TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Tuesday, 16th December 2025
Page 811

As room demand weakens, new hotel revenue sources awaken

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For almost two decades since 2002, Singapore-based Global Hospitality Solutions (GHS) has established a profitable business in helping hotel partners be present in the entire customer journey in travel and tourism, from engaging travellers to driving purchase and eventually rewarding for loyalty.

But with a large part of their business being in room bookings, GHS found its existence challenged when the pandemic hit in early 2020.

Quek: Online retailing, including F&B delivery, plays a crucial role in supporting hotel businesses

“There was zero tourism. And so, our work suddenly became focused on helping our hotel partners survive – which in turn ensures our own survival,” recalled CEO Bernard Quek.

To develop different and more stable ways for hotels to get business amid recurring lockdowns and continued international travel restrictions, GHS adjusted its technology platforms to facilitate F&B orders and delivery, voucher sales and e-gifting services.

GHS’s transformation birthed Social Media Hospitality Salesbot, which enables hotel room bookings and voucher sales via Facebook and Messenger, online F&B ordering for takeaway or delivery, and restaurant reservations via a chatbot as well as WhyQueue Hotel e-Store, which powers a private e-store for both hotel companies and individual properties.

However, Quek discovered that the business pivot required more than just a technology change. By stepping into F&B purchase and delivery services, GHS now has to put on a new operational hat and play the role of a coordinator that connects customers with transport vendors and hotel partners.

He detailed: “When it comes to selling a room, the customer puts in arrival and departure dates, selects rooms, books, pays, and the transaction is complete. With online F&B purchases, the customer selects what he wants, and puts in his delivery address which must be linked to Google Map for us to instruct our delivery partners. This process can get complex beyond Singapore, such as in the Philippines where there are many regions and zones.

“We have to work with our transport partner – in Singapore, it is Lalamove – to ensure the hotel meal, chocolates or wines are delivered to the customer in good condition and in accordance to our hotel partners’ brand and service standards. And should there be delays, we must sort things out.”

GHS’s WhyQueue Hotel e-Store now supports various hotel companies and properties, such as Grand Hyatt Singapore, Grand Hyatt Jakarta in Indonesia and Wyndham Hotels and Resorts across Asia-Pacific. It recently won over Marco Polo Hotels and will be establishing an online store for the chain’s properties in Manila.

According to Quek, hotels have a lot to gain by moving into online retailing. Citing an example, he said a hotel client in Singapore generated seven-digit revenue “over the last couple of months” from just F&B delivery alone.

Online retailing can also cushion hotels from recurring lockdowns. When Singapore went into Phase 2 partial lockdown on May 16, which restricted staycation guest movement and prohibited dining in at eateries, Hyatt’s online orders grew 300 per cent in a day.

For now, Quek observed that major hotel companies and high-end properties were more open to the idea of shifting to online retailing and F&B delivery, compared to smaller, local properties. But even with a more open mind, it was not easy for these companies and hotels to move out of their traditional business in room sales.

“Most have never done F&B delivery as a key segment of their business, so we must guide them in every step of the way. Today, F&B is a very important part of hotel business. To do F&B business now requires hotels to relearn concepts. For example, hotels cannot sell a delivered meal at the same price as a dine-in meal because the customer is not paying for the hotel ambience and service,” said Quek.

He said Hyatt properties have done well in transitioning a part of their F&B business to takeaway and home delivery. They had the foresight to set a much lower, more practical price range for food orders. An Impossible Burger served at a Hyatt hotel restaurant would cost about S$30 (US$22.70) or S$40; the same meal for takeaway costs S$12.

F&B products sold by Hyatt properties are marketed at lower prices online

Quek opined that e-gifting is another valuable lifeline for hotels. The service allows corporate clients to purchase hotel vouchers for their staff and/or business partners, which can be used to redeem a specific product – such as a two-night stay in a deluxe room at a specific hotel – or a range of products, such as premium toiletries or gourmet treats.

“E-gifting supports the future of work. Many people are working from home, so bonding is gone and organisations are looking to make up for that loss of engagement through thoughtful gifts that their staff or business partners can enjoy at home, be it a nice meal or a bottle of wine,” said Quek.

Even when movement restrictions ease and post-pandemic travel resumes, Quek is confident that online retail will remain useful for hotels. “Consumers have formed a habit to send gifts of food, wine and other goodies to people they love and miss during the pandemic, and e-gifting will continue to have a place even as movement restrictions ease. There is still room for improvement in overseas e-gifting, and what we do can help to enable this service,” he said.

GHS is growing its Social Media Hospitality Salesbot and WhyQueue Hotel e-Store solutions most prominently in Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippines now, with plans to expand into Vietnam, Hong Kong and Taiwan soon.

