TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Saturday, 25th April 2026
Page 2259

Kuoni opens office in Chengdu

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WITH its outbound group travel business from China rising 14 per cent last year, Kuoni Group Travel Experts (GTE) has strengthened its China network by opening an office in Chengdu.

Kuoni GTE’s China network is centralised in Hong Kong, with local representatives in Beijing, Guangzhou, Shanghai and, since last Friday, Chengdu.

Chengdu is the fourth most populous city in the mainland, home to some 14 million people and the production facilities and offices of multinational corporations.

Passenger traffic through Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport exceeded 31.6 million in 2012 with plans in place to increase that number to 40 million by 2015.

Said David Painter, CEO of Kuoni GTE based in London, in an email interview with TTG Asia e-Daily: “Although many travellers come from Beijing and Shanghai, second-tier cities – 160 of them with populations of one million or more – are increasingly the focus for international investment which is helping to increase disposable income and drive the growth of a wealthier middle class.”

He added: “Having people throughout mainland China helps us to build local relationships, serving potential clients more efficiently by directing them to our Hong Kong and worldwide offices which can provide quality group travel options. Chengdu follows a similar investment in southern China with consultants based out of Guangzhou since 2012.”

Heading the Chengdu office is Joanna Ma, who reports to Tom Shi in Beijing. Ma oversees Kuoni GTE representatives of mid-west market in Chengdu and ensures their close collaboration with the Hong Kong office.

JacTravel boosts team in Asia

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JACTRAVEL has doubled the manpower for its Hong Kong team to tap the strong growth across Asian markets, where sales have increased more than 200 per cent in the past year.

It has appointed Shelley Ki as regional head of sales, Asia. Ki brings to JacTravel experience in some of the most respected companies in travel technology and online travel.

Ryan Kwok, the team’s new sales account development manager, Asia, has five years’ experience in the travel industry.

Sally Yiu, JacTravel Hong Kong’s contracts manager, comes from the hotel industry where she was responsible for selling accommodation.

Oakwood Worldwide names Dean Schreiber MD for APAC

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OAKWOOD Worldwide has appointed Dean Schreiber as managing director for Asia-Pacific. He will be based in Singapore.

In his new role, Schreiber will establish and execute the strategic direction for the business unit and oversee the growth of the brand throughout the region.

He has close to 30 years of international experience in the hospitality industry, including assignments in the Asia-Pacific and Middle East regions as well as experience in property development, new property openings, general management and hotel operations for five-star and luxury brands.

Schreiber was previously senior vice president of operations for Pan Pacific Hotels Group.

AirAsia India kicks off first flights in June

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ENDING months of speculations, AirAsia Goup CEO Tony Fernandes has confirmed that AirAsia India will take off this June.

Fernandes announced in a Tweet yesterday: “Very very proud to announce AirAsia India open for sale tomorrow. Wow. First flight June 12th. See you all In India on the 12th.”

The Times of India reported that the airline would begin operations with two daily flights on the Chennai-Bengaluru-Chennai route and a daily flight on Bengaluru-Goa- Bengaluru sector.

“Considering that 50 per cent of the domestic air travel market in India is between Delhi and Mumbai, through our South India operations we will strive for equal distribution of air traffic,” Fernandes had said once.

The LCC, a joint venture between Malaysia’s AirAsia Group, Tata Sons and Telestra Tradeplace, received its air operating licence early this month and is expected to offer fares between 30 and 35 per cent lower than its rivals’.

“AirAsia is entering a market where most of the airlines are facing heavy losses. It will be interesting to see how they manage profitability,” said Ankush Nijhawan, managing director, Nijhawan Group of Companies.

Chic Collection to have own GDS code, new booking engine

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GLOBAL marketing platform Chic Collection will launch its new GDS private label code and Guest Connect booking engine at the upcoming ILTM Asia show in Shanghai on June 2.

Chic Collection is introducing its FF – which stands for A Feeling not Formula – private label code for GDS systems, which will connect members to more than 65,000 travel agencies, major travel suppliers and websites internationally.

