TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Monday, 15th December 2025
Page 2460

THAI Smile to introduce Phuket-India flights

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THAI Smile, a sub-brand of Thai Airways International, will commence direct flights from Phuket to Mumbai and New Delhi, which trade sources say will boost travel to the already popular beaches in the south.

Operating four times a week, Phuket-Mumbai flights begin on March 31 and Phuket-New Delhi on April 1.

Rajesh Sethi, newly-elected president of the Society of Foreign Travel Operators, said: “Phuket has been very popular even though the traveller has to transit in Bangkok. With direct flights, southern Thailand will benefit from a large influx of Indian tourists as they will explore that region more.”

Laguna Phuket’s assistant vice president – destination marketing, Debbie Dionysius, was similarly positive. She said: “The growth of airline services from India is particularly exciting for us as we are engaging holidaymakers in this important market. Laguna Phuket is less than five hours by air from major Indian cities.”

Indian tourist arrivals to Thailand crossed the one-million mark for the first time in 2012.

Elsewhere, Cathay Pacific Airways is considering new flights from Hong Kong to other Indian cities after introducing four-weekly flights to Hyderabad and increasing flight frequency to Chennai. The airline also currently flies to New Delhi and Mumbai, while subsidiary Dragonair flies direct to Kolkata.

GHM terminates management of The Strand Yangon

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GHM today announced the termination of its management of The Strand Yangon in Myanmar.

The 112-year old, 30-room property will return to the arms of owner Strand Hotel International, who will manage the hotel instead.

GHM has run The Strand since September 1999, and GHM co-founder Adrian Zecha had been instrumental in launching the renaissance of the property.

“It is with deep regret that we close the book on GHM’s long relationship with The Strand,” said GHM president Hans R Jenni. “We have enjoyed many years of collaboration with the owners of this extraordinary hotel.”

PATA prefaces annual summit with digital events

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PATA has teamed up with the producer of Digital Innovation Asia (DIA), E-Tourism Asia, to stage a series of digital events ahead of its own annual summit in April.

PATA’s DIA events, running from April 23 to 25, are timed to lead into the PATA Annual Summit, which will be held from April 25 to 28. These events include the China Boot Camp, Blogger Match-up Asia and Speak-out Asia.

China Boot Camp on April 23 will help companies understand how to reach and connect with affluent and sophisticated Chinese consumers, given the powerful influence of social media in modern China.

The Blogger Match-Up on April 24 will see speed-dating sessions connect bloggers from the region and the world with travel and tourism providers from Asia. It will also offer workshops on how to leverage citizen journalists, as well as how small with low budgets can be effective and engaging on social media.

In the evening, the inaugural Digital Innovation Asia Awards will also recognise the best in digital innovation in the travel and tourism industry from the region.

On April 25, the Tourism Authority of Thailand will host the inaugural Speak-Out Asia, featuring respected and well-known digital revolutionaries, showcasing technology solutions and sourcing innovations from across the region. It will include include Digital Aid Asia @ Speak-Out Asia, an initiative to leverage technology in developing responsible tourism.

JAL trims flight schedule after grounding Dreamliners

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JAPAN Airlines (JAL) has tweaked its flight schedule for the period of March 31 to May 31 to accommodate operational adjustments after grounding its Boeing 787 Dreamliners in January (TTG Asia e-Daily, January 17, 2013).

The airline has decreased the frequencies of services out of Tokyo’s Narita International Airport, reducing Narita-Boston flights from seven to four times weekly, Narita-San Diego from seven to three times weekly and Narita-Honolulu from three to two daily round trip flights.

Domestically, JAL will run 16 daily round trips from Haneda Airport to Sapporo instead of 18, and decrease the number of Haneda-Okinawa (Naha) services from 14 to 12. However, the carrier will operate 13 flights every day to Okinawa between March 31 and April 1, and April 27 and May 6.

Due to the grounding of Dreamliner aircraft, changes in aircraft deployment will be made on the following routes: the B767-300ER replaces the B787-8 for flights from Narita and Haneda to Singapore; the B777-200ER will take over from the B787-8 on routes from Narita to Boston, San Diego and Moscow; Haneda-Beijing will be plied by a B737-800 instead of a B787-8; and Haneda-Shanghai will be served by the B767-300ER and not the B777-200ER.

Best Western unveils Semarang hotel

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BEST Western International’s newest Indonesian property, Best Western Star Hotel, has opened its doors in the city of Semarang, Central Java.

The 258-room, newly-built hotel is located in Semarang’s CBD. Facilities include a rooftop sky pool bar, a restaurant and nine separate meeting rooms covering more than 620m², the largest of which can hold 180 guests. Free Wi-Fi is also available in all guestrooms.

