HONG Kong Tourism Board (HKTB) is offering passengers of the SuperStar Virgo special discounts for eight of the city’s most popular tourist attractions, including Hong Kong Disneyland, Ocean Park and Ngong Ping 360, when it relocates and homeports there for six months from April.
A spokesman from HKTB said the passengers could also experience new tours such as the Sham Shui Po Foodie Tour, focusing on local and traditional food; the Wing Chun Kung Fu Experience Tour, focusing on kung fu legend and movie star Bruce Lee; and the Hand Made in Hong Kong Tour, focusing on age-old handicraft such as shoe and sign-making.
WITH increasing hotel inventory on its website and rising awareness among the travelling public, bookpanorama.com is aiming for triple-digit growth in business this year.
Hans Tjandra, general manager, bookpanorama.com, said: “We are confident that the target is achievable because of the huge number of domestic travellers, despite (the devaluation of the rupiah).”
Hans said that since the launch of bookpanorama.com in February 2013 (TTG Asia e-Daily, February 20, 2013), the site’s property inventory has almost doubled.
“There are currently more than 400,000 hotels worldwide, among which 5,100 properties are in Indonesia, comprising of hotels, villas, apartments and hostels,” he said.
Hans shared that the biggest challenge faced after the launch of bookpanorama.com was educating the market on e-commerce and the site’s book-now-pay-later principle.
“The Indonesian market was not convinced that they could pay the hotel after staying and not when they made the booking (like they normally do),” he said.
Appointing popular Indonesian artist Dewi Sandra as its brand ambassador has shown some results, with 35 per cent of customers making bookings on the campaign site.
Bookpanorama.com is an e-commerce site for online hotel bookings of Panorama Dotcom Indonesia, part of Panorama Group.
THE little-known province of Xaysomboun will be thrown into the spotlight when Laos launches Visit Xaysomboun Year in 2015, though poor tourism infrastructure threatens to hobble the campaign.
Situated near capital Vientiane, the province boasts many unexploited tourism sites and stunning natural scenery, including the cave of King Anouvong and Phou Bia, Laos’ highest mountain peak.
Xaysomboun Provincial Department of Information, Culture and Tourism director, Vonepadith Dalanouvong, commented: “Xaysomboun has a population of more than 81,000 people and many ethnic groups of which visitors can explore their unique traditions and customs.”
“We will build roads to connect the province with all other provinces. We also plan to build an airport to facilitate visitors and investors who are interested in coming to the province,” Sombath Yialiher, governor of Xaysomboun province, who last week signed off on the construction of three new roads from Anouvong town in the hopes of building tourist numbers by easing access.
However, Laurent Granier, general manager of Laos Mood Travel, was less optimistic, saying: “Well, it is not going to change the future of travel to Laos! The current road between Pakxan and Phonsavan is in poor state despite being newly built, and during the wet season, it is virtually impossible to venture there.”
THE Tourism Administration of Guangzhou Municipality (TAGM) is stepping up publicity on the 72-hour visa-free transit facility at Guangzhou’s Baiyun International Airport, after opening the scheme to six more countries since it was first introduced in August 2013.
The six countries are: Serbia, Croatia, Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia and Albania.
TAGM executive director, Li Zhi Xin, said: “I believe this could be open to more countries in the future to help Guangzhou attract more high-end business travellers to come for meetings and exhibitions.”
“The availability of this 72-hour visa-free facility until now is not well known, so we need to promote it more strongly.”
In line with this, Li said more facilities would be added, service levels improved, and new tour products created, adding that high-end and theme park tours of between one and three days are being developed to cater to transit visitors.
Brochures in several languages are available and include information on the 72-hour visa-free facility, flight information, suggested tours, attractions, hotels, dining, golf, shopping, and transportation.
TAGM department of marketing and promotion executive, Su Bin, said TAGM hopes international travellers visiting Hong Kong and Macau in the Pearl River Delta would also include Guangzhou as a result of the 72-hour visa-free facility.
SINGAPORE must continue to “enhance the tourism experience and upgrade the tourism sector” to remain an attractive tourist destination, said Singapore prime minister Lee Hsien Loong.
