TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Thursday, 5th February 2026
Page 1834

Singaporeans report spike in happiness while on vacation

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Beach holidays were ranked the most popular holiday type

SINGAPOREANS reported a surge in happiness when they travel, according to Hotels.com’s inaugural Travel Happiness Index survey.

The survey revealed that their happiness level rose from 69 points out of 100 before their trip, to 85 points while they are on holiday, a 23 per cent increase.

However, upon their return home, respondents indicated a drop in happiness to 68 points. While a majority of them felt refreshed after their holiday (48 per cent), one in 10 said they felt exhausted.

While on vacation, one-third of respondents said they were happiest when indulging in delicious food, while 17 per cent prefer a comfortable bed and 13 per cent enjoy alone time most.

The survey, which also looked at the possible situations that could ruin a trip, showed that the loss of a wallet (32 per cent) or being down with food poisoning (30 per cent) ranked higher than bad weather (17 per cent).

The top holiday type for respondents was the beach with 59 per cent indicating their preference, followed closely by family trips coming in at a close 57 per cent.

Almost half of the respondents said they planned one to three months in advance for their holiday (47 per cent), while only 0.6 per cent revealed that they spontaneously went on trips.

Zenith Hotel Kuantan targets Asian MICE markets

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THE Zenith Hotel Kuantan has turned its attention to three Asian markets – Singapore, Indonesia and China – after four years in operation to expand its business beyond domestic sources.

General manager, Nathan Vaithi, told TTGmice e-Weekly: “It is time we expanded. We have very good hardware and software for meetings, incentives and conferences. We are the only facility on Peninsular Malaysia’s east coast with a dedicated conference and exhibition centre.

“This year, we were awarded the ASEAN Green Hotel Standard which will give us an edge when we bid for MICE groups. Being close to two well-known beaches, Teluk Chempedak and Cherating Beach, is an added advantage.”

The property has 12 meeting rooms, two exhibition halls, and three ballrooms which can fit 5,000 people theatre-style when combined.

In its endeavour to expand its MICE business internationally, The Zenith Hotel Kuantan recently hired a director of sales for MICE and is currently creating indoor and outdoor teambuilding packages.

There are also plans to participate in IT&CM Asia this October, as well as conduct product presentations for meeting planners.

IACC sports new logo following rebranding exercise

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IACC, a global association that represents small to mid-sized meetings venues, has undergone a rebranding to better represent its 378 members from 22 countries.

Extensive research with members and industry stakeholders was conducted and the result is a new logo designed to reflect symmetry. Made up of four overlapping hexagons, the logo illustrates the strength and alignment of universal connectivity, and represents the four brand pillars which are – exclusive meeting venues, by design; at the forefront of meetings innovation; globally connected network of passionate members; and curators of exceptional meeting experiences.

Mark Cooper, IACC CEO, said: “As we continue to grow and expand the association globally to thrive in what is undoubtedly a fast changing meetings industry, the brand needed to evolve to acknowledge this.”

Alex Cabañas, IACC president, added: “This gives us a refreshing new look that reflects and projects a modern, forward thinking and innovative personality, which remains a unique characteristic of the IACC global community.”

Founded in 1981, IACC members include conference centres, seminar houses, day meeting venues, corporate universities, and meetings-focused hotels and resorts.

China becomes world’s biggest business travel market

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CHINA surpassed the US as the world’s highest-spending business travel market, having ended 2015 with US$291.2 billion in business travel spending as compared to the US$290.2 billion recorded for the US in the same year, according to a Visa-sponsored report by the GBTA Foundation.

The GBTA BTI Outlook – China 2016 H1 report projects the trend to persist – with China’s business travel spend forecasted to grow 10.1 per cent to US$320.7 billion, compared to an increase of 1.9 per cent to US$295.7 billion in the US market.

Despite heightened concerns about a potential hard landing for China as a result of the early 2016 volatility in its financial markets, there has been continued investment in travel infrastructure in the country.

A plan to open 82 new airports has been underway since 2011 and hoteliers are also continuing to increase their presence in China. Over 70 per cent of the hotel construction pipeline in Asia-Pacific can be attributed to China.

Economic pressures are however, expected to slow the rate of growth of the Chinese domestic market, which accounted for 95 per cent of total business travel spend in 2015. Nevertheless, domestic business travel spending is expected to grow roughly 10 per cent from 2016 to 2017.