Secondly, Chic Collection will unveil its new booking engine. Developed by Sabre Hospitality Solutions, it allows consumers to make direct reservations at Chic Collection’s member hotels in real time.

Nigel Bolding, founder and CEO of Chic Collection, said: “Through the launch of our new working model we aim to connect member hotels directly to their target consumers while also offering sophisticated travellers a smooth and stress-free booking experience.”

The marketing platform is also in the midst of putting together a digital marketing strategy aimed at increasing page views to its website.

Chic Collection has representative offices in the UK, Germany, Dubai, Singapore, the US and Saudi Arabia.

Hyatt Place debuts in Asia with Shenzhen hotel

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HYATT Hotels and Resorts yesterday launched the first Hyatt Place hotel in Asia-Pacific in Shenzhen, China.

Hyatt Place Shenzhen Dongmen is located near the Shenzhen Dongmen Shopping District and a short distance from the Luohu business district, offering easy access from the airport and train station.

The Hyatt Place brand aims to meet the needs of both business and leisure travellers with its service concept, modern design and amenities including free Wi-Fi and 24-hour food offerings.

The hotel boasts 144 rooms, free Wi-Fi throughout the hotel, free hot breakfasts, a 24-hour gym, free public computers with Internet access, and more than 110m2 of high-tech meeting space.

F&B choices at the hotel extend to a 24/7 market serving food round the clock; a Coffee to Cocktails Bar featuring specialty coffees, premium house beverages and cocktails; and a Gallery Kitchen for sit-down lunch and dinner hours, dishing up local fare as well as Western food.

In her own way

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With more women travelling independently than ever before, tour operators and hotels are sitting up and taking notice of their requirements

may23_p4_analysis

A new generation of women is increasingly calling the shots in the travel industry, which is starting to recognise the potential of an emerging market segment that is travelling more frequently for both business and leisure.

Statistics from PATA show that between 2011 and 2012 there was a two per cent rise in female travellers to Cambodia, 4.9 per cent increase to Thailand and 6.9 per cent to Laos. Among the Asia-Pacific countries where statistics are available, Mongolia is the only country to see a decline in female travellers – and just a mere 0.6 per cent drop.

Industry players attribute the exponential growth of female travellers to rising affluence and maturing travel preferences in the region’s advanced economics. Lindy Andrews, CEO of Luxperience, commented in a media release: “The majority of these affluent Asian women travelling are from the wealthier areas of Asia, such as Tokyo, Singapore, Taiwan, Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong or Seoul. (For) example, in Singapore 32 per cent of all business travellers are female and Hong Kong has the largest percentage of female business travellers at 36 per cent.”

In particular, a growing number of ladies are embracing independent travel, based on TripAdvisor’s inauguralWomen and the World Travel Survey of over 600 female respondents from Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia; two in five women (41 per cent) go on leisure trips with other women, while one in three women (36 per cent) travel alone for leisure, with 43 per cent planning at least two solo trips this year.

And despite the recent spate of incidents pinpointing safety concerns for women in India, solo travel is picking up among the country’s female travellers. An online survey conducted by Indian OTA MakeMyTrip revealed that 44 per cent of Indian female travellers have travelled alone for leisure; 70 per cent of solo women travellers have so far travelled only within the country, while 10 per cent had only travelled overseas and 20 per cent had covered both.

The growth of independent female travellers has led to many tour operators specialising or rolling out exclusive programmes targeting this niche segment.

Girls on the Go, an India-based exclusive travel club for women, recorded 110 bookings in 2013, a 20 per cent increase from 2012, said founder Piya Bose. Some 90 per cent of the firm’s business derived from India and the remainder predominantly from Singapore and Malaysia.

While G Adventures does not offer female-only programmes, the Canada-based company will provide private group service as an alternative if a group of females request to travel together, according to spokesperson Casey Mead, who added that around 30 per cent of the firm’s travellers are solo females.

