TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Sunday, 25th January 2026
Page 83

Holiday Inn Johor Bahru City Centre names new GM

0

Holiday Inn Johor Bahru City Centre has appointed Jacky Kok as its new general manager.

With more than 20 years of experience in hospitality, he has held leadership roles across hotel operations, food and beverage strategy, and large-scale events in both Malaysia and China.

Before joining Holiday Inn Johor Bahru City Centre, he was instrumental in delivering major international events, including high-security summits and large-scale conventions—demonstrating his expertise in managing complex, fast-paced hospitality environments.

In his new role, Kok will lead the hotel’s overall operations, drive commercial strategy, and spearhead initiatives to enhance guest satisfaction.

Reinventing hotel distribution

0

What’s the impact of the sale of Sabre Hospitality Solutions on Sabre Lodging?
It’s very much business as usual for the LGS side of our business, which is what I lead across Asia-Pacific. In fact, we’re actually doubling down on our efforts in this space.

I think it’s important to clarify that Sabre Hospitality Solutions and LGS serve different but complementary roles in the travel ecosystem. Hospitality Solutions provides operational and retailing technology to hoteliers, helping them manage day-to-day operations and execute their retail strategy. By contrast, our focus in LGS is on lodging distribution – connecting hotel suppliers with travel sellers through our global SabreMosaic Travel Marketplace.

So, just as Sabre enables airlines to distribute their fares and offers to travel sellers, we help hoteliers make their properties more visible, bookable, and competitive in the global ecosystem. Our marketplace provides access to more than two million property options. In fact, Hospitality Solutions is one of our most valued supply partners, and that relationship remains unchanged. They will continue to distribute their hotelier partner content through Sabre, helping ensure broad visibility and global reach for their customers.

While Hospitality Solutions embarks on a new chapter as a standalone entity, for LGS, our direction is clear: we’re doubling down on investment and innovation that helps hoteliers and travel sellers connect, grow, and win together for the benefit of their travellers.

Why is Sabre increasing its focus on hotels’ B2B distribution?
Let me take this from a travel seller’s perspective first: the hotel B2B distribution space represents a major untapped opportunity for travel agencies.

Hotels typically offer higher margins compared to air bookings, meaning agencies can drive greater profitability without increasing customer acquisition costs – they already have the traveller booking a flight, and that traveller will almost always need accommodation. Yet, despite this natural synergy, many agencies are still leaving significant revenue on the table.

Our recent study with select agency customers found a hotel attachment rate (HAR) of only 37 per cent, meaning that for most air bookings, no hotel is being sold alongside them. For many agencies, increasing this rate could translate into millions of dollars in additional revenue, depending on their size and scale.

Our goal is to help our partners unlock this potential. Looking specifically at Asia-Pacific, our data underscores the opportunity. The average Asia-Pacific business traveller spends US$741 per trip, with 32 per cent going to hotels – the single largest share of the travel wallet. Yet hotels are only attached to air bookings about 30 per cent of the time, which shows how much room there is to grow.

How are you helping agencies to increase hotel attachment (or to sell more hotel rooms)?
Sabre Lodging AI makes selling hotels easy—seamlessly suggesting hotel options when an air seat is booked. It brings intelligent capabilities to Content Services for Lodging, which is part of SabreMosaic Travel Marketplace – serving up properties that are most likely to be booked. Using Sabre Travel AI and advanced machine-learning capabilities from Google, the new capability analyses property attributes, customer trip segmentation, and traveller and agency preferences to generate custom lodging options. If a traveller has requested a specific property that isn’t available, Lodging AI returns up to 20 alternative lodging options in an API response, providing a score based on closest match.

Lodging AI’s cross-sell functionality also allows agents to identify previously booked air segments that are eligible for hotel stays, and offers hotel options through confirmation or trip reminder emails. This feature has been crucial in boosting hotel attachment rates even after the initial booking is completed, offering a new way to generate additional revenue for agencies.

Those are the benefits for travel agencies. What are the benefits for hotels?
While travel sellers want to be able to shop, sell, and service the world’s travel content – including lodging – through one connection, hoteliers want to increase visibility, and reach travel sellers at the point they are booking. With SabreMosaic Travel Marketplace, hoteliers can reach more customers where they are shopping, with access to the widest breadth of high-value corporate and premium leisure travellers in one place.

