TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Thursday, 2nd April 2026
Page 1407

World’s most Michelin-starred chef Joel Robuchon dies

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Photo credit: Facebook/Joel Robuchon page officielle

French master chef Joel Robuchon, who built up a global restaurant empire and elevated mashed potato into an art form, has passed away on Monday in Geneva. He was 73.

The French government announced his death. He died of cancer, according to French newspaper Le Figaro.

Photo credit: Facebook/Joel Robuchon page officielle

Often dubbed the greatest French master chef of his era, he was widely regarded for recasting French haute cuisine in a personal and inventive style.

Born in Poitiers, western France, in 1945, Robuchon rose up through apprenticeships and came into his own in the 1980s and 1990s. His first Paris restaurant, Jamin, dazzled the French culinary and earned three Michelin stars a mere three years after opening in 1981.

He ran many restaurants worldwide, including Las Vegas, New York, Bangkok, Hong Kong and Macau, becoming the world’s most Michelin-starred chef with a record 32 Michelin stars in 2016.

In June, it was announced that his two restaurants at Singapore’s Resorts World Sentosa were closing down.

Singapore tests iris scans at border checkpoints

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Iris scans are being tested at the Woodlands checkpoint, bordering Johor Bahru in Malaysia
Iris scans are being tested at the Woodlands checkpoint, bordering Johor Bahru in Malaysia

Eye scans for Singaporeans and permanent residents are being piloted at select counters at the Woodlands and Tuas checkpoints, as well as Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal.

The trials involve officers scanning travellers’ iris in addition to fingerprint verification at select counters, reported Singapore’s The Straits Times, quoting an Immigration and Checkpoints Authority spokesman.

With iris patterns harder to replicate than fingerprints, eye scans represent a more effective biometric identity verification tool that could eventually replace thumbprint checks at Singapore checkpoints, the article stated.

Fare fluctuations more likely with further liberalisation on Chinese air routes

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Chinese airlines allowed to set price on significantly more routes now

As the Chinese authorities further loosen controls on airfares, travel industry players are expecting greater fluctuations on popular domestic routes as early as this summer.

Last December, the Civil Aviation Administration of China and the National Development and Reform Commission allowed Chinese carriers to set their own prices on a significantly larger number of routes.

According to BCD Travel, only 31 China air routes operated without price control in 2013. After the new ruling kicked in, the number jumped to 724 in 2017 and 1,030 this year.

Chinese airlines allowed to set price on significantly more routes now

More than giving airlines pricing control, a greater implication of the reform is that prices become subject to free market forces, BCD Greater China, managing director, Jonathan Kao, stressed.

Changes in airfares are “the result of many different factors including competition between different carriers flying the route, competition with high speed rail, and behavior changes – travellers booking earlier, choosing cheaper flights”, Kao explained.

Yet, Kao expects that airfare in China will continue to increase modestly in the near future, “consistent with the rise in prices in most categories of products/services in China”.

Kao noted that TMCs will play a role in procuring options most beneficial for his corporate travellers. “There is no evidence so far that the price reform will affect the demand for business and leisure travel. However, we do feel that forward-planning and travel policy controls will become more important.”

On the leisure front, Century Holiday International Travel Group, Shanghai branch, vice general manager, Frank Kao said the market has already been regulating itself by supply and demand without much government control.

While pricing varies between low and peak travel seasons, Kao said he has never encountered airlines charging above the ceiling of published rates.

“It’s hard to tell whether airfare will rise as it relates greatly to China’s economy. Based on big data and online websites (however), it seems economic prospects are not optimistic so there will be downward trend.”

A leisure travel agent in Beijing who spoke to TTG Asia on the condition of anonymity also expected lower airfares from Chinese carriers in the future as high-speed trains are increasingly seen as alternatives to flying.

The source remarked: “If one takes the train between Xi’an and Chengdu or through Guangxi area, the view from the window will be super nice. While if taking a flight, you worry about the airflow bumps all the time.”