Connecting critical dots in luxury tourism

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ILTM Asia Pacific will take place online again this year. How will this work?
We are very much looking forward to it. While we would prefer to be in Singapore with a live event, it’s still not the right time to do this, especially with such a big international audience in attendance. So, for the event happening from July 20 to 22, we have created a framework consistent with the virtual editions delivered by ILTM during 2020, providing a platform from which luxury travel brands can access the top luxury travel agents representing the highest net worth of clients across the Asia-Pacific region.

Designed to provide international and regional suppliers with new business opportunities and enhance industry and media relationships, ILTM Asia Pacific will deliver one-to-one online meetings, plus direct messaging between buyer or media and suppliers, in addition to opportunities to learn from content and industry insights throughout the three-day event.

ILTM is an opportunity to expand business and knowledge not just internationally, but also regionally.

Are there opportunities for luxury travel buyers and sellers to continue interacting after ILTM Asia Pacific 2021 concludes? How will the ILTM team facilitate that?
All of the pre-scheduled appointments will mean both buyers and sellers meeting together. As with every ILTM event, that establishes the connection and we would expect that both parties will continue with their relationship should business require it.

For all those participating in the virtual event, all content will be available online post-show for a period of a month.

What else is new for this virtual event?
We will also have Asia-Pacific’s most influential travel editors who speak to the High Net Worth (HNW) luxury consumer through their printed magazines, and digital online publications. (These editors) will also participate in the meetings, and can choose the exhibitors they wish to interact with.

ILTM undertook research with Barton in late-2020 to understand the current state of luxury travel among the region’s HNW consumers. Can you give us some highlights of your findings?
Despite the effects of Covid-19 persisting globally, many of the 55 countries that make up the Asia-Pacific region have been considered excellent examples of resilience during a period that has upended the travel industry like never before.

Asia-Pacific is the fastest growing wealth region in the world, which was what identified it as a key location for the travel industry to expand into long before Covid-19 was known. The wealth growth trend seen in Asia-Pacific prior to the pandemic has only paused (during the pandemic), and in some cases, it has even increased. That means, the region still has the fastest growing HNW population anywhere across the globe.

Given the very strong link between wealth and luxury travel spend from the region, this means very strong growth in Asia-Pacific’s contribution to the total spend on the Global Luxury Travel Universe.

The full report will be made available to all participants of ILTM Asia Pacific.

How is participation shaping up for the virtual event this year?
The Asia-Pacific region is key to international and regional luxury travel brands because it is such a huge market and one that has remained stable as the Barton research shows. So, it’s no surprise that we expect some 200 suppliers to be participating in meetings with a similar number of hand-picked agents and advisors who will come from across Asia, Australia and the Oceania.

A taste of the suppliers that will be joining include bespoke experiences, luxury yachts, iconic brands, boutique hotels, private islands, and cruises – a diverse mix with representation from brands including Accor, Belmond, Conrad, Hyatt, Kerzner International, Mandarin Oriental, Seabourn, Shangri-La and Wharf Hotels as well as destinations ranging from Aspen, Catalonia, Madrid and the Seychelles through to individual properties and experiences such as Capella Hanoi, Patina Maldives, Aurora Experiences, Quark Expeditions, Rocky Mountaineer and The Broadwick Hotel in London.

Are there certain segments of luxury travel suppliers that you are surprised to see, or see more of, at the 2021 edition? Why do you think they have responded especially well to the second edition of ILTM Asia Pacific 2021?
ILTM is a key business driver to the luxury travel industry and the virtual event has been supported by the industry as a much needed (business platform). We have people returning to join us after attending the ILTM World Tour conducted in the later part of 2020 – and that is great to see.

As there are limited live events currently taking place, ILTM Asia Pacific 2021 gives people the chance to re-engage and catch up with the luxury buyers of this fascinating and developing region.

We have a good mix of international and regional luxury travel brands (that were with us) at our previous shows, but also many new ones such as Aurora Expeditions and the Broadwick Hotel in London to name just two.

Another outstanding element is that we have a good percentage of buyers – 15 per cent – that did not join the last virtual event. We will also be bringing in approximately 35 premier Chinese buyers.

What would you say is the biggest motivation for luxury travel players to join the event this year?
Asia-Pacific is still the fastest-growing wealth region in the world and it is home to some of the world’s most prolific travellers – over US$363 billion is spent on the Global Luxury Travel Universe annually. With the financial resource, design and inherent ability to pivot during incredible disruption, Asia-Pacific travellers should be seen as pioneers of the new luxury travel landscape, providing the much needed economic injection the industry needs and has been waiting for. So, it makes sense to be part of this turnaround for our business community.

Will we finally see an in-person ILTM Asia Pacific materialise in 2022? Will it still be in Singapore?
We are absolutely planning for ILTM Asia Pacific to be a face-to-face event in 2022 and yes, our home will be Singapore.