Our global travel platform delivers higher average daily rates by connecting hotel suppliers with high-value travellers. Another key advantage is that while cancellations on other channels, such as OTAs, can reach 30 to 40 per cent, our global travel marketplace maintains a rate lower than 10 per cent because bookings are typically confirmed and committed.

How do you meet the varying hotel needs of agencies? Please explain the importance of direct connectivity.
Travel agencies are telling us loud and clear that they are facing growing pressure from fragmented content systems that are increasing operational costs and making it harder to deliver a consistent customer experience. We commissioned a new global study which revealed that more than 91 per cent of agencies operate with four or more booking systems, and over half are managing seven or more – a sprawl that is directly impacting productivity, profitability, and agent satisfaction. So, it’s clear agencies don’t want more connects and more complexity. They want to get the widest breadth of content through one connect – that’s why we developed SabreMosaic Travel Marketplace.

We have two million plus lodging options available on our marketplace through Content Services for Lodging. We have global hotel chains, direct connectivity with central reservation systems, and content from global aggregators including Booking.com, Expedia Partner Solutions, Bedsonline, and Nuitée. This breadth allows us to meet the diverse needs of agencies, whether they’re serving leisure or corporate clients.

However, it’s not just about the most content. The problem today is not the lack of content. It’s about consolidating and normalising everything to surface the most relevant, most-likely-to-be-booked, lodging options; and the best thing about this is it comes in a single API. Agencies don’t have to do all the groundwork and heavy lifting of maintaining all these different connects and aggregators.

How does Sabre’s loyalty programme for agencies work?
When an agency books hotel content through the SabreMosaic Travel Marketplace, the booking is attributed to the agency. We pass the agency’s identifiers to the hotel so the property can recognise the agency as the demand generator.

That matters for three reasons. Firstly, many hotel groups run agency-facing or loyalty programmes, meaning those stays can qualify for the agency’s rewards or commission tiers. Sabre’s rates are also generally eligible for loyalty recognition and accrual on the traveller side, subject to each chain’s rules, with commissions paid by the hotel flowing through to the agency. Also, consistent attribution can strengthen an agency’s relationship with hotels as the hotel can clearly see the business the agency is driving.

We’re actively investing in this space – on our roadmap are deeper loyalty credential passthrough, automated accrual, and richer reporting so agencies can more easily track and maximise the value of their hotel bookings. In short, booking hotels through Sabre means the agency gets the credit, the traveller gets recognised, commissions stay intact, and data strengthens the agency’s future negotiating power – benefits that can typically be lost when booking through third-party aggregators.

What other industry challenges are you addressing, having joined Sabre in October last year, after over 15 years of high-profile roles in travel and hospitality industry?
Hotel distribution remains one of the most complex areas of travel and simplifying it is a major industry challenge. Content fragmentation has been a longstanding issue, making it harder for agencies to present travellers with the best, most relevant options. One of the ways we’re tackling this is by solving fundamental problems like property and room type mapping, as part of our normalisation efforts – ensuring that a single hotel doesn’t appear multiple times under different names from various booking sources. Our proprietary mapping technology, developed with the team in our innovation lab, Sabre Labs, delivers very high accuracy with global chains – significantly higher than industry standards.

Beyond normalisation, we’re focused on future proofing hotel distribution around digital payments. Agencies want more digitalised payment solutions, but hotels also need to evolve to accept these methods, especially in Asia. Our goal is to drive transformation across the agency and hotel sides to ensure seamless, modern distribution.

Central to our vision of a more connected and intelligent travel ecosystem. We’re continuously enhancing the SabreMosaic Travel Marketplace platform to deliver richer content, smarter personalisation, and seamless integration across channels. For travel sellers, this means more relevant choices and better conversion. For lodging partners, it means greater visibility and more meaningful engagement with travellers.

In Asia-Pacific, where diversity and complexity define the market, our focus is on localising innovation – whether through more relevant content, deeper loyalty credential passthrough, or advanced analytics. It’s about creating value at every touch point.

