TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Monday, 22nd December 2025
Page 848

Long-stays to lead tourism’s post-Covid recovery

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The tourism industry may see a rise in demand for long-stay vacations lasting more than a month when international travel resumes, especially among youth travellers, predicted experts at ITB Berlin NOW.

This comes as a result of pent-up travel demand, compounded with the need for extra procedures – such as vaccination and possible quarantine – that will likely be required for travel in the future.

Blecharczyk: Airbnb now offers more flexible booking terms to meet changing demands

Greg Richards, research advisor at World Youth Student and Educational (WYSE) Travel Confederation, said: “We’ve seen opportunities emerging in terms of long stays because, with people having to (undergo) quarantine, it doesn’t make sense to travel anywhere for a weekend anymore. Youth travel is one of the areas where long-stay travel is particularly important. The average length of a trip for someone who’s (travelling for) au pair, work experience or language learning is over 100 days.”

The promise of such long-term, “purposeful travel” jumpstarting travel again has rippled across the globe. Australia announced in February that the Covid-19 vaccine will be made available to international students, and countries such as Croatia and Greece are dangling digital nomad visas for remote workers itching to travel.

In Thailand, Sri Panwa Phuket completed its first Villa Quarantine pilot project on March 8, and 58 travellers are now free to embark on a one-month tour of the country. Based on this success, the project may soon be replicated across five provinces, including Phuket, Krabi and Chiang Mai.

Richards noted: “We’ve also seen youth accommodation providers profiting from this trend by offering long-stay packages. Now, you can get packages that are a month or more in many hostels. (These packages are) now increasingly based in private facilities as well rather than just dormitories, to facilitate social distancing.”

Home-sharing platforms are also looking to capitalise on the rising long-stay trend. Airbnb has adjusted its booking function to allow for a flexible range of dates, in anticipation of changing work arrangements and longer weekends, described Nathan Blecharczyk, Airbnb’s co-founder and chief strategy officer as well as chairman of Airbnb China.

As the vaccines bring about hope for the return of travel, WYSE predicted that travel agencies may see a resurgence as travellers seek assurance and safety in their holiday arrangements.

Richards explained: “Travel agents are positioning themselves to be advisors who can provide reassurance and knowledge, which is very important (when) travel advisories are shifting rapidly. Increasingly, travel agents are helping people understand travel restrictions, the terms and conditions that are attached to travel these days, insurance products, and how best to travel. From our previous research, this advice function that travel agents are able to offer often translates into sales as well.”

Phuket eyes domestic market to revive tourism sector

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The government is partnering with the private sector to formulate new strategic plans to revive tourism in Phuket, with the aim of restoring the island back to the same level of vibrancy it had before the pandemic hit.

The scourge of Covid-19 has left Thailand’s most famous resort island languishing in its wake, recording its lowest economic activity in its 50-year history last year.

Laguna Phuket will hold a 19-day festival to attract locals to celebrate the Songkran Festival in its complex

To date, despite reporting zero new Covid-19 cases for nearly three consecutive weeks, some 90 per cent of hotels on the island remain closed. The rest, with a combined room count of 10,000, are slashing rates up to 60-70 per cent.

Thanusak Phungdet, president of the Phuket Chamber of Commerce, said that the sector is likely to remain in dire straits through this year, judging from forward bookings for hotels, particularly from overseas markets.

As a first step to revitalising the island’s tourism sector, the private and public sector have teamed up to transform Phuket into the go-to destination for revellers celebrating the Songkran Festival, in hopes of superseding top destinations such as Bangkok, Chiang Mai, and Sukhothai.

Laguna Phuket is set to kick-start a 19-day festival, dubbed the Laguna Phuket Revive 555 Festival, to attract domestic tourists to celebrate the Songkran Festival in its complex and other places.

Taking place from March 31 to April 18, 2021, the festival will include a series of sports, music, cultural and community events over three weekends, including the Songkran holiday period.

“We strongly commit to making Phuket (into the) busy destination (it used to be) in the past. If we can achieve it this year, Phuket will become the first model for overcoming the crisis in the country,” Thanusak said.

The island is also poised to start receiving inbound arrivals, following the move by some airlines including Singapore Airlines to resume international direct flights to Phuket as well as from other major provinces.