“As we enter 2013, Indonesia will become a key part of our Asian expansion strategy,” said Glenn de Souza, vice president international operations – Asia & the Middle East, Best Western International.

“This year we plan to add at least 12 new hotels to our Indonesian collection, encompassing many of the country’s fast-growing cities.”

The group said it was also on track to more than quadruple its Indonesian portfolio within the next three years.

Anantara Bophut Samui to shut for facelift

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LUXURY resort Anantara Bophut Resort & Spa Koh Samui will close its doors from April 16 to November 15 for a 170 million baht (US$5.7 million) renovation.

Renovation works on the 106-room resort will take seven months to complete. Two new Deluxe room categories, Deluxe Garden View and Deluxe Sea View, will be added, offering 36m2 rooms instead of the usual 32m2. Guests may also request an extra bed for these room categories.

Two more suite categories, Garden View Suite and Royal Garden View Suite, will introduce suites with areas of 70m2 and 75m2. The private pools of the two Anantara Beachfront Pool Suites will also be expanded.

In addition, the resort’s F&B outlets – High Tide restaurant, Eclipse bar, the Library, lobby, meeting and event rooms – will go under the knife.

Tips on how to wow today’s customer

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Veteran hotelier and independent consultant, Giovanni Angelini, offers pearls of wisdom on how to stay afloat in today’s competitive industry.  

In this first instalment, he outlines broad trends sweeping across the hospitality sector and dispenses tips to hotels on how to meet the changing needs of customers from pre- to post-stay.

giovanni-angelini

The pressure to perform and produce better results, growing competition, sophisticated and demanding customers, a less engaged workforce required to do more with less and managing more business channels are just some of the challenges the hotel business is facing today.

Now more than ever, hotel executives and leaders must be fully aware of economic trends and familiar with hospitality industry indicators in order to respond efficiency and effectively. Here are some guides and reminders to keep them on the right path towards achieving better results.

Challenges and opportunities facing the industry

  • Flat demand from the West, increasing demand from Asia
  • Shortage of a trained and committed labour force, especially in mid-to-senior management
  • Compounding costs and continuous increases
  • Higher/unrealistic expectations from owners and investors
  • Intensified competition and growing number of brands in the market
  • Forecasting customer values and expectations
  • Maintaining a healthy balance in distribution
  • Climate change and natural disasters
  • Global power and political shifts

The changing customer

According to a survey by Market Metrix of American, European and Asian travellers in 2012, location topped the list of what motivates them to select a hotel, followed by price and past experience. Scores on brand reputation and loyalty programmes were on the low side. Going forward, would customers have similar motivations on selecting a hotel in 2013 and onwards?

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Source: Market Matrix

The emerging middle class in many developing countries comes with a stronger appetite for consumption. Surveys show customers are prepared to pay more for top-of-the-line quality, while they have less tolerance for impersonal and substandard services. Online reviews, ratings and scores are also important to customers. Due to the increase in number of guests travelling with mobile gadgets, they require user-friendly in-room connections and battery-charging facilities. Smartphones are also becoming increasingly popular in accessing mobile websites.

Maximise potential of e-commerce through

  • Adapting to online marketing without losing the personal touch
  • Brand protection from third-party users
  • Search engine optimisation
  • Continuous upgrading of website (every 24-36 months)
  • Making online bookings faster and simpler

Fully exploit technology in hotels by having

  • Superfast/high-speed connections with both wireless and cable and with significant download capacity (plus all international multi-socket plugs in the rooms)
  • Free uninterrupted, multiple-user Wi-Fi everywhere within the hotel including public areas, restaurants, hotel limo, elevators, rest rooms, etc
  • iPods and/or tablets in the rooms
  • Electronic check-in and check-out
  • Integration between POS and PMS systems incorporating customer relationship management with the objective of customer recognition and response to customers’ needs

Rise of wellness and sustainability

Health, fitness and well-being are becoming essential needs, and there is increasing expectation that hotels will provide top-of-the-line facilities and services in this area, and not just at the spa.

Here are some trends

  • Healthy and nutritionally balanced menus with a focus on local and seasonal items; think also of a healthier minibar (items with less sugar/sodium/fats)
  • Vegetarian and gluten-free choices are a must-have
  • Large “wet room” style showers with strong pressure are preferred over traditional bathtubs, but without wastage of water
  • Paperless check-ins and check-outs, and the reduction of paper consumption in general
  • Quality pump dispensers in bathrooms rather than little toiletry packs
  • Stronger focus on CSR strategies and investments towards equipment, education and attitude

Wowing the guest

First impressions are critical and all the below appear to be routine but are extremely important and, in many cases, overlooked. It is well known within the industry that one of the biggest guest complaints as reported by quality surveys are on arrival and departure.