Malaysia launches 2026 medical tourism campaign to boost international healthcare travel

0

The Malaysia Healthcare Travel Council (MHTC) has launched the Malaysia Year of Medical Tourism 2026 (MYMT 2026) at the Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre on July 25.

The campaign was officiated by Malaysia’s minister of health and MHTC chairman, Dzulkefly Ahmad, who also unveiled its logo and tagline, Healing Meets Hospitality.

The campaign aims to position Malaysia as a leading destination for international patients through a blend of medical care and hospitality

MYMT 2026 aims to position Malaysia as a leading medical tourism destination by promoting its healthcare services and hospitality offerings. The initiative seeks to attract international health travellers by highlighting the country’s medical infrastructure, professional expertise and integrative wellness options. Malaysian singer Siti Nurhaliza was named as the campaign ambassador.

In 2024, Malaysia recorded 1.6 million healthcare travellers, a 14 per cent increase year-on-year, generating 2.72 billion ringgit (US$578 million) in revenue – a 21 per cent rise compared to 2023. MYMT 2026 is expected to build on this growth, in line with MHTC’s target of achieving 12 billion ringgit in revenue by 2030.

The launch also featured the Flagship Medical Tourism Hospital programme, which recognises four shortlisted institutions: Institut Jantung Negara, Island Hospital Penang, Mahkota Medical Centre, and Subang Jaya Medical Centre. These hospitals have been selected for their performance in clinical care, innovation and international patient services. The winner will be announced in December 2025.

“Malaysia is no stranger as the medical tourism destination of choice, serving an array of healing journeys for our healthcare travellers to choose from. Now, not only are we focusing on modern medicine alone, we are also exploring a more integrative healthcare – a holistic ecosystem that blends modern medicine, wellness, Traditional & Complementary Medicine and preventive care,” said Dzulkefly.

New I’Msignia beachfront resort to open on Boracay’s Puka Beach in 2026

0

I’M Hotel Group, known for its aquatic-themed hotels and attractions, is expanding in the Philippines with plans to open a 381-key all-inclusive resort in Boracay in 1Q2026.

Country general manager Melissa Lim said I’Msignia Beachfront Resort Boracay will feature distinctive elements, including underwater rooms and integrated entertainment facilities, to increase demand in Boracay and compete with other island destinations.

I’M Hotel Group will debut its first beachfront resort in Boracay, featuring underwater rooms and family-friendly amenities; artist’s rendition of the I’Msignia Beachfront Resort Boracay pool

The resort, the only one on Boracay’s Puka Beach, will cover over two hectares. It will offer six room categories, with the smallest measuring 45m² (the Department of Tourism standard for a five-star hotel is a minimum of 30m²). Some rooms will include mini-playgrounds, targeting families, young adults and leisure travellers.

I’Msignia will include an Ocean Park and a large water park focusing on leisure and entertainment. This will set it apart from I’M Hotel Group’s Manila Ocean Park and Cebu Ocean Park, which have an educational emphasis popular with school field trips.

Lim said the resort’s concept will draw inspiration from Bali’s mega day clubs and beach clubs with international DJs, as well as diving resorts in the Maldives.

On the food and beverage side, Lim plans to collaborate with Michelin-starred chefs to introduce new culinary concepts to Boracay.

Health and wellness will be a major focus, with plans to offer an enhanced version of the I’M Onsen Spa, a key feature of the I’M Hotel in Makati, alongside the latest technologies such as red light therapy.

Headquartered in Singapore, I’M Hotel Group’s Philippine portfolio includes Hotel H2O and Manila Ocean Park, I’M Hotel (above which are the Oakwood Makati Avenue serviced apartments), I’M Onsen Spa in Makati, Cebu Ocean Park, and a building in Makati currently being renovated into serviced apartments. The group has also acquired land in San Vicente, Palawan, and aims to develop a property in South Korea within the next five years.

Seibu Prince Hotels & Resorts expands abroad with new Danang property

0

Seibu Prince Hotels & Resorts will open the Prince Hotel Da Nang in Vietnam in October 2025, marking a step in its renewed focus on international expansion. The move extends the company’s presence beyond Japan and reflects its plan to grow its global portfolio.

The 164-room hotel features minimalist designs, with each room offering a private balcony overlooking either the city or the beach. Facilities include several on-site restaurants and bars, among them a rooftop bar, The Speakeasy, with 360-degree views.