“Despite a relative slowdown, China’s business travel market remains one of the fastest growing in the world,” said Michael McCormick, executive director and COO, GBTA.

“China surpassing the US in business travel spending marks a major inflection point and truly demonstrates the global nature of today’s economy.”

Annie Chng-Luchau joins Design Hotels as sales director

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Annie Chng-Luchau, regional director of sales, Asia-Pacific, Design Hotels

ANNIE Chng-Luchau, a veteran with 15 years of sales experience in the hospitality industry, has joined Design Hotels as regional director of sales, Asia-Pacific, based in Singapore.

In her new role, she will be in charge of developing and implementing sales strategies for the hotels under Design Hotels’ portfolio in order to maximise opportunities, drive revenue and boost brand awareness in the region.

Most recently, Chng-Luchau was regional sales director at The Collektion, a sales representation company for independent hotels.

Some of her other prior hotel experiences include serving as assistant director of sales at The Lanesborough in London, global director of group sales at Preferred Hotel Group and regional group sales manager at The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company in London.

Destination Kuala Lumpur unveils new brand

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KUALA Lumpur City Hall has unveiled a new destination brand for the city yesterday, as well as committing to between two million ringgit (US$512 thousand) and three million ringgit in funds on advertising to promote the brand in Malaysia first, before going global.

Titled Kuala Lumpur a City of Contracts and Diversity, the branding seeks to represent the diverse populace, architecture, cuisine, accommodation and shopping options that can be found in the capital of Malaysia.

“The branding exercise will help expand our marketing capabilities with promotional campaigns and eye-catching logos to set Kuala Lumpur as the region’s forefront destination for business and leisure,” said Mohd Amin Nordin Abdul Aziz, mayor, Kuala Lumpur City Hall.

He added: “By successfully branding Kuala Lumpur, we will be able to stimulate an increase in tourism, investment, job opportunities, business development and events hosting.”

According to Amin, the campaign hopes to boost three key indicators – visitor arrivals, average spend per night and average length of stay.

In the government’s Kuala Lumpur Tourism Masterplan 2015-2025, targets are for Kuala Lumpur to reach 16 million foreign arrivals and to generate 79 billion ringgit in receipts by 2025. This translates to about five to six per cent annual growth.

Branding of the city is also in line with the masterplan which had prescribed that to position Kuala Lumpur competitively, it needed to have a distinctive brand.

Qatar celebrates 10 years in Hong Kong

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QATAR Airways is celebrating 10 years of Hong Kong operations with a series of events and the launch of new flights.

A sale took place in late March offering promotional fares to 10 destinations worldwide, and Qatar will be holding the sale again in this year-long celebratory affair, according to Chan Cheong Eu, greater south China country manager, Qatar Airways.

Other consumer engagements are also in the works, including street performances throughout the city.

Additional flights from Hong Kong are set to launch as well, with this year’s first, a Doha route, established since February after Cathay Pacific gave up the slot, stated Chan, adding that a Boeing 787 Dreamliner is being used to ply the daily service.

He further said that more route launches can be expected later this year, including to lesser-known European destinations.

Hong Kong was Qatar’s 70th destination when it launched its maiden flight there a decade ago. The Doha-based carrier currently operates the second largest fleet of Boeing 787 aircraft with 27 on hand and 16 more on order.

Hotel price war in Pattaya after disappointing Songkran

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THE recent Songkran season in Thailand gave only a brief boost to hotels in Pattaya, where a price war is grinding on, sources tell TTG Asia e-Daily.

Songkran, which ran from April 13 to 18, failed to bring enough crowds to the resort city famous for its nightlife and entertainment, according to Sanpech Supabowornsthian, assistant managing director, Unchaleewiwat Group.

“Hotels (did not do too well) on April 18 and 19, with big tourist volumes gotten only from April 13 to 15, and (occupancy) was only at 80 per cent from April 15 to 16,” said Sanpech, who is also president of the Thai Hotels Association Eastern Chapter.

Hotels in the main tourist area of Pattaya City are faring worse with only 60 per cent occupancy despite having already slashed prices. “Most of them cannot (afford to) dump the price anymore,” exclaimed Sanpec.

He attributed the double slump in rates and occupancy to the declining centricity of Pattaya as a tourist destination, adding that the once popular town is experiencing the effects of “tourist sharing” as Thailand continues promoting other destinations in the country such as cities in the northeast.

Also a bane are shared economy players like Airbnb and apartment hotels, where “even the Chinese use them and they do not overflow into small hotels”, said Sanpec.

Further explaining the difficult situation, Bill Barnett, managing director of consultancy C9 Hotelworks, said that it is due to the absence of Pattaya’s traditional Russian source market. Domestic travellers have declined severely this year as well due to the heatwave.

Accor appoints ‘chief disruption and growth officer’

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Thibault Viort, chief disruption and growth officer, AccorHotels

ACCORHOTELS has appointed a ‘chief disruption and growth officer’, signalling its continued drive to change with the times.

The C-level role, a first for the global hotel industry, is held by Thibault Viort, “a serial entrepreneur who built up his first business at age 22”, according to an AccorHotels statement.

His ventures included creating Facebook’s first online games under IsCool Entertainment in 2008 then specialising in tourism from 2009 after creating Wipolo and transforming City Vox.

Viort’s role is to track down new growth opportunities in order to foster the emergence of new entrepreneurs within and outside the group; oversee investments or acquisitions in emerging activities; and reinforce interactions with start-ups that re-invent the sector “at a time when the current networking of humanity shakes up every sector (including) the hospitality industry”, said the AccorHotels statement.

Its chairman and CEO Sébastien Bazin said he was building up “new streams of activity…to create value and enhance creativity in the way we conduct our business”.

Accor just bought onefinestay on April 5 for €148 million (US$167 million), after acquiring a 49 per cent stake in Squarebreak and 30 per cent in Oasis Collections in February. This gives it a foothold in the sharing economy space, which has grown exponentially since Airbnb was founded in 2008.

Last year, it also acquired France-based Fastbooking, which gives it yet another new stream. Fastbooking provides more than 4,000 hotels with website development, channel management, digital marketing, revenue management and competitive intelligence.

Accor is also completing its acquisition of FRHI Holdings, announced last December, which will bring the Fairmont, Raffles and Swissotel brands into its fold. This plugs the luxury/upscale gap for the chain.

Asked what he would like to buy next, Bazin, in an email interview, said: “AccorHotels has an opportunistic approach in M&A in every area of action: asset-light hotel companies, hotel real estate, but also digital, F&B….provided this is accretive and in line with what AccorHotels has implemented over the past three years.

“On the digital side, we are looking at start-ups that are developing state-of-the art technologies following two angles: either to improve hotel performances or to enrich customer experience.”

Singapore tourism sector gets S$700 million boost

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Singapore’s Marina Bay Cruise Centre

IN LIGHT of recent lacklustre tourism performance, the Singapore government will be injecting S$$700 million (US$517 million) to aid the industry over the next five years.

Announced by the minister for trade and industry, S Iswaran, at the Tourism Industry Conference 2016 yesterday, this third tranche of the Tourism Development Fund will focus on three areas – developing tourism products, improving productivity through technology and enhancing manpower capabilities.

Acknowledging that the tourism sector for the past two years has been “more challenging”, Iswaran said: “We must contend with periodic fluctuations caused by uncertainties in the global economy, adverse developments in key source markets, growing competition in the region and domestic resource constraints.

“Against this backdrop, we need two types of responses; strategies that will best position us to benefit from long term growth opportunities; and tactical measures to deal with volatility and challenges in the short term.”

Iswaran pointed out that some of the funding will be directed to “niche sectors with high growth potential” such as the cruise industry, which generates “significant spillover economic benefits” for ground handling services, bunkering and ship repair.

To keep abreast with new technology, Iswaran pointed out that big data and predictive analytics present significant opportunities for the tourism sector.

“It can revolutionise the way we understand our visitors, their tastes and preferences, how we reach out to them, and tailor our products and services to meet their needs,” Iswaran said.

He added that the the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) will expand the scope of support under the Business Improvement Fund with a time-limited Hotel Retrofitting Grant for hoteliers seeking to redesign their premises to implement productivity-enhancing solutions.

STB chief executive Lionel Yeo also shared that as part of STB’s marketing strategies over the next five years, they will be “intensifying trade engagement and marketing efforts” to attract visitors from the top five source markets of Indonesia, China, Malaysia, Australia and India.

STB will also be ramping up efforts in “high-growth secondary cities” such as Surabaya and Medan in Indonesia, Tianjin and Chongqing in China and Ahmedabad and Hyderabad in India, as well as enter newer markets like Myanmar, said Yeo.