Phuket deputy governor Pichet Panapong assured tourists that the island has safety and better infrastructures in place. He added that all types of accommodation, ranging from budget to luxury, are offering very attractive prices. In addition, the second series of Seafood Festival is scheduled to take place from March 19-21, 2021.

The island also unveiled a new online portal in the Thai language to draw people from other provinces to secure their rooms and packages at extremely low rates.

Full speed ahead

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The first resort under the Patina Hotels & Resorts brand will soon open in the Maldives. Why launch the brand amid the pandemic?
Patina Maldives is a strategic development for Capella Hotel Group (CHG), therefore, a single moment in the history of the resort will not impact the long-term commercial success of this project.

The planned opening of Patina Maldives may turn out to be well-timed as we believe a strong recovery of luxury leisure travel is eminent in the months ahead. Over the past eight months, the Maldives has performed better than any other international resort destination, with over 140,000 tourists arriving just this year alone. This is largely due to the uniqueness of the Maldives, where resorts are based on private islands, providing guests seclusion and the ease to social distance.

Overall, how is Patina and Capella faring amid this pandemic and hospitality crisis?
Although 2020 was a year of significant challenges on all fronts, the team at CHG were able to move the company forward with our long-term strategy. We had solid financial results from the majority of our portfolio, impressive consumer recognition for our hotels and brand; the opening of our urban resort, Capella Bangkok; and additional signings in key destinations such as Kyoto, Osaka, Macau, and Chiang Mai.

Our teams at Capella Hotels and Resorts were nimble in re-engineering all revenue-generating activities to cater to our domestic markets, when it was clear that international travel would be significantly restricted. As a leisure-oriented hotel management group, it is always important for us to develop creative experiences to entertain our guests. This made our transition in catering to a domestic audience relatively seamless.

How has the group had to switch up its marketing strategies for the Patina brand launch in the wake of Covid-19?
We’ve moved further away from traditional marketing approaches and placed more focus on creative social media and digital marketing campaigns, leveraging our recently established affiliation with Design Hotels and utilising Zoom in order to host brand and resort familiarisations.

We have also decided to focus time and resources on the customer experience for Patina Maldives, with an emphasis on creative programming and overall operational excellence. As we all know, the most effective marketing tool is “word-of-mouth”.

Are future openings still continuing as planned?
Future openings for CHG continue to remain on track as our development partners take a long-term view of their investments.

For Patina Hotels and Resorts, we seek urban and resort destinations where we can be highly competitive in the lifestyle space. Markets that can appreciate the Patina brand’s strong emphasis on holistic sustainability, wellness, and experiences that cultivate creativity and social connections will be a key focus for us. We anticipate growing our Patina brand with a high degree of discipline, only selecting projects that can be unique in their respective destinations.

Although the majority of current hotel development activity is in Asia-Pacific (Ubud, Sanya and Osaka), we are consistently receiving inquiries for development opportunities in key international markets such as Americas, Europe and Middle East.

Now that vaccinations have begun across the globe, when do you think travel will return?
With international travel significantly restricted over the past 12 months, we have had great success with our domestic leisure guests. In particular, our properties in Singapore, Shanghai and Sanya have been enjoying robust demand from their local clientele; this trend has continued thus far in 2021.

With vaccination initiatives well underway across the globe, we believe international travel will begin to gain momentum in late 3Q2021. Luxury leisure travellers will be the first segment to venture to their preferred international destinations, as they have both the pent-up desire to travel and the financial capability to do so.

Fairfield by Marriott continues to grow footprint in Japan

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New hotels: Pullman Dubai Downtown, Shama Yalong Bay Sanya, and more

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Qatar’s first Chedi flag to fly in Doha

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Qatar National Tourism Council celebrates birth of baby camels

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JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong welcomes new GM

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JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong, the flagship hotel of the JW Marriott brand in Asia Pacific, has appointed GP Yeow as its new general manager.

A seasoned hotelier with almost 30 years of experience, Yeow began his hospitality career in Perth Australia, and worked in both F&B as well as rooms divisions before moving up the ranks to become hotel manager.

With his extensive operational experience in Australia, Malaysia and China, the Malaysian was appointed as area director of operations overseeing Marriott hotels in north-east Asia and northern China in 2010 and 2012 respectively.