Adele Mitchell, director of Australia-based Inspired Travel, originally started her agency to cater to both male and female travellers, but eight years later some 95 per cent of her clients are female. “We deal with the 35-plus market as females of this age tend to be more curious, and enjoy learning and discovering. Our female clients enjoy travelling alone from their country of origin but joining small groups as part of the tour. This provides security and allows them to meet new people.”

“The security of small group travel with like-minded people” is especially appealing to solo female travellers, pointed out Suzanne Hart, director of She Travels, which offers specially tailored programmes targeted at financially independent women aged between 30 and 60. “We offer female-friendly accommodation options in locations that are deemed safe,” she added.

Sharing similar observations, Bose added: “Women are more likely to explore off-the-beaten-path locations including the Antarctica and Sahara when accompanied by other females. Many of our clients have limited (social) circles or find themselves constrained whether at work or home. Providing the platform to make new friends and share a common travel interest has been key to our success.”

Lyn Taylor’s Adventure Travel goes a step further by having female guides. Founder Lyn Taylor said: “If women are looking for an all-women holiday, then they want a woman to expertly guide them through their holiday, not just organise the trip and send them off on their own. Our business relating to women-only tours has increased by 10 per cent in the past two years and we expect a further two per cent rise in 2014.”

At the same time, the steady increase of women travelling alone has also led to a corresponding hike in demand for single-occupancy rooms.

Between 2011 and 2012, Small Luxury Hotels of the World (SLH) saw growth in single-occupancy travel across the board in terms of both revenue and number of room nights, with the number of sole occupancy room nights jumping from 4,115 to 5,841 while revenue from global solo bookings increased by nearly US$400,000 year on year.

We offer female-friendly accommodation options, along with the security of small group travel with like-minded people, which appeals to the solo female traveller.

We offer female-friendly accommodation options, along with the security of small group travel with like-minded people, which appeals to the solo female traveller.
Suzanne Hart, Director, She Travels

In its core markets of Australia, Brazil Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Russia, the UK and the US, the surge of female bookings was particularly notable, with a 53 per cent increase in room nights booked by single-occupancy females between 2011 and 2012 (from 973 room nights in 2011 to 1,489 room nights in 2012).

Around Asia, hotels have also jumped on the bandwagon by rolling out services with feminine touches.

Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok has since mid-2013 introduced a Women’s Experience programme, which entails assigning rooms along the corridor for female guests for safety and security reasons and placing a card in their rooms to inform of  amenities such as curling iron, yoga mat, makeup remover wipes and razor, shared Patty Lerdwittayaskul, the hotel’s director of marketing communications.

“We experienced an increase of seven per cent in female travellers in 2013 compared with 2012 after introducing the Women’s Experience programme,” she said. “However, in 2014 due to the current political issue we have seen a downturn as the female market has been more sensitive than male market over safety fears.”

Within the region, Singapore’s Naumi Hotel has gone one step further to dedicate an entire floor to female travellers for complete privacy; this floor is accessed via a glass door that can only be opened with a keycard.

Donny Yip, director of sales at Naumi Hotel, said: “We became aware of an increasing trend for women to travel alone and wanted to ensure female travellers a comfortable environment. In the past 12 months alone, our female only floor has experienced an increase in bookings of 20 per cent. The majority of bookings come from Australia, Hong Kong, Europe and South Korea.”

To cater to the female travel market in Asia-Pacific even more effectively, Luxperience’s Andrews urged travel suppliers to consider strategies such as introducing a no-single supplement during shoulder months, including an experiential aspect to products and stepping up engagement on social media channels for a market segment that strongly relies on peer-to-peer recommendation for travel decisions.

36%
The percentage of women in South-east Asia travelling alone for leisure, based on TripAdvisor’s Women and the World Travel Survey of over 600 female respondents in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia

400%
The expected increase in business trips undertaken by women in Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea and Singapore by 2030, according to estimates from Amadeus.

1,489
The number of room nights booked by single-occupancy females in 2012 among Small Luxury Hotels of the World’s core markets, marking a 53 per cent surge from 2011.