TTG Asia is the only official trade media partner for ILTM Asia-Pacific 2021. Watch out for the ILTM Asia-Pacific 2021 special in the luxury travel bumper issue of TTG Asia this July. For more information on the event, email steve.oloughlin@reedexpo.co.uk.

Experience Western Australia at Hyatt Centric Victoria Harbour Hong Kong

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SiteMinder launches new hotel distribution solution

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SiteMinder has launched SiteMinder Multi-Property to set the new distribution management standard for modern hotel chains and groups, by giving revenue teams critical distribution controls in place of the obsolete features and high costs that typically come with legacy systems.

The technology makes it possible for hotel chains and groups of all structures – from brands to clusters – to centralise the management and distribution of their rates, and easily onboard new hotel properties and staff.

With SiteMinder Multi-Property, hotel chains and groups can enter rate plans once and have the details disseminated across all their properties – a scale that is unmatched by other distribution technologies due to SiteMinder’s open connections to 1,000 property management systems, channel managers, booking channels and hotel applications.

Additionally, hotel chains and groups can use SiteMinder Multi-Property to launch enterprise-wide campaigns at a fraction of the time they used to, run continuous health checks of their set-up, and produce customised reports.

In a statement, SiteMinder said that Multi-Property “comes at a crucial time as travel markets reopen around the world and hotels remain challenged by a resource and skills shortage”.

“By simplifying the complexity involved with distribution for hotel chains and groups, SiteMinder’s technology will allow revenue teams to boost their efficiency, stay nimble and drive stronger revenue outcomes than ever before,” it added.

Speaking on the reasons for creating SiteMinder Multi-Property, SiteMinder’s chief product officer, Inga Latham, said: “We’ve worked closely with revenue and distribution professionals for many years and know that, more than any other hotel segment, multi-property groups are held back by traditional technology and fragmented structures. Legacy distribution systems have imposed high costs and provided a vast array of features and functions, which often go unused.

“SiteMinder Multi-Property lets hotel chains and groups manage their distribution on their terms. It gives them a greater capacity to innovate and compete with less time and resources. Consumer expectations have also increased over the past year and, with SiteMinder Multi-Property, hotel chains and groups can guarantee a smooth experience in the back-end to support the guest experience.”

According to SiteMinder, Multi-Property is now being used by hotels in every region globally. Early adopters include Minor Hotels, Quest Apartment Hotels, TFE Hotels, Nesuto Hotels, and StayWell.

Ascott rolls out telehealth, telecounselling and travel security advisory services

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APAC airline traffic remains dismal in April: AAPA

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Fresh lifeline for Malaysia’s tourism sector with govt’s latest stimulus

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Room for growth

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When a nationwide lockdown in Malaysia left hotel rooms across the country sitting largely vacant, Hanley Chew saw a window of opportunity to help hoteliers put their distressed inventories to good use.

That led him to set up online hotel booking platform JustTonite in February, at a time when Malaysia was under its second movement control order and the hotel industry was suffering with occupancies less than 15 per cent, even in the nation’s capital, Kuala Lumpur.

JustTonite’s Chew plans to introduce the concept of selling distressed inventory to other travel-related sectors beyond hotels

“There were more than 50,000 unoccupied hotel rooms daily in the capital alone. Nationwide, the number was in excess of 100,000. I created JustTonite solely with the intention of assisting hotels to fill up their unoccupied inventories for the same night,” shared Chew, founder and CEO of JustTonite.

The platform offers same-day, room-only bookings with check-in from 18.00 onwards. “This unique model was very welcomed by the hotel industry as it focuses only on the segment of unoccupied rooms for the night that will (otherwise) not generate any revenue,” said Chew.

Chew, who has been in senior management in the hotel industry for the past 28 years, shared that it was initially a challenge to explain the concept of distressed inventories to hoteliers.

“Many thought JustTonite was another OTA coming into an already very crowded marketplace. Many a time, I got ‘lectured’ on rate parity and hotel positioning, a topic which I am way too familiar with,” he elaborated.

“The industry ethics on rate parity only applies when all parties are selling the same product. In the case of JustTonite, we are selling a different product which is of restricted use. We are only selling (hotels rooms based) on a time segment – (a concept) which no hotels nor OTAs are focusing on.”

The platform was launched with 30 hotels in Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. That number has since increased to more than 100 hotels nationwide, and Chew is optimistic that the platform will grow to 300 hotels by year-end.

Hoteliers are allowed to list their inventory free-of-charge on the platform. A transaction fee is charged only when a booking materialises, with payment made to hotels immediately through the payment gateway.

Chew now plans to expand the platform to Singapore as he sees similarity in booking preferences between Singaporeans and Malaysians in that they desire a user-friendly booking platform with fixed, consistent rates.