Prior to his move to Hong Kong, GP held the role of general manager at JW Marriott Beijing for more than five years, as well as general manager at W Hong Kong for two years.

Maldives mulls vaccine tourism to boost arrivals

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The Maldives is contemplating the introduction of vaccine tourism across its collection of over 200 resort islands, as tourist arrivals begin to grow in the post-pandemic era.

The proposal was made by tourism minister Abdulla Mausoom during a recent meeting of the country’s legislature, where he said that the government is considering promoting the Maldives as a working vacation destination under the tagline ‘Visit, Vaccine and Vacation’.

Amid the pandemic, the Maldives has emerged as a tourism winner, welcoming over 200,000 tourists so far this year

He added that the currently available Covid-19 vaccines require two doses of the vaccine to be received within a 10-week period – meaning, there is a significant window of time between the inoculation of the two doses in which tourists could stay in the Maldives.

According to Mausoom, the Maldives is likely to become one of the first countries to have vaccinated its entire population, making it one of the safest destinations to visit. As of March 8, more than 157,000 of the island country’s 531,000 population have received the Covid-19 vaccination. So far, the Maldives has imported 200,000 doses of the Covishield vaccine developed by Oxford and AstraZeneca and produced by the Serum Institute of India. It has ordered 700,000 more doses.

As of March 4 this year, the Maldives has received 200,871 tourists, down however by 41.2 per cent from the number of visitors during the same period last year, according to official data. The daily average stands at over 3,000 visitors.

Meanwhile, the Maldives will be sending its first delegation headed by Mausoom to attend trade fairs and roadshows in Russia and India. Accompanying him will be 13 companies and 19 participants, said Maldives Marketing and Public Relations Corporation managing director Thoyyib Mohamed, who will also be attending these events.

They will participate in the MITT trade show in Moscow, a B2B and B2C event taking place from March 16-18; followed by India’s South Asia Travel and Tourism Exchange on March 22 along with a roadshow. The Russian event will coincide with roadshows in Moscow, Kazakhstan, St. Petersburg and Yekaterinburg.

Malaysia restarts interstate travel between RMCO states

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Following a nearly two-month ban, domestic travel has been given the green light to resume with the Malaysian government lifting its ban on interstate travel from today (March 10), albeit under certain restrictions.

For the time being, interstate travel is only allowed between states that are under the recovery movement control order (RMCO). These states are Perlis, Melaka, Pahang, Terengganu, Sabah as well as the Federal Territories of Putrajaya and Labuan.

Interstate travel in Malaysia currently restricted to travel between RMCO states, including Melaka

The rest of the country is under the conditional movement control order (CMCO).

Those travelling between RMCO states must use a registered tour agency and the company must obtain approval from the police prior to travel. Interstate travel on a personal capacity is still not allowed.

While travelling from one state to another, tour vehicles are not allowed to make a stop at states which are still under CMCO. This includes the capital city, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Johor, Penang, Kedah, Kelantan, Negri Sembilan, Perak and Sarawak.

Yap Sook Ling, managing director, Asian Overland Services Tours & Travel, said the lifting of the interstate travel ban is a good beginning and her agency stands ready to accept tour bookings as vehicles have been kept well-maintained and in running order, even amid the travel lull.

She expects FIT travel, made up of families travelling together, to take off. Sit-in coach tours may also make a comeback, provided the number of new Covid-19 cases continue to dip, and attractive rates are offered to domestic travellers, she added.

Yap, however, stressed that inbound tour operators cannot rely solely on domestic tourists as the rates are low. She said: “We need the borders to reopen soon and for the government to implement travel bubble arrangements with other countries. The government should also look at welcoming foreign tourists who have already taken their Covid-19 vaccinations.”

Malaysian Association of Tour and Travel Agents president, KL Tan, expressed uncertainty about travel demand in the short-term as the main markets for domestic travel are residents living in areas that are still under CMCO. He also hopes that, eventually, the need to get police approvals ahead of travel would be lifted.

To help speed up recovery, Malaysian Association of Hotels (MAH) president, N Subramaniam, proposed for the government to allow travel between RMCO states via flight with confirmed hotel bookings. He said: “Hotels are ready with their SOPs, especially those certified ‘Clean & Safe’, which is MAH’s very own hygiene and safety label supported by Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture.”