44%
The percentage of Indian female travellers who have travelled alone for leisure, based on the findings of an online survey conducted among women travellers by Indian OTA MakeMyTrip.

Additional reporting by Xinyi Liang-Pholsena

SIA, US-based JetBlue await approval for codeshare

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INTERLINE partners Singapore Airlines (SIA) and New York-based LCC JetBlue Airways have filed an application with the US Department of Transportation for a codeshare agreement.

According to a JetBlue press release, passengers can combine flights by both carriers within a single itinerary and benefit from seamless connections by the airlines, one-stop ticketing and baggage check-in, should the codeshare agreement receive approval.

Tickets will go on sale once approved by the relevant authorities.

Should the deal go ahead, JetBlue would put its code on the following SIA flights including:
Los Angeles-Tokyo (Narita)-Singapore
New York-Frankfurt-Singapore
San Francisco-Hong Kong-Singapore
San Francisco- Seoul-Singapore

Singapore Airlines would add its code on JetBlue-operated flights beyond its US gateway at New York’s John F Kennedy International Airport to 16 destinations:
Austin, Texas; Boston, Massachusetts; Buffalo, New York; Charlotte, North Carolina; Chicago, Illinois (O’Hare); Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood, Florida; Houston, Texas; Jacksonville, Florida; Orlando, Florida; New Orleans, Louisiana; Portland, Maine; Rochester, New York; Syracuse, New York; Tampa, Florida; Washington D.C. (Dulles); and West Palm Beach, Florida.

Asiana receives first Airbus A380

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SOUTH Korea’s Asiana Airlines took delivery of its first Airbus A380 aircraft yesterday, which it plans to deploy on routes from Seoul to Tokyo, Hong Kong and Bangkok for a start.

Eventually, the airline will use it on Los Angeles-bound services as well.

The aircraft is the first of six A380s Asiana has on order, powered by Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines. Each aircraft comes with a premium three-class layout for total seating capacity of 495 passengers, with 12 private suites in First Suite, 66 fully flat seats in Business Smartium and 417 seats in Travel Class. All seats are equipped with the latest on-demand in-flight entertainment systems.

“We are delighted to receive our first A380 today, which is key to our future vision and fleet modernisation strategy,” said Park Sam Koo, chairman of Kumho Asiana Group at the occasion yesterday.

“I am confident that Asiana can further enhance its level of customer service and that the A380 will play a significant role in helping us to remain at the forefront of the airline business.”

Asiana also has on order 30 of the all-new A350 XWB, which promises 25 per cent lower operating costs than the competition.

Changi Airport and Jetstar pilot self-service check-ins

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CHANGI Airport Group (CAG) has begun trials for its self-service initiative in collaboration with Jetstar Asia, aimed at reducing the airport’s manpower requirements and offering passengers a more hands-on check-in.

As part of Fast and Seamless Travel at Changi (FAST@Changi), CAG has installed two self bag-drop units and four self check-in kiosks alongside the LCC’s check-in counters at Terminal 1. At the self check-in kiosks, passengers print their boarding pass and baggage tag. They can then deposit their tagged baggage at the self bag-drop counter and obtain a receipt for their luggage.

Passengers on selected Jetstar flights are invited to use the self-service options, and instructional videos, signs and personnel will be on site to guide them through the process.

Local daily The Straits Times reported that CAG will continue the trials for the next three months until August.

Tan Lye Teck, executive vice president, airport management, CAG, said in a press release: “Against a backdrop of growing passenger raffic and the current manpower situation in Singapore, such as in the groundhandling sector, the adoption of self-service initiatives will help alleviate some of the pressure faced by the industry.

“The implementation of FAST@Changi is in line with a wider global push towards increasing automation at airports to improve productivity and efficiency, while providing passengers with greater flexibility and convenience.”

FAST@Changi will be rolled out in phases throughout the airport’s existing facilities as well as the upcoming Terminal 4 (TTG Asia e-Daily, November 6, 2013).