spin with a new name and an expanded recipient category.
South Korean players are now eligible for recognition in the Top MICE Agent Awards, joining existing markets India, China and Indonesia. Three top performing South Korean MICE agents will be awarded in each of two categories: Top Number of Passengers and Top Number of Groups.
A HKTB spokesman said South Korea has been included this year because of its strong growth potential.
“South Korea recorded over 20 per cent growth in overnight MICE arrivals last year. Meetings and Exhibitions Hong Kong will foster a closer relationship with top MICE agencies (in the market) to bring more meetings and incentives into Hong Kong,” the spokesperson said.
HKTB, through its office in Seoul, will also be deploying more marketing initiatives and organise more trade seminars, workshops and fam trips in 2016.
HKTB will be focused on growing meetings and incentives traffic from shorthaul markets, including South Korea, China, India and Indonesia, with particular attention being paid to select industry sectors such as direct selling, finance and insurance, information technology, manufacturing and pharmaceutical sectors, according to the spokesperson.
New World Millennium Hotel to unveil upgraded event spaces in August
REFRESHED function rooms at New World Millennium Hotel in Hong Kong will greet meeting planners come August, as the hotel continues with its refurbishment project following its rebranding from Hotel Nikko Hong Kong.
To date, the hotel in Tsim Sha Tsui East has unveiled an updated hotel lobby in January and 88 renovated guestrooms in March. The guestrooms, which span five room types, now offer enhanced comfort and modern amenities including a complimentary handy smartphone which affords guests unlimited local and international calls to seven select countries, and unlimited 3G mobile Internet access.
While details of the upgraded function rooms are still under wraps, the hotel’s director of sales and marketing, Francesco Wong, said the décor would be modern and the venues would offer flexible configurations.
Wong added that meeting packages would be reviewed after renovations are complete, and prices would be competitive.
Meanwhile, work on the Lobby Lounge is slated to be completed next month.
“With our new products, we remain positive (about) our business. Despite the uncertain market situation, we have been versatile and highly responsive in our sales and marketing strategies so as to achieve our business goals,” he said.