Speaking at the official opening of river-themed wildlife park River Safari on Friday last week, Lee said: “Travellers are becoming increasingly spoilt for choice. They are not attracted just by iconic buildings or infrastructure, and want different and unique experiences customised to meet their interests.
“Therefore, we have to complement our hardware with good software, imaginative projects, which will create unforgettable experiences and make you want to come back for more visits.”
To aid the tourism sector, Lee highlighted the government has set aside almost S$1 billion (US$800 million) in a Kickstart Fund (TTG Asia e-Daily, September 26, 2013) to help fund new tourism concepts among other initiatives.
Nevertheless, pointing out that tourism is a “high-touch industry”, he said the government is studying how to do more to equip workers with the skills, knowledge and courtesies to do well in the sector.
Noting that the River Safari is Asia’s first and only river-themed wildlife park, Lee said the park makes the Mandai cluster an even more exciting nature destination alongside the Zoo and Night Safari.
The River Safari has attracted more than 1.1 million visitors since its soft launch in April last year (TTG Asia e-Daily, March 26, 2013).
Home to 6,000 animals, the park also houses Singapore’s first pair of giant pandas. As the wait for a baby panda from resident pair Kai Kai and Jia Jia continues, Claire Chiang, chairman of Wildlife Reserves Singapore, said: “We are hoping for good news, maybe in the next two years.”
KHIRI Travel has merged with Indonesia-based Sunda Trails and will be promoting the islands east of Bali under its first office in Indonesia.
The Bangkok-headquartered DMC today announced that it is looking to open offices in Lombok and Flores with dedicated English- and Dutch-speaking teams, kick-starting Indonesian tours with a focus on destinations in East Nusa Tenggara such as Lombok, Sumbawa, Sumba and Flores.
“Indonesia offers a treasure trove of great travel experiences,” said Willem Niemeijer, CEO, Khiri Travel. “The country’s amazing diversity will be reflected in Khiri Indonesia tour offerings, including Java and Bali, the orang utan sanctuaries and Komodo Island, as well as dozens of off-the-beaten-track trips.”
These trips will be personally selected by Anita Verhoeven, who founded Sunda Trails 12 years ago, has been living and working in Indonesia for 20 years and speaks fluent Bahasa Indonesia. According to a Khiri Travel press release, Verhoeven will continue to play a key leadership role in Khiri Travel Indonesia, focusing mostly on product development.
Sunda Trails runs inbound tourism operations to Indonesia and specialises in ecotourism and rural community exploration, besides offering hiking, bicycle tours, diving, marine expeditions and anthropological trips throughout Indonesia.
Sunda handles about 2,000 travellers yearly, including both individual and group bookings.
Niemeijer said the merger will bring efficiencies of scale and fast client response times, while new internal systems will give Sunda’s existing 12-woman strong staff enhanced training and career prospects.
KUCHING will play host to route development forum Routes Asia 2014 next week, two months after it hosted the ASEAN Tourism Forum (TTG Asia e-Daily, January 6, 2014).
Asia’s largest route development forum will run from March 9 to 11 and will be launched by Sarawak’s minister for tourism, Abang Abdul Rahman Zohari Abang Openg.
Abang Zohari said: “I am happy to launch Routes Asia 2014 and to host members of the regional aviation industry in Kuching. I hope this will be a start of bigger things to come for Sarawak’s tourism industry.
“The tourism landscape is changing rapidly. China is now the number one tourism market in the world with the number of Chinese tourists travelling outside the country hitting 97 million in 2013 (TTG Asia e-Daily, January 10, 2014). We want to increase the number of Chinese tourists coming into Sarawak from the 30,000 that we are currently getting now and hopefully events like Routes Asia will make that happen.”
The three-day forum will attract a number of airlines from China including China Southern Airlines, China Eastern Airlines and Air China.
A total of 146 delegates representing 100 airlines and 233 delegates representing 173 airports have confirmed their attendance at this event, hosted by the state government of Sarawak and co-hosted by Malaysia Airports Holdings.
EXOTISSIMO Travel has promoted Guy Van der Schoot to the role of group sales director.
A Dutch native, Van der Schoot will be responsible for the Benelux, Scandinavian and East European markets.
Van der Schoot was previously the group sales manager at Exotissimo. He first joined the DMC in 2009 and boasts over nine years of experience in the tourism industry.