The following is a checklist that starts right from the booking process

  • Is your reservation/confirmation document that the guest receives clear enough?
  • Does the hotel send a reconfirmation note close to the arrival date with the latest information of what the guest will expect on arrival?
  • What is the status of your driveway and exterior surroundings of the hotel, including the traffic flow and efficiency of doorman?
  • Is your bell staff efficient in handling of luggage?
  • What do your guests encounter when they enter the lobby: lighting, décor, directions, smell, etc?
  • Are your front desk staff welcoming, warm, attentive, efficient and informative?
  • What hotel front desk system do you have? Are tablet computers provided to facilitate check-ins at different locations?
  • Does the guest receive all necessary/basic items/information at the front desk? E.g. working-condition key, access code to Wi-Fi, check-out date, method of payment, etc.
  • Are the elevators clean at all times, speedy fast and with updated advertising material?
  • Are the lift landings clean, attractive, well-lighted and equipped with an in-house phone?
  • Are the corridors well-lighted with clear indications, quiet and are room numbers easy to find/read?
  • Are door locks in good working order at all times?
  • Within rooms, ensure these are looked into: lighting switches/controls, cleanliness, TV, working desk, connectivity, temperature control, luggage rack, black-out curtains, amenities, etc.

Managing business

Delivering customer satisfaction remains the ultimate objective of hospitality. Always deliver what has been promised and avoid overpromising. Observe first-hand how guests are treated, the efficiency of operations and compare this with your competition. Reflect on how you cater to new demographics of travellers, such as female business travellers. Lowering rates is an ineffective strategy to increase revenue and market share. It lowers the value of the whole competitive set and destination, and takes years to recover from. Invest in resources that add value to customers, staff and the product.

In your annual business plan, consider

  • Is the owner assured that the operator has explored all potential revenues and enhancements to optimise returns and asset value for the hotel, and given the right benchmark?
  • Does the owner buy in the operator budget process?
  • Is the budget developed on zero-based principles?
  • Is each month properly forecasted? Are the forecasts proactive or reactive?

 

Look out for the second part of this hotel leader series, where Angelini will touch on branding, sales and distribution, and human resource management.

By Giovanni Angelini

Qantas dangles companion fares for Hong Kong-Australia travel

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QANTAS is offering two-to-go round trip fares between Hong Kong and Australia starting from HK$3,980 (US$513) per person.

Airfares for trips from Hong Kong to Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide or Cairns are for sale until March 13.

Tickets are valid for three months from date of departure and good for travel from now to March 27, between April 1 to July 3, and from August 4 to November 30 inclusive.

To purchase companion fares, a minimum of two passengers must travel together.

Banyan Tree offers credit for every two nights’ stay

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BEGINNING today, guests who stay at Banyan Tree Hotels & Resorts’ participating properties will receive the value of one night’s credit for every two nights booked.

The credits can be spent in the hotel on F&B, spa treatments or at the gallery retail outlet, and are cumulative – guests notch up more credits the longer the stay.

Valid for bookings made between March 1 to 31 for a minimum of two consecutive nights at best available rates, the promotion is good for stays from March 1 to May 31.

Travel and tourism beats global economy in growth

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FOR the first time in history, travel and tourism now supports one in 11 of all jobs in the world, with more than 10 per cent of all new jobs created last year coming from the industry.

According to 2012 statistics by the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC), the industry outperformed the global economy, increasing its total contribution to global GDP by three per cent and number of jobs to 260 million, up five million.

The trade’s economic contribution ­– taking into account its direct, indirect and induced impacts – was US$6.6 trillion in GDP, US$765 billion in investments and US$1.2 trillion in exports, at 2012 prices.

These figures represent nine per cent of total GDP, five per cent of total investment and five per cent of world exports.

Among the 20 largest global economies, South Korea (10 per cent), China (seven per cent), South Africa (seven per cent) and Indonesia (six per cent) performed best, offsetting abysmal growth of less than one and two per cent in Europe and the US respectively.

WTTC predicts that the industry will up its total contribution to GDP to 3.2 per cent this year, faster than the 2.4 per cent estimated for global economic growth. The industry is expected to support nearly 266 million jobs in 2013.

The tourism body also anticipated that China would overtake the US to be the world’s biggest travel economy by 2023.

David Scowsill, president and CEO, WTTC, said: “(This last year) demonstrated again just how resilient the travel and tourism industry is.

“Our industry is responsible for creating jobs, lifting people out of poverty, and broadening horizons. But we need international institutions and governments to recognise its strength, to remove restrictive visa and tax regimes and to work with the private sector to stimulate that growth.”

WTTC has summarised its findings in an animated clip that can be viewed below.

http://vimeo.com/60650184

Do you like to travel? from WTTC on Vimeo.