Mary Li assumes co-CEO role at Mystifly

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Mary Li has taken up the role of co-CEO at B2B airfare marketplace Mystifly, joining founder and CEO Rajeev Kumar to lead the company through its next phase of innovation and growth.

Li will direct the company’s leadership in optimising product, technology, operations and the human resource efforts while also bringing her expertise to drive growth.

Before joining Mystifly, Li founded and served as the COO of Aslan, a data-driven travel technology company which was acquired by Alitrip (Alibaba’s online travel market). She went on to serve as the head of air tickets, where she and her team rolled out the first mobile app platform for air ticketing in China.

Guam Visitors Bureau seeks marketing representation in South Korea

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Inarajan Natural Pool in Guam

The Guam Visitors Bureau (GVB) is soliciting proposals from marketing companies to act as its destination marketing representation in South Korea.

The chosen agency will play a role in promoting Guam tourism and achieving visitor arrival goals, as well as act as GVB’s liaison office in South Korea on matters pertaining to the destination.

Inarajan Natural Pool in Guam

Request for proposal packages can either be downloaded via GVB’s website or obtained (in USB format) at a fee of US$25 at the GVB Office, located on 401 Pale San Vitores Road, Tumon, Guam.

GVB said in a statement that any questions should be made in writing to the president and CEO, and be dropped off at the GVB office; emailed to procurement@visitguam.org; or sent by fax to 671-646-886.

The deadline for submission is September 14, 17.00 (Chamorro Standard Time).

Best Western doubles loyalty rewards in Asia

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SureStay Plus Sukhumvit 2 by Best Western
SureStay Plus Sukhumvit 2 by Best Western

Best Western Hotels & Resorts has unveiled a new Double Points promotion for its loyalty programme members.

Valid for stays between now and October 31, Best Western Rewards members booking directly with any participating hotel across Asia or via Best Western’s website can earn double the points.

Best Western’s Asia portfolio includes hotels in Bali, Tokyo and Yangon.

Graham Perry named MD for Best Western Australasia

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Graham Perry has been appointed managing director of Best Western Hotels & Resorts, Australasia.

The appointment follows Best Western International (BWI) taking management control of the brand on June 1 from the Motel Federation of Australia.

His first few weeks have been spent bedding down the operational transition as BWI moves to a property direct relationship with hotels and resorts in Australia and New Zealand.

Perry’s immediate goals are to boost the level of services Best Western provides properties such as increasing revenue management capabilities and growing Best Western Rewards.

He was most recently CEO of inland NSW, while previous roles include CEO See Australia, CEO Traveland, managing director classifieds at Fairfax Media, and managing director Utell International.

Como Hotels appoints new cluster DOSM for Maldives resorts

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Singapore-based luxury hotel group Como Hotels and Resorts has appointed Fadzlon Bakar as cluster director of sales and marketing for the Maldives – Como Cocoa Island and Como Maalifushi.

Bakar’s experience in the luxury travel industry includes three years with Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts, 16 years with Four Seasons and most recently with Alila Villas Soori, where she played an instrumental role to rebrand the property to become The Soori Bali.

Not a one-legged stool anymore

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Tom Santora

Let’s go back to the beginning. Why did Associated Luxury Hotels buy WorldHotels 18 months ago?
We compete with the bigger chains, but we were a one-legged stool doing only meetings and incentives (the parent owns Associated Luxury Hotels International or ALHI, an independent global sales organisation serving the North American MICE market). We should also be doing corporate travel and leisure. Either we build or we buy. So we bought WorldHotels.

Tom Santora

Why WorldHotels?
We have the same ethos, i.e. to prop up independent hotels for success. The portfolios were almost opposite, so there wasn’t an overlap from a distribution perspective. ALHI at the time had over 170 hotels in North America and 50-60 hotels internationally, while most of the 350 members of WorldHotels are predominantly in Europe and Asia, with only over 30 hotels or so in the US.