Budget airlines have enjoyed a stellar rise since their emergence in South-east Asian skies a decade ago. Will these carriers go the distance over the long haul?
Change appears to be the only constant in ASEAN’s budget aviation landscape in 2013 as LCCs pursue ambitious expansion plans, carving out a bigger share of the passenger throughput at the region’s main hub airports.
With the launch of Golden Myanmar Airlines in early 2013, LCCs are now based in seven out of the 10 ASEAN member states. Only Brunei, Cambodia and Laos are without their own homegrown LCCs.
A constant state of brand evolution As 2013 rolled out, several LCCs in ASEAN began to tweak their brand names and this is none more apparent in the Philippines than elsewhere in the region. AirPhil Express, a subsidiary of Philippine Airlines, was rebranded as PAL Express while Zest Air merged with Philippines AirAsia to operate as AirAsia Zest.
SEAir became known as Tigerair Philippines, a name that might change again as Tigerair has sold its 40 per cent stake in Tigerair Philippines to Cebu Pacific Air – the latter will initially just add its own title to the airplanes of the former’s small fleet. Tigerair and Cebu Pacific Air will also cooperate on their services between the Philippines and Singapore.
In Singapore, Tiger Airways rebranded itself as Tigerair in July 2013, adopting a new logo that resembles a tiger’s tail.
Soaring expectations A clear sign of strong optimism in their growth performance ahead, eight of the LCCs (see table) covered in this report have more airplanes on order than they have in their current fleet.
AirAsia continues to be the cherry on the cake for Airbus with more than 240 delivery positions – although it should be noted that some of these are slated for its operations in Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines (and possibly in India). AirAsia X is re-committed to returning to Europe with a reportedly more efficient Airbus A330 and is on the brink of replicating its blueprint in Thailand with Thai AirAsia X.
Indonesia’s Lion Air is the next most aggressive LCC, taking a leaf out of AirAsia’s book to roll out Malindo Air in Malaysia and Thai Lion Air in Thailand. In an about-turn of its long-term strategy however, the airline has also cancelled its outstanding order for five Boeing 787-8 Dreamliners – initially destined for its premium subsidiary Batik Air.
Not to be outdone, Singapore’s Tigerair has entered into a minority partnership with Taiwan’s China Airlines to establish a new Taipei-based LCC that is likely to carry the Tigerair branding.
Thailand’s Nok Air has also entered into a joint venture with Singapore’s Scoot to establish NokScoot to operate medium and longhaul services out of Bangkok’s Don Mueang Airport – a clear response to the ‘invasion’ of Thai AirAsia X and, to a lesser extent, Thai Lion Air. According to an industry source, NokScoot will start up in early June 2014 with a couple of Boeing 777s likely to be sourced from Singapore Airlines with destinations in China, Japan and South Korea on its radar. To leverage on the partnership synergy, Scoot’s Singapore-Bangkok service is expected to fly into Don Mueang Airport instead of Suvarnabhumi Airport from May 2014.
A push for wider horizons As Cebu Pacific Air started operating A330-300s and extended its network to Dubai, PAL Express too received an A330-300 from its parent company – Philippine Airlines – and launched its own five-times-weekly services to Dubai.
Thai AirAsia X will begin operations with A330-300s in 1H2014, while Scoot too will be in a position to launch new longhaul routes when it receives its first B787-9 Dreamliners in 2H2014. Jetstar Asia will also take delivery of its first B787-8s later this year but there is yet any indication which routes these will be deployed.
Lion Air will turn Batam – located just south of Singapore – into its second hub to initially serve as a nexus for east-west domestic travel. Over time, Lion Air hopes to increase Batam’s domestic destinations from its current 15 to 20, and add international links to Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Jeddah, New Delhi and Mumbai.
Reaching out globally through GDSs More LCCs have turned to global distribution systems (GDSs), making it easier for travel consultants to access their content and drive sales. By end-2013, the services of 26 LCCs worldwide are bookable via Abacus, which expects to grow this by 10 per cent in early 2014.
Amadeus Asia Pacific’s executive vice president, airline commercial, Hazem Hussein, said: “The competition among LCCs in South-east Asia is tough, and airlines need to evolve to get ahead. LCCs that tap our extensive travel agency network can reach new customers and improve their yield.”
