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high quality and inexpensive shopping.
Leung believes that industry sectors spe-
cialising in new technology and finance will
contribute the most business events bookings
to Japan and Scandinavian countries, while
Corporate Travel Management Hong Kong’s
CEO Larry Lo expects banks, investment agen-
cies and insurance companies to shine the
brightest for his company.
Lo also noted a “growing trend for person-
alisation” among clients.
He said: “Hong Kong corporates are
demanding for more innovative and unique
venues, staff wellness and experiential learn-
ing opportunities, culinary experiences and
a safe environment. And with an eye on cost
efficiency, corporates are preferring to conduct
a single, big event to consolidate activities and
obtain bulk savings on transportation and ac-
commodation.” – Prudence Lui
Philippines
events demand and movement will likely slow
down in the lead-up.
Destination wise, events specialists opined
that Japan and South Korea will remain hot
favourites for Indonesian incentive groups, due
to easy visa processes and strong reach of
digital destination marketing efforts.
Bali remains the top domestic destination
option, as poor access and pricey airfares to
other parts of Indonesia continue to make
other local options less appealing. – Ade
Siregar The higher cost of travelling abroad due to the
Philippine peso’s steep depreciation has not
marred the appetite for foreign incentive trips,
which remain the fastest-growing outbound
business events segment.
Industry sources agreed that Europe
remains high on the list for top-level corporate
champions and it helps that Turkish Airlines
and Middle Eastern carriers offer affordable
airfares to the continent.
Bella Calleja, JTB’s manager for Corporate
Team 2, MICE, said big corporations continue
to reward their top sellers and dealers with
their preferred European destinations although
they will reduce the duration from say, 10 to
eight days, and cut the number of countries
featured in the itinerary.
For those on the lower rung of the ladder,
Calleja said they are rewarded with Asian coun-
tries such as Taiwan, Thailand and Singapore.
Feliz Axalan, general manager, Tradewings
Tours and Travel Corp. is “worried” about the
impact on business events of the peso’s depre-
ciation combined with the fuel surcharge that
two Philippine airlines have imposed in 2018
due to rising fuel prices. She hoped to continue
getting good rates with their airline partners to
Europe.
Marlene Jante, president, Philippine Travel
Agencies Association, noted that corporations
will still send their top achievers to foreign trips
all the more to reward and incentivise them,
while meetings and conventions abroad still
have to be attended for networking. – Rosa
Ocampo
Malaysia Singapore
While Malaysian companies are still incentivis-
ing their staff, travel spend on incentives have
not improved much, mainly due to a weakened
ringgit which isn’t showing signs of strong
recovery in the near future.
Rosli Seth, managing director of Feel Japan
with K, said: “Companies are requesting for
more half-board packages, where one or two
times during the entire stay dinner is not
provided for. They say it is to give delegates
a chance to explore on their own, rather than
to reduce expenditure. But that is also how
companies are managing their costs.
“Also, to catch the Sakura season, compa-
nies are opting to travel to Kawazu in the Izu
Peninsula, where blooms happen from early
February. This way, they save about 30 to 35
per cent on hotel rates as compared with a
stay in Tokyo during the Cherry Blossom Festi-
val (in peak March or April).”
Also pained by the weak ringgit, Abdul Rah-
man Mohamed, general manager at Mayflower
Holidays, expects clients to turn away from
longhaul destinations in favour of the more
affordable regional ones.
Regional favourites among small and me-
dium enterprises are Bali, Bangkok, Pattaya,
Chiang Mai and Ho Chi Minh City, according
to Nanda Kumar, managing director, Hidden
Asia Travel & Tours. Malaysian clients are also
favouring their own backyard for corporate in-
centives and teambuilding programmes, such
as Langkawi, Penang and Pangkor Island.
– S Puvaneswary The volatile global political climate is expected
to dent appetite for corporate travel to tradi-
tional longhaul business hubs from Singapore.
Geopolitical tension arising from the US-
China trade war and Brexit has had a “damp-
ening effect” on planners’ confidence in travel
to the US and the UK, observed Crystal Sim,
president & CEO, Albatross World.
Instead, longhaul incentives are heading
elsewhere, to more exotic European destina-
tions like Croatia, Portugal and Spain. Sim ex-
plained: “There will always be clients who will
travel high-end. As long as there is no major
economic malaise, people will travel, and we
will continue to focus on luxury tours.”
Regional business cities are also gaining
favour. According to a September study by
YouGov, business travellers in Singapore rated
Tokyo, Bangkok and Hong Kong as their top
destinations. Tokyo was the top choice for re-
spondents aged between 35 and 44, and those
over 45 preferred Bangkok.
“Japan will be a hot destination in the next
two years as it hosts the Rugby World Cup
tournament next year and the 2020 Tokyo
Olympics,” said Kerry Healy, vice president of
sales Asia Pacific, AccorHotels. Singapore’s in-
terest in Japan will be amplified by the partner-
ship between the Singapore Rugby Union and
JTB to promote rugby tourism to Japan and
Singapore. To capture this crowd, AccorHotels
last