Seibu Prince Hotels & Resorts will open Prince Hotel Da Nang in October 2025, marking a key step in its global expansion

Additional amenities include a gym, an infinity rooftop pool on the fifth floor, and a hotel spa. The property also houses flexible meeting rooms equipped with audio-visual systems.

Located near My Khe Beach, the hotel provides access to Danang’s city nightlife in An Hai and the Son Tra Peninsula. It is also close to tourist sites such as Dragon Bridge, Marble Mountain, the Ancient Town and the Golden Bridge.

Lee Richards, CEO of the International Division, Seibu Prince Hotels & Resorts, said: “This new hotel marks an exciting chapter in our commitment to hospitality excellence, reinforcing our dedication to setting the highest standards in the world’s most thoughtfully curated destinations. Guests can look forward to experiencing our unique blend of Japanese warmth and genuine hospitality, ensuring an effortlessly elegant and deeply memorable stay.”

Duong Tien Thanh, of Thien An Thanh Trade Service Company, the owner of Prince Hotel Da Nang, added: “Our collaboration with Seibu Prince Hotels & Resorts is a natural fit. We firmly believe that our two organisations align perfectly in the shared endeavour to bring esteemed hospitality to the rest of the world, and we are excited for Prince Hotel Da Nang to be a shining example of this synergy.”

Aviation roundup: Emirates, Air France and more

0
Emirates

Emirates adds third daily flights to Dublin and Mauritius
Emirates will increase capacity to two key destinations with the launch of a third daily flight to Dublin from October 26, 2025 and to Mauritius from December 1, 2025.

The third daily service to Dublin will operate as EK165/166, using a Boeing 777-300ER in a three-class configuration.

This added Dublin service provides an early morning departure option from Dubai, complementing Emirates’ existing afternoon and evening flights. It also enhances connections to destinations across the airline’s network, including Sydney, Melbourne, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok.

The additional service to Mauritius will operate as flights EK709/710 also using a Boeing 777 aircraft. It will complement Emirates’ existing two daily A380 services (EK701/702 and EK703/704). Operated under a codeshare agreement with Air Mauritius, the new flight will offer improved connectivity for travellers from the Middle East, Europe, the Americas, and Far East markets such as Japan, China, Malaysia and Hong Kong. First Class, Business Class and Economy Class will be available on board.

La Première suites on Air France; photo by Air France

Air France unveils new La Première Suites on Singapore-Paris route
Air France is now operating its newly refurbished Boeing 777-300ER aircraft on its daily flight between Singapore Changi Airport and Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport. The aircraft features the airline’s latest cabin products across all classes, including the introduction of its new La Première suites on this route for the first time.

Singapore becomes the second destination, after New York JFK, to offer Air France’s upgraded La Première experience. Each aircraft features four suites, alongside 60 Business Class seats, 44 Premium Economy seats, and 204 Economy seats.

The new La Première suite includes fully flat beds, adjustable seating, floor-to-ceiling privacy curtains, and in-flight entertainment on dual 32-inch screens. Passengers also benefit from Bluetooth pairing, wireless charging, and personal device holders.

Air France plans to gradually expand the La Première product to more destinations, with Los Angeles joining in summer 2025, and Tokyo-Haneda in winter 2025/2026.

The newly retrofitted aircraft also offer enhanced comfort across all classes, with upgraded Business, Premium Economy, and Economy cabins now featuring lie-flat seats, Bluetooth connectivity, larger entertainment screens, and redesigned seating for added comfort.

Jetstar

Jetstar to launch direct flights from Brisbane to Cebu
Jetstar will launch a new seasonal service between Brisbane and Cebu from December 3, 2025, marking the airline’s seventh international route from Brisbane Airport.

The new route will operate three times a week on Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays, using Jetstar’s Airbus A321LR aircraft. It will be the first direct service between Australia and Cebu and is scheduled to run until May 16, 2026.

The addition forms part of Jetstar’s ongoing expansion in Asia and supports growing demand for direct, low-cost international travel from Brisbane. The Cebu route also contributes to Brisbane Airport’s network growth, bringing its total number of direct international destinations to 34 — the highest in its history.