Sabre Travel Network’s vice president and general manager Asia Pacific, Hans Belle, said: “LCCs in Asia are evolving their merchandising strategies to differentiate, compete and extend their reach into new customer segments. Our global travel marketplace allows airlines to promote, personalise and sell their seats to 400,000 travel (consultants) around the world, and tap into data-rich solutions that give insights on customer shopping and booking trends, resulting in better yields and more personalised customer service.”
This article was first published in TTG Asia, February 21, 2014 on page 18 and 20. To read more, please view our digital edition or click here to subscribe.
So, how do we rebuild a crisis-hit destination? Raini Hamdi asks brand and communications experts.
Typhoon Haiyan robs the Philippines of its Fun. Thailand’s anti-government ‘shutdown’ gives Amazing a different meaning. Serial rapes render Incredible India impotent.
As any branding or communications guru will tell you, all it takes is a crisis to annihilate a destination’s image. As Asia evolves economically, socially and politically, and as natural disasters become a staple diet, more crises can be expected.
So, what’s an affected destination to do? Should it replace its branding? When arrivals are down due to an ‘unsafe’ label and travel advisories, can branding and advertising bring back the numbers? Are daily updates designed to give clients ‘the facts’ effective, or do they go straight into spam or, worse, serve only to remind clients of a crisis?
David Keen
Turning negative into positive
When the 2004 Asian tsunami hit Thailand, Patrick Gauvain, founder and managing director of Bangkok’s oldest design and communications agency, Shrimp Asia, had just launched for the JW Marriott, Bangkok a new Japanese restaurant which his agency branded as –Tsunami.
“Marriott called a crisis meeting and wanted to change the name (it had just spent three million baht, or US$91,352, on a promotional campaign) and I suggested not to do this, but to turn a negative into a positive.
The Tsunami restaurant then announced that a percentage of its revenue would be donated towards the Tsunami Relief Fund. It raised quite a lot of money, and more brand awareness from its good deed,” Gauvain recalled.
“Something similar could be done with the Philippines. For example, Fly to the Philippines with Philippine Airlines (PAL) and 10 per cent of your airfare will go towards Haiyan. The destination could amend its ads/commercials and even make a PR/online campaign out of it. PAL is government-owned anyway, so it should help support the cause and encourage the private and domestic airlines to do the same.”
When a disaster hits, the last thing a destination wants to do is do nothing, said branding experts, consultants and communicators.
“All brands are fragile, none more so than countries or destinations in crisis. Most destinations react with silence and in each case, they do irreparable damage to their brand, said Quo Global’s CEO, David Keen.
There is much to be done; indeed, crises are “opportunities for destinations to invigorate their perception”, he said (see box below).
Bill Barnett, managing director of C9 Hotelworks, points to India as an example of a brand that has “gone into hibernation”.
“India has not done anything to address the rape issue, which has stunted tourism growth. Zero. The past few years Incredible India was one of the
best tourism campaigns anywhere, but it has lost the plot and gone into hibernation,” said Barnett.
But even if they are not silent, few countries actually get it right in rebuilding the destination. The reasons run the gamut: bureaucrats running tourism making a corporate decision on a crisis management branding or situational awareness; changes in manpower in bureaucracies; lack of alignment between public and private sectors; absence of a single tourism agenda and single voice; private sector players’ apathy and bottomline first priority; lack of budget or budget foolishly spent; appointments of agencies that are not based on merit but corruption and cronyism – in some parts of Asia where these are rampant, this interlinked, complex ecosystem that enables effective branding and communications can be nothing short of dysfunctional.
Patrick Gauvain
‘Not in the thick of things’
Asked to rate how Thailand and the Philippines have managed their respective crises (at press time in late January), Barnett said: “So far, they have not been in the thick of things. In either case, what we’re missing are tourism or hotel brands in leadership roles. Barnett pointed to Bali and the Bali Hotel Association as a good example of leadership over the years when terrorism struck the island. “There was clarity as there’s a large organisation speaking for tourism. This is key. In so many other cases, tourism ranks far below other sectors and what comes out are political statements.”
Ken Scott, managing director, ScottAsia Communications, agreed. “The Philippine authorities were slow off the mark. The impact of Haiyan was beyond what they were prepared for – politically, physically, and psychologically.