From the sales perspective, no one does MICE like ALHI, while WorldHotels is the ALHI of corporate travel. So we have two portfolios covering the globe. We’re now a full-service soft brand, not just a MICE global sales organisation.

ALHI has existed over 30 years. Why is it important to be a full-service soft brand today? How do ALHI members react to your being global, from US-centric previously?
It is a delicate but important subject in that in both groups, I don’t think members always want to see you grow. They want all the attention, so as we keep growing the organisation, sometimes they may feel they won’t be getting as much revenue as they used to get.

But if, say, our sales person talks to a customer and the customer says, ‘We need to have a meeting in Shanghai, what do you have there?’ If we don’t have anything there, well guess what? They are going to call Marriott or Hilton or someone else.

If you join ALHI, you probably don’t want the sales person running around selling 600 hotels (the combined number of hotels, roughly), but remember, the 600 hotels are not all MICE hotels, only a portion.

Do you see a day when the two portfolios will combine?
What we might see is the ALHI collection and the WorldHotels collection coming under one name. In some cases members might be in both (depending on the product). A lot of WorldHotels’ members in Asia are upper upscale hotels that need MICE, while the ones in Europe and the US typically have 150 rooms with three meeting rooms. There are already 35-40 WorldHotels members that have also become part of ALHI.

Give me an example how the purchase has benefited ALHI.
It gave us literally overnight an infrastructure to put more MICE people on the ground.
On our own, to hire someone to work for ALHI in Singapore would mean us knowing who the experts are, setting up an office, understanding the requirements such as medical benefits, etc. Now, they can start working in Shanghai or Beijing (WorldHotels has over 30 sales offices globally) and that’s the plan.

We’re going to put more MICE people on the ground globally. If you rewind to 18 months ago, everybody was in the US; today, we’ve already opened offices in London and Frankfurt, and Paris next, with offices in Asia and South America following.

Back to the two portfolios, how are you growing them going forward?
Our CEO (Josh Lesnick) stands behind the mantra that we’re not in the membership business; we’re in the revenue-generation business. We have always been a sales-focused organisation that highly incentivises our sales people to perform (http://bit.ly/2KhCrie). We’re not about the plaque; we want to be behind the scenes driving revenue and helping guide our hotels be successful.

So our combined portfolio moving forward is to have the right quality hotels in locations our customers want be, and to make sure we have the sales support to make those hotels successful.

That means saying no to hotels (that are not the right fit). In the past year, we have turned away over 10,000 rooms inventory from people who came to us (for WorldHotels membership). When we did the background, we didn’t think we could support them, so we didn’t want to take their money, or we felt their quality wasn’t where we’re going.

Apart from shifting WorldHotels’ culture towards more revenue-generation and sharper membership fit as you’ve just described, how else are you strengthening the new child?
We’re investing over US$10 million in WorldHotels alone this year on technology and people.

One of the big initiatives we’re taking is relaunching the loyalty programme. We’ve sunsetted Peak Points (the previous WorldHotels loyalty programme) and are launching an entirely new one, TheList, this fall.

There’s a focus among independent chains on loyalty programmes, as the big chains launch soft brands and other new threats such as home-sharing emerge. What gives your new loyalty programme an edge?
Our CEO Josh is the gentleman that came up with no blackout dates. He’s either launched or redefined maybe five different loyalty programmes from major chains like Hyatt, Starwood, Wyndham, plus he launched a loyalty coalition on Broadway, addressing issues such as how to get members to go to the different theatres’ shows – in short he’s Mr Loyalty, he gets it.

I redefined Omni’s programme (Santora was Omni Hotels & Resorts’ CMO and SVP of sales) but I also launched Global Hotels Alliance (GHA) which brought together 35 brands and 600 hotels around the world. Omni was a shareholder in that, so I had the chance to work with the CEOs of GHA to develop (the alliance).

And now we have a chance to launch a loyalty programme from the ground up, without being handcuffed by old technology or legacy programme.