Delta Air Lines

Delta to commence daily non-stop service between Hong Kong and Los Angeles
Delta Air Lines will introduce a new non-stop daily service between Hong Kong International Airport and Los Angeles International Airport from June 8, 2026, further expanding its Asia-US network.

The new route will be operated using Delta’s Airbus A350-900 aircraft, offering four cabin classes: Delta One suites, Delta Premium Select, Delta Comfort+, and Main Cabin. Delta One features lie-flat seats with sliding doors, premium bedding, and seasonal four-course meals, while Premium Select offers wider seats, greater recline, and upgraded amenities.

The service provides direct access to Los Angeles, with onward connections to over 30 US destinations. It also strengthens the Delta-Korean Air Joint Venture partnership, enhancing connectivity across the Pacific.

Travellers flying in Delta One to or from Hong Kong will have access to Delta’s new Delta One Lounge at LAX, featuring nearly 200 seats, chef-curated menus, a sushi bar, wellness room, and concierge check-in.

Mandai Rainforest Resort by Banyan Tree celebrates SG60

0

Mandai Rainforest Resort by Banyan Tree is marking Singapore’s 60th anniversary with a room package that includes resort credits, a buffet dinner at Planter’s Shed, and commemorative items available at Banyan Tree Gallery.

The resort is located within the Mandai Wildlife Reserve and offers access to attractions such as the Singapore Zoo, Night Safari and the recently opened Rainforest Wild Asia.

Guests can celebrate SG60 with a stay at Mandai Rainforest Resort by Banyan Tree, complete with dining offers, spa credits and exclusive merchandise

Banyan Tree Gallery will feature the SG60 Collection, which includes two Blooming in Harmony gift sets – each decorated with a motif of six Vanda Miss Joaquim orchids. The mini set, priced at S$60 (US$45) includes a crystal stone diffuser and aromatherapy oil. The full set, at S$160 adds an upcycled cassava wireless charging tray.

Dining accessories featuring the orchid motif are also available, including a linen table runner at S$260, a set of four linen table placemats at S$160, and a set of four ceramic coasters at S$60.

Planter’s Shed will offer a dinner buffet from August 4 to 10, 2025, priced at S$60++ per adult and S$30++ per child aged six to 12. Usual prices are S$68++ and S$34++ respectively. The buffet will feature local dishes such as laksa and prawn noodles, prepared at live cooking stations.

Guests staying at the resort between August 1 and 31, 2025 will receive S$60 in resort credits per room, per stay. The credit can be used for dining at Forage and Planter’s Shed, treatments at the Banyan Tree Spa, or purchases at Banyan Tree Gallery.

Bookings are open through to August 31, 2025.

For more information, visit Mandai Rainforest Resort by Banyan Tree.

New leadership appointments at Virtuoso

0

Helen McCabe-Young has been appointed senior vice president, global products at Virtuoso. She takes on the role following the departure of Thatcher Brown, who is now CEO of Crescent Seas. McCabe-Young has been with Virtuoso for five years as senior vice president, global marketing.

Two other recent appointments are Amy Logan as vice president, global network product, and Lucy Lieberman as vice president, global digital experience.

From left: Helen McCabe-Young, Amy Logan and Lucy Lieberman

Logan joined Virtuoso in May, having previously worked at Classic Vacations, Expedia, and Amazon, while Lieberman joined in June, and was formerly CEO of Hotels at Michelin and held senior roles at Ogilvy and Mather.

McCabe-Young starts her new role immediately and will help with the handover as Virtuoso looks for a new marketing head. Both Logan and Lieberman will report to McCabe-Young.

The slow appeal

0

If slowing down is the new luxury, Tasmania may be Australia’s best-kept secret. The air is crisp, the food hearty, and mobile phones often lose signal – which is the point. For Asians prioritising off-the-beaten-path travel, Tasmania offers a quiet appeal.

“I’ve watched it develop from a struggling industry to a blossoming one,” said Annabelle Sweetman, a 20-year Tasmanian tourism veteran and guide. “We used to be seen as a bit backward, but Tourism Tasmania has done a lot of work, so now we’ve grown up. Operators are working together to combine experiences, products are maturing, and people are really proud.”

