TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Saturday, 11th April 2026
Page 2038

Asia is Singapore’s top destination for voluntourism: Zuji

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CHARITY starts at home for Singaporeans travellers, with more than half saying they would prefer to stay within Asia when going for volunteer trips abroad, said a survey.

Zuji’s Giving Back is the New Black study polled 855 Singapore-based travellers and found that 60 per cent of respondents would travel for a cause to Asia as compared to the four per cent willing to go to South America, the least popular region likely owing to its distance from home and unfamiliarity.

Nearly half of the respondents preferred to teach underprivileged kids when volunteering overseas; 27 per cent preferred building and restoring communities; while 17 per cent were motivated by wildlife conservation and 11 per cent went overseas for mission trips.

Before volunteering abroad, 65 per cent of respondents research destinations and causes through content sites, and Zuji has observed the growth in interest in destinations like Yangon and Auckland.

For accommodation, Zuji hotel booking data revealed that 63 per cent of Singapore-based travellers opt for at least four-star accommodation. However, on volunteer trips, 86 per cent are willing to stay in budget hotels and hostels.

Thirty-seven per cent of participants felt that helping the underprivileged overseas is best enjoyed with a group of friends, while a third felt that it did not matter who they travel with as the trip serves a bigger purpose. Despite that, 60 per cent of Zuji bookings show that people are solo travellers.

Chua Hui Wan, CEO for Zuji Singapore, said: “We are witnessing more people travelling to developing countries, with Thailand, Indonesia and Philippines featuring among our top 20 booking destinations.

“With the strong number of long weekends in 2015, it’s the opportune time to jet-set for a few days, see a new place, but also give back.”

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Source: Zuji

La Residence Hotel & Spa appoints executive assistant manager

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EDOUARD Lallemand has been named executive assistant manager of La Residence Hotel & Spa in Hue, Vietnam.

The French native comes to Hue after a two-year stint in Danang, where he worked in Hotel Pullman Danang Beach Resort as rooms division manager.

He has also worked at Sofitel in Turkmenistan and Luxembourg, and in France at Four Seasons Resort Provence.

Better partners now

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Conrad Clifford

Believe it or not, airlines still love travel agencies. That, in a nutshell, is what Conrad Clifford, who replaced retired Maunu von Lueders as IATA vice president Asia-Pacific in February 2014.

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As IATA regional vice president Asia-Pacific, how much time do you spend on the travel agency sector?
About a third of my time. It’s huge and important because the sector brings a lot of revenue to our members – more than 50 per cent (of airline tickets sold).

Despite airlines going direct?
Yes. It would have been more before. It also depends on the market. Japan, for example, is still agency-driven; others are not so, partly due to ease of Internet payment. Also, it depends on segments – the corporate business still relies on agencies; people want to hand over their corporate travel for somebody to manage.

What is the difference between the sector here than in the US and Europe?
Things are changing. Asia-Pacific is becoming the largest market in the world and is evolving its own approaches to customers. You see customers in Asia-Pacific wanting a higher level of service and there are people who are prepared to provide that service. So we don’t see in Asia-Pacific the big push to go direct and cut out the middleman as we do in the US.

Is that good for airlines though?
It is. What we also see in Asia-Pacific is an enormous percentage of first-time travellers. They need a lot of advice and assistance and if there is somebody who can do that for them effectively, it is the agencies.

But airlines want to reduce the distribution fee.
Yes, in the olden days, we had percentage commissions and now it is fee-based, the logic being the customer pays for what he gets, which is more efficient and does not burden the airlines with additional costs.

How would you describe the relationship between IATA and the agency community in Asia-Pacific today?
It is good. We’ve done a lot of work with travel agency associations and have been able to reach agreements on key issues through a lot of consultation and discussion. So you don’t have the kind of combative relationship that you might see in other markets.

What’s an ongoing key issue?
For us, it’s always the constant pressure  to get the money for our members faster, so we’ve tended to reduce the days of the credit period, which has been in some cases a challenge for the agency community.