“Thailand’s political situation has been an on-off issue over the last eight years, more a condition than a crisis. But at the moment things are veering towards crisis and the tourism authorities should have their crisis scenario preparations made,” he said.
Shrimp Asia’s Gauvain said TAT’s situational updates on the anti-government protests “are trying to justify the situation, not put out the fire”.
“They (TAT) should downplay the protestors. They should be using Facebook, Instagram, Line; create competitions where participants can win awards like a weekend in Phuket, free flights and meals, etc, sponsored by the private sector. When someone ‘Likes’ something on these apps, they disseminate that information to their friends – the tourist takes ownership of the brand and becomes your ambassador,” said Gauvain.
Scott however thought TAT’s updates were “good”, “frequent” and “information rich”, although he too noted they should be more prominent on the home pages of tatnews.org, tourismthailand.org and na.tourismthailand.org.
He acknowledged the now-standard reaction by NTOs and DMCs to send out regular updates when a disaster strikes could be counter-effective by drawing attention to a negative, but “on the principle of one step back two steps forward, it has to be done”.
“Stakeholders are intelligent people. They appreciate being informed so they don’t unwittingly put their clients into harm’s way due to ignorance,” said Scott.
Ken Scott
Stimulating a rebound
A crucial aspect of disaster recovery is stimulating a rebound, especially when recovery these days tends to be “quicker”, according to Barnett, who traced crisis-hit Asian destinations in recent history and noted a three- to six-month recovery timeframe.
“Unfortunately the first business to go is longhaul corporate and MICE, which is high-yielding, so you can’t replace long lead time business. You have to simply fill the rooms on ad hoc strategies and what hurts the most is room rates. Thankfully with the LCCs it’s much easier to turn on the tap,” he said.
However, LCCs, while fuelling travel among Asians, also open up a multitude of destination choices for them. This is why there needs to be “a real promotion by the private sector, with the support of the NTO, to entice them back, said Gauvain.
“For the Asian market it’s psychosomatic. Give a Chinese mainlander a discount opportunity and they will be there like a shot,” he said.
UK clients would too, said David Kevan, director, Chic Locations UK, offering a tour operator perspective on whether advertising/promotion works in a crisis. “At the risk of sounding callous and cynical, it is now accepted that many clients in the UK, and probably in most other countries, can be opportunistic hyenas. So today’s disaster area can be tomorrow’s holiday bargain. In many cases, there could be clients who feel by returning quickly to a destination theyare benefiting the local economy. But it is the thought of a reduced price and a holiday bargain that is the main stimulation,” he said.
“With the right offer – usually significantly reduced rates, free nights, etc – a destination can start to see tourists returning quicker than anticipated.
“This particularly applies in a destination that was enjoying good popularity and then was impacted by political or natural events. It is much more difficult to rebuild a destination that was in decline anyway as, even at rock bottom prices, it is unlikely you can stimulate demand.”
Turning brand crisis into opportunity
Crises are “opportunities for destinations to invigorate their perception”, said Quo Global’s CEO, David Keen.
“Should the Philippines stop marketing the destination in light of (Haiyan)? No, it should never stop marketing the country but it has to evolve the current perception because it does not talk to future investors and belittles the country’s image when there’s a natural disaster.
“The government should align itself far more closely with the vibrant private sector and evolve the perception of the country accordingly,” he said.
Keen’s point is It’s More Fun in the Philippines is “myopic” to begin with.
“One can reasonably argue that any beguiling tagline may be rendered ineffective after a natural catastrophe, but surely a tagline that talks to the credibility, opportunity, personality and particularly, in the Philippines’ case, investment, would be taken more seriously and would bring significant long-term benefit to the country?
“Today Palawan is gearing up to position itself as the next Bali, Phuket or Samui. The entrepreneurial governor has taken the view that Palawan needs to form a powerful independent brand to attract foreign investment. The new brand is intended to draw on the magnificent beauty of the province and the natural attraction of the people in the province to create desire from the biggest tourism players in the industry. Does It’s More Fun in the Philippines talk to that aim?
This article was first published in TTG Asia, February 21, 2014 on page 5. To read more, please view our digital edition or click here to subscribe.