Battery Point’s vibrant cottages bring Hobart’s layered history to life; photo by Mick2770

Many who have watched tourism here blossom point to the “MONA effect” for its beginnings, referring to the debut of the Museum of Old and New Art 14 years ago, drawing global attention for its curious and edgy exhibitions.

“People were coming just for the weekend and the airlines were seeing more demand,” said Sweetman, also noting that tourism has surpassed forestry as Tasmania’s leading industry.

For the record, the island welcomed 254,000 international visitors in 2024, a 24.8 per cent increase from 2023, with visitor spending rising 47.7 per cent. Compared to pre-Covid numbers, recovery is almost complete, with mixed performance from various markets.

About 20 per cent of international visitors come from Asia, with significant traffic from Singapore and Hong Kong, while the key China market is being encouraged to return and India emerges as a market to watch.

“The Asian market not only plays a very strong role in year-round visitation for us, but also a strong role in spending. We try really hard to make sure that the visitors we’re attracting to Tasmania are an audience who will understand what we offer but also respect our place,” said Lindene Cleary, chief marketing officer of Tourism Tasmania.

The tourism bureau promotes its offer around six key pillars: F&B, nature and wildlife, experiences, history and heritage, positive impact, and culture and creativity. It is also keen to show that it has just as much to offer in the winter season, if not more.

“There are a lot of events and festivals that are very creative and different to what you’d find anywhere else across our seasons but particularly in wintertime,” she said, in addition to whisky tastings and more aurora sighting opportunities due to longer nights.

She also noted the rise in hot and cold therapy experiences “all over Tasmania”. These include saunas on the beach, seconds from the cold plunge of the ocean, or saunas on a boat 20 minutes from Hobart, from where one can dive straight into the cold river water.

“That’s an interesting trend in Tasmania because we’re not seen as a typical wellness destination in terms of day spas and the traditional definition of wellness, but our version of wellness is more about taking time or pausing,” said Cleary.

Regardless of how wellness tourism is defined, the trend aligns with Tasmania’s immersive landscape, where unique wildlife thrives and geographic isolation helps preserve its pristine environment.

Visions of campfire meals also lend to masterful storytelling in Tasmanian tourism, from its defining history of convict settlement tangling with Aboriginal resistance to the 114 luxury rooms in MACq 01 hotel, each of which identifies with a local historical character.

Tasmania is also the kind of place that inspires the self-driving tourist, with itineraries that can be co-designed from scratch.

“We suggest that you plan at least five to seven days, and you can travel from Hobart, along the East Coast, Maria Island, Freycinet, Launceston, and possibly up to Cradle Mountain,” said Daniel Schoedler, owner and managing director of Premier Travel Adventures Tasmania.

“If you have 10 days, that’s even better, because you don’t have to change hotels every night. You can explore more of this seafood capital of Australia and spend time stargazing, which is a tour that’s really popular with the Asian market as we have several enquiries daily,” he added.

The luxury accommodation scene is also evolving. In addition to the premium but intimate old-world charm that properties like Islington Hotel offer, newer entrants such as The Tasman (named in the world’s top 50 hotels), Mövenpick, and Crowne Plaza are expanding Tasmania’s higher-end proposition.

“We used to have a waitlist for our rooms and now have to compete more, but that’s good. It keeps standards up,” said Karen Ann, general manager of Islington Hotel.

“I’m still in awe. There’s just such a huge variety for visitors… the outdoors, clean air, beautiful sightseeing, and restaurants that are to die for. Tasmanians really know how to look after their guests, who love the laid-back approach. Every guest has said to me, ‘I wish we had more time’,” she added.

If most visitors leave wishing they had stayed longer, the tip for tourists is evident – give yourself the time. And don’t say we didn’t tell you so.

Club Med welcomes Stéphane Maquaire as president and CEO

0

The Board of Directors of Club Med Holding has appointed Stéphane Maquaire as president and CEO, effective immediately.

The French national will be based in Paris and is tasked with leading the next phase of the company’s growth while maintaining its French identity and values.

Maquaire brings extensive leadership experience with French companies operating internationally. He has a background in premium brand transformation and commercial real estate, with a record of driving growth and operational performance. He joins Club Med from Carrefour, where he was executive director for Brazil and Latin America.