How does one go about launching a new loyalty programme?
Understanding what our customers want is one of the first steps. In 4Q2017, we did a quantitative study of 100,000 independent travellers across the globe.

And here’s a really interesting finding: they feel they get inconsistent recognition at independent hotels. Say, when they arrive, they’re asked ‘is this your first stay with us?’ when it’s their third.

Then we went to the GMs and owners and did a similar survey. Guess what, the first thing they said was they needed to improve recognition for their guests – they know they don’t know their own customers.

So tied to our loyalty programme is a new CRM that will create extremely valuable profiles of every guest. This will provide them with better service when they travel and stay with our members.

We’re going to go back to the hotel, take three years of the customer history, and dedupe it. So instead of five times Santora (record), it becomes one, and that profile would say everything about me, not just where I’ve stayed – and that it’s not my first time at the hotel but third – but what my preferences are. We’re providing our members with technology that on their own, as independent hotels, will be expensive to have.

We’re still fine-tuning the programme and will roll it out in the fall, after the new WorldHotels website is launched this summer. There, too, the change won’t just be the skin of the website but an entirely different architecture. It will be fantastic from the functionality perspective, communications perspective and so on.

Taking off with NDC

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IATA and its airline protagonists have high hopes for the New Distribution Capability (NDC), which is touted as a new standard to connect airlines with intermediaries, with the promise of greater flexibility to sell ancillary products and introduce more personalised and dynamic offers.

It has taken a while for the industry to warm up to NDC since its launch in 2012. Airlines were fairly slow to adopt NDC due to investments required in implementing NDC appplication programme interfaces (APIs). GDSs, which were initially concerned about NDC’s potential disruption to their traditional intermediary role, have adopted a more conciliatory stance and became adopters of NDC – an integral part of the NDC implementation process.

Six years on, there’s no doubt that NDC is finally beginning to take flight, albeit in a lumbering sort of way, clearly illustrating the work that still needs to be done by IATA and its supporters in championing for NDC integration.

The party has started
“It isn’t a question of ‘is NDC going to happen?’. It’s happening, and it’s more a question of how, what and why,” Travelport’s vice president product and marketing Ian Heywood asserted at the recent Travelport Live conference in Bangkok.

For an initiative that began fairly controversially, the narrative has turned largely positive as entities in the aviation sector agree that standardisation is needed to achieve transparency and efficiency in the current distribution system.

Already, 48 airlines are now certified to IATA NDC Level 3, and by end-2018 certified airlines are expected to account for 59 per cent of all passengers boarded. Also certified are 55 IT companies and aggregators, including those which help airlines to expose NDC content by providing the APIs, e.g. Farelogix, Datalex and OpenJaw.

IATA has released a list of 21 airlines that are part of its Leaderboard initiative to push NDC adoption, with each carrier aiming to have 20 per cent of their transactions via NDC by the end of the year 2020. These include Finnair, Qatar Airways, Cathay Pacific Airways, China Southern Airlines, among others.

Qantas, for example, in May launched a new distribution platform developed with Farelogix to enhance the airline retailing, booking and servicing capabilities for its trade partners and deliver a more personalised experience for customers, shared  the airline’s senior manager, distribution operations, Nathan Smeulders, during Travelport Live.

“We are taking a positive approach and collaboration with agency partners,” he said. “We want to grow NDC content as quickly as we can with the 20 per cent (of transactions by NDC) by 2020 target.”

Bryan Koh, vice president ecommerce, Singapore Airlines (SIA), conceded that the carrier was “a late starter to the NDC game with a lot of contemplation prior” but it has since been building merchandising engine and capabilities with travel technology providers and agents. The airline launched its first NDC connection with Skyscanner in May this year.

In addition to airline buy-in, the three major GDSs have committed to achieve Level 3 NDC certification as aggregators. Travelport was the first to get there in December 2017, followed by Amadeus last month, while Sabre, already a Level 3 IT provider, is expected to attain the same level as an aggregator within this year.