To that aim, JustTonite has appointed Infinity Hospitality Asia as its partner in Singapore, effective July 1. Chew shared: “Its role will be to introduce this new concept of marketing distressed inventories to the hotel community in Singapore, and to reach out to staycationers through various marketing initiatives.”

The ambitious Chew is also in discussions with an organisation based in Dubai to promote this innovative model to all seven GCC countries. If all goes according to plan, the roll-out will start in the UAE this September.

JustTonite’s success in Malaysia has given Chew a long-term vision of adding value to the entire travel ecosystem, based on the similar concept of creating an effective distribution channel for distressed inventory.

Chew explained: “Airlines, car rental companies, bus operators and theme parks have similar distress inventories during low or no demand periods. All these industries have enough data to know which periods have low demand, and will need platforms like JustTonite to assist them. Each industry, however, defines distressed inventories quite differently.

“We are currently engaging with the captains of these industries to first understand their definition of distressed inventory. Through some proprietary tools we developed in-house, we determine a matrix to price these inventories effectively.”

Chew added that this pandemic season is the “perfect time” to introduce the concept of distressed inventory management via JustTonite as “hotels and many travel-related industries are currently undergoing some stages of ‘reset’ for their businesses”.

Sheraton debuts family programme in Greater China

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Travel trade backs Malaysia’s full lockdown

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Tourism and hospitality players have welcomed the move by the Malaysian authorities to impose a full nationwide lockdown for two weeks beginning tomorrow (June 1) in a bid to flatten the Covid-19 curve.

The announcement made on Friday night comes after a record surge of 8,290 new cases on that day. This record was broken the following day with 9,015 new cases.

Malaysia will enter a full nationwide lockdown for two weeks beginning June 1 amid record virus surges

This will mark the country’s second full nationwide lockdown, following the movement control order (MCO) initiated last year in March for almost two months to stamp out Covid-19.

During this fresh lockdown from June 1 to 14, only essential and service sectors will be allowed to operate. This includes health services, the food and beverage industry, as well as banks and transport services including ports and airports.

Hotels and accommodation are allowed to open, but only for the purposes of quarantine, and not tourism.

The government has also decided that 80 per cent of civil servants and 40 per cent of the private sector will work from home.

If the 14-day lockdown succeeds in reducing daily new infections, the government will move to a four-week Phase 2, where economic sectors may resume, provided there are no large gatherings involved and physical distancing is possible.

This will be followed by Phase 3, where economic sectors are allowed to operate, but social activities are not allowed. The decision to move from one phase to the next will be based on risk assessment.

The tourism and hospitality sectors are in agreement that a complete lockdown is much needed to break the current spread of Covid-19 infections in the community as well as to ensure the long-term survival of all businesses and industries.

Malaysian Inbound Tourism Association (MITA) president, Uzaidi Udanis, shared: “MCO 1.0 was a success, no one can deny it. It had helped to flatten the curve. We had been calling for a similar lockdown to MCO 1.0.”

He added that concurrently, Malaysia also needs to speed up the pace of its national vaccination programme as that seems to be the only way out of this pandemic.

“Our members are also willing to volunteer the use of all our assets including vans and tour buses to speed up the vaccination programme by providing free transport and manpower to bring people to the vaccination centres,” he said.

MITA’s voluntary service comes in the wake of several news reports that the take-up rate for vaccination is low. It has also been reported that more than 14,000 mostly senior citizens in Johor, 11,000 in Kedah and about 10,000 in Kedah, did not show up for their appointments, with common reasons being not having transport to get to the vaccination centres and not having someone to accompany them there.

On the new lockdown, Malaysian Association of Hotels (MAH) president, N Subramaniam, opined: “The government must ensure that implementation (of mobility restrictions) is executed at the highest level, and that there be no room for compromise when the country is facing such high daily numbers.”

Both MAH and the Malaysia Budget & Business Hotel Association (MyBHA) also called on the government to support businesses during this period.

Subramaniam added: “Enhancement to the wage subsidy programme is long overdue, and banks must play its part by giving automatic full moratorium at zero interest to assist the government in ensuring the survival of businesses. Banks had collectively declared billions of net profit for 2020 as well as the first quarter of 2021.”

MAH and myBHA also called on the national electricity provider, Tenaga Nasional Berhad, to extend support to businesses, with a minimum of 50 per cent discount on electricity charges.

“Businesses unable to cope with operating and payroll costs should be given leeway on statutory payments during the lockdown to protect jobs,” shared Subramaniam.

Requests made by MyBHA to the state and federal government include providing special exemption on tax assessment for 2020 and 2021 for all hotel premises as well as introducing special tax incentives from 2020 to 2022 for all registered and licensed hotel and tourism industry players, shared Sri Ganesh Michiel, national deputy president.

MyBHA had also requested for the establishment of a special division under the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture or the Ministry of Finance to process all loan applications by hotel and tourism industry players, allowing them to bypass approval requirements by financial institutions.