Airlines look at the payments they get from direct selling and it’s pretty immediate, within 48 hours. Then they look at the typical agency system, where they get paid in 14 days and they say, ‘I think I know which way I’m going to go.’ Agencies need to be cognisant that airlines is always going to be looking at payment direct vs payment via agency and that ideally they want the same payment period.

As well, we have full service members and LCCs. The LCCs have a completely different model – if you are an agency that wants to transact with an LCC, you must put your money in advance and draw down against that. So the full service carriers look at that and say, ‘why is it that with LCCs you pay in advance and with us you need credit?’

Why indeed?
It’s just the way LCCs are set up and the way full service has been running. Force of habit. Making changes to an existing business model is much more difficult than embracing a completely new business.

Like commission cuts.
Exactly. It’s fair to say airlines have been able to change that but it took a long while.

Do you think the day will come when airlines will succeed in reducing credit period to 48 hours?
I believe reduction of credit period will continue but whether there is an end target is a decision our members will need to make. Right now, we’re not getting the pressure to reduce it in markets with shorter credit periods, but in some markets, like Japan, which is a big market, we are reducing the credit period, from 21 days currently to 15 days from October.

What’s the average credit period now?
In Asia-Pacific, around 17 days.

We discussed one example of how the trade should be cognisant of how airlines think. How about the reverse?
I think airlines have to value all of the sources of business, that there still is a significant number of customers who do not want to deal direct. So recognising that and working together with the channel of distribution to make that the best experience for customers is the way to go.

This is why we (IATA) want to continue innovating and experimenting ways to support the travel trade better.

I supposed IATA’s NDC (New Distribution Capability) is a good example?
Yes, it’s big. The old-fashioned GDS distributes the very minimum, ie, seat and price, and what airlines want is to display more of their products – extra legroom, meals, other ancillaries – to consultants so they can give customers better informed decisions. NDC is about providing the system feasibility to drive that content through the GDS to the agency office.

That will improve the environment for travel consultants immensely. Today, they have to feed in a customer booking, go into another system to update his frequent flyer details, and they can’t sell add-ons because a lot of times they don’t even know they are there, plus it’s not linked to the back office accounting. NDC will make the agency look more professional and knowledgable, all in one screen.

(IATA is also piloting Easy Pay in South Korea and exploring a global default insurance scheme which will lower the cost of insurance for agents, TTG Asia e-Daily, May 14, 2015.)

So how do you spend the other two-thirds of your time at work?
Safety is another important strand. And advocacy.

Yes, I read that you said many of the region’s governments see aviation as critical to their economic strategies yet struggle to provide the foundation for the industry’s success. Example?
Countries, such as Indonesia, realise aviation has huge value to their economies but to harness the value, you need to make it easier for airlines to operate, and to provide the infrastructure for them to do so in a safe and efficient way.

In Indonesia, there’s high fuel taxation; the airports are inadequate – the regional airports’ runways don’t have enough lighting and in big hubs like Soekarno-Hatta in Jakarta, there aren’t enough slots, for example.

What do governments tend to do?
They sort of try and catch up later (laughs). This is why the first thing we say to them is, ‘let’s have a masterplan’; let’s consult members in the industry so that legislation is not made in a vacuum and results in unintended consequences; let’s see if there are best practices that they can implement, say, a slot management best practice – if it has worked in 200 airports around the world, why wouldn’t it work for them?

This article was first published in TTG Asia, June 19, 2015 issue, on page 10 To read more, please view our digital edition or click here to subscribe.

Benjamin Bahn named Preferred’s VP global sales for APAC

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PREFERRED Hotels & Resorts has announced the appointment of Benjamin Bahn as vice president of global sales for Asia-Pacific.

In his new role, Bahn will supervise all sales activities in seven offices across the region to ensure strategic engagement and retention of the company’s member hotels.

He brings extensive experience in hotel sales and marketing including time at big-name brands like Four Seasons, InterContinental, Starwood and Hyatt, and was most recently as director of sales & marketing at The Upper House, Hong Kong.

Bahn will continue to be based in Hong Kong.

Second hotel in Hong Kong secured for pentahotels

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TAILORED for the independent-minded leisure and business traveller with its chic offering, pentahotels is expanding in Asia with a second Hong Kong hotel due to open in autumn 2016.

The hotel operator has signed a deal with Luks Industrial Company to manage the 298-key pentahotel Tuen Mun, which is converted from a former industrial high-rise building.

Surrounded by seafood markets, heritage sites and Buddhist monasteries, pentahotel Tuen Mun will feature the 24/7 pentalounge, which replaces the usual lobby and reception with a bar that transforms from lounge to bar by night.

“Since we opened pentahotel Kowloon in 2013, we’ve seen how the penta concept really resonates with both Hong Kong visitors and residents,” explains Sonia Cheng, CEO of Rosewood Hotel Group, pentahotels’ parent company.

“Guests love the distinctive design as well as our creative approach to every aspect of the hotel experience, from the cool lobby gathering place to streamlined, practical conveniences. We’re confident that pentahotel Tuen Mun will further extend the penta brand’s success in Hong Kong when it opens next year.”

Pentahotel Tuen Mun is the fourth and latest addition to the pentahotels portfolio after Hong Kong, Beijing and Shanghai.

Amadeus teams up with SWISS to launch Fare Families

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SWISS International Air Lines (SWISS) is the first in the Lufthansa Group to launch the company’s branded fares across all channels using Amadeus’ Fare Families solution to maximise exposure.

Amadeus Fare Families deploys SWISS’ new Light, Classic and Flex fares on direct and indirect channels to provide a consistent offer to both intermediaries and travellers.

By branding and differentiating its products and services, SWISS will be able to show the full value of each fare family, offering greater transparency on product characteristics and terms and conditions.

“(The tie-up) represents the next step in our merchandising strategy as we brand and evolve our products according to traveller needs,” said Marcus H Frank, vice president and head of revenue management, pricing and distribution at SWISS.

Amadeus Fare Families is fully integrated with travel agency mid- and back-office systems to facilitate reporting and customer servicing. It also allows travel consultants to better advise their customers as well as upsell from one fare family to the next based on individual preferences.

SWISS is the first airline to go live with ATPCo Branded Fares and Amadeus is the first to offer airlines the ability to file centrally or directly in the Amadeus system.

Global carriers aim to improve air travel experience with technology: SITA

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AIRLINES around the world are investing in technology to offer travellers services that are personalised, stress-free and updated on a timely basis for a better travel experience, according to a SITA report.

The 2015 Air Transport Industry Insights: The Airline IT Trends Survey collected responses from chief information officers at airlines across the world.

On average, an airline uses two-thirds of annual IT spend in 2014 for service continuity, while the remaining 32 per cent goes towards innovation and enhancing existing investments.

Key goals in investing in new IT for passenger experience include: more personalisation, less stressful travel, and to keep travellers informed of what they need to know.

Firstly, airlines want to leverage mobile adoption trends throughout the world, with 75 per cent of airlines planning major smartphone programmes to deliver passenger services in the next three years that will likely include highly personalised smartphone bookings and baggage-tracking functions.

Twenty-two per cent of airlines intend to allow passengers to download content for flight such as books and films, from media tablets to mobile devices, by 2018.

On smoothing air travel for passengers, the SITA survey predicted that while desk check-ins are likely to remain the de facto check-in channel through to 2018, mobile check-ins are likely to become the second-place option at 24 per cent over laptop/desktop check-ins at 20 per cent.

Automatic check-ins could double over the next three years, and some 68 per cent of airlines are expected to offer this on certain routes. The number of airlines offering bag drop facilities should rise from 17 per cent presently to 74 per cent by 2018.

Airlines are also working to keep passengers up-to-date on travel information, as the SITA survey found that 70 per cent of airlines plan to share with passengers the location of their baggage compared to 10 per cent today.

Carriers will also be able to use passenger location to ensure on-time boarding with notifications based on locations.

The report also stated that airlines are looking into increasing mobile device usage among cabin crew, invest in data analysis, and preparing for technologies such as the Internet of Things, wearables, and beacon technology, which SITA is trialling with Hong Kong International Airport.

Catching MERS in airplanes is ‘impossible’: Korean Air

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KOREAN Air is reassuring passengers that they are safe from contracting MERS while on a flight by debunking misconceptions about cabin air circulation.

“Unlike tuberculosis, the possibility of airborne transmission with MERS is very small. So far, there have been no virus transmission cases that happened within the air cabin,” the South Korean flag carrier said in a press release.

“However, some passengers have misunderstandings about the cabin’s enclosed space, and believe it will increase the likelihood of being infected with MERS.”

According to industry experts as quoted by Korean Air, it is impossible for the virus to spread through the air in the aircraft; any particle that enters the plane’s air circulation system is completely filtered and sterilised.

Air outside the aircraft is compressed by the engines and heated to 200°C to be completely sterilised. The compressed air then passes through an ozone purifier and is cooled down. It is then mixed and discharged into the cabin together with air filtered by a high efficiency particulate air filter.

During the flight, air in the plane is completely refreshed every two to three minutes. As cabin air moves vertically instead of horizontally, it flows from the passenger’s head to toe, preventing the spread of the virus.

To safeguard passengers from MERS, every flight that flies from the Middle East to South Korea is sterilised daily. Planes are now disinfected weekly instead of monthly, while the number of sterilised planes has risen from five to 20 per day.

Korean Air uses disinfectant MD-125, which can effectively kill the coronavirus that causes MERS for a week.

As of press time, there are 179 confirmed cases of MERS in South Korea, where the virus has claimed 27 lives. About 3,100 people are still under quarantine at state facilities or at home.

The outbreak – the largest outside Saudi Arabia – has sparked alarm across Asia and a flurry of flight cancellations to the country.

6-star tower set for Gold Coast’s Jupiters Hotel and Casino

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JUPITERS Hotel and Casino on Queensland’s Gold Coast will be home to a brand new six-star tower as part of its A$345 million (US$266 million) transformation currently underway.

With construction set to commence in August, the 17-storey tower will be built at the front of the existing hotel and casino, and feature luxury suite-style accommodation with private balconies, infinity pools and restaurants and bars targeted at high-end gamers.

The new tower will be constructed alongside what is being touted as one of Australia’s most extensive hotel room refurbishments in the original hotel. All 592 guestrooms will undergo renovation, with the first of them set to open by end-October.

Owner of Jupiters, Echo Entertainment Group’s managing director Queensland, Geoff Hogg, said: “The extensive renovation will see all rooms completely revitalised to offer both business and leisure travellers a world-class experience.”

This next phase in Jupiters’ revamp follows the completion of a new pool, two new restaurants and painting of the building.

The entire project will be completed in time for the Commonwealth Games to be held on the Gold Coast from April 4 to 15, 2018.

Malaysian trade offers full refunds for Mt Kinabalu climbing packages

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THE national association for travel consultants in Malaysia has ordered all members to provide full refunds to climbers who have had to scrap plans to ascend Mount Kinabalu after the June 5 earthquake.

MATTA members who do not provide refunds may be “queried” by the Ministry of Tourism and Culture’s licensing division, said a statement by the association, whose vice president inbound, Tan Kok Liang, said: “This is not the time to impose cancellation policies.”

Service provider Sutera Sanctuary Lodges is in the midst of reimbursing customers who have cancelled their climbing packages between June 5 and August 31 this year.

General manager Ravi Karthiravelu said in the same statement: “Rest assured full refund will be made and give us some time to process.”

Authorities had declared a three-week suspension in all climbing activities as it sought to repair damage to key trails on the mountain.

Sabah Park director Jamili Nais meanwhile said: “Rehabilitation and repair works will commenced soon but with a reduced carrying capacity for a start.”

“However, business is as normal for other tour packages to Kinabalu National Park and Poring Hot Springs.”

The earthquake struck Ranau in Sabah on June 5, loosening rocks and boulders on the slopes of Mount Kinabalu in a tragedy that claimed 18 lives, including schoolchildren on a field trip.