HRG, which has been awarded IATA level 3 certification for NDC, views the new standard as “groundbreaking”, said Australia managing director, David Lorimer, as the TMC is now able to distribute new fares and deepen its relationships with clients while improving efficiency.

Role of GDSs in post-NDC world
GDSs’ traditional role as the main intermediary between airlines and agents may have been challenged with NDC’s inception, but it is not realistic to think that they will disappear.

Although agents will be able to directly connect to all commercial information of airlines if they choose to do so in the post-NDC landscape, it may not always make sense.
Industry executives were quick to point out that NDC content will still come through the GDS, which is much better at serving booking volume.

Without the GDS, work efficiency will be compromised, shared HRG’s Lorimer. “If there are many APIs, I have to leave the GDS environment and I can’t afford to be less efficient,” he said. “We have created HRG One-View system, piping in API inventory from all around the world.”

Gawin Tsang, e-commerce manager, IT department, Nan Hwa (Express) Travel Service, a B2B travel wholesaler in Hong Kong, also sees value in having GDSs to aggregate NDC content in order not to create a ridiculous amount of work.

“We consolidate over 83 carriers, so it would be a tough job to have NDC connections with all airlines,” said Tsang.

“(Connecting to) less than 10 APIs would still be possible, but it’s probably impossible to get all NDC solutions connected. Not only will such scenario be costly and less efficient, the outcome may not yield better returns too.”

While airlines like Lufthansa and British Airways – which have rolled out direct connect initiatives via NDC – have approached Nan Hwa on collaboration, Tsang said it’s still an “open verdict” on how the company will move ahead with NDC.

Emphasising the aggregator role that GDSs now play in the new ecosystem, Heywood posed this question to agents: “API connections are expensive, do you want 400 APIs coming to you?”

No longer pure distribution platforms, Travelport, Amadeus and Sabre, have expanded their portfolio to become travel technology providers and content aggregators across airlines in the new ecosystem.

Industry in waiting
Following years of explanation and debate around its education blitz to build acceptance of the NDC, the positive traction gained among major airlines has led IATA’s NDC programme director Yanick Hoyles to claim that “2018 is a year of plumbing” as the organisation expects to see “from mid-2019 to 2020 really strong growth in volumes.”

But Heywood thinks it’s still “early stage experimentation” for the IATA-led project as the industry feels its way around the new standard.

“It will be 2018 and 2019 as the sector puts NDC in place. But there’s still quite a lot of work, not just for the airlines and agencies but across the whole industry,” said Heywood.

Even though many major airlines  like Lufthansa and British Airways have forged ahead with the standard and some have applied a commercial strategy, CAPA’s chief analyst Brendan Sobie notes that most carriers are still “waiting and seeing”.

Malaysia Airlines, for example, is still in the preliminary stages of embracing NDC, having just moved into a new PSS (passenger service system) last year, the airline’s sales manager of GDS management, Abdul Razak Ab Hamid, told TTG Asia. “A lot of back-end work is needed to get NDC going,” he commented.

Smaller airlines, especially LCCs, are more inclined to sit on the fence regarding NDC uptake as they await alternatives. “There are some (airlines) who don’t even know what NDC is about,” Sobie remarked.

The way forward
The adoption of NDC is unlikely to be resolute in the coming years, but industry experts generally believe that “embracing the NDC standard” is the way to go although implementing brings its own set of challenges.

“What we are seeing at the moment is not what we are going to see in two, three years’ time,” said Heywood, projecting that the NDC transition is a multi-year effort involving a “carrot and stick” process.

Acknowledging the flux that will likely characterise the NDC landscape in the next 18 months, Heywood urged agents to join forces with Travelport and airlines to work out NDC’s benefits. “Please come on board to work together on solutions that you need,” he recommended.

SIA’s Koh puts forth a similar message. “Many agents have talked about airlines taking away their business, but NDC offers agents to be part of the new norm.

“Come join the party and bring it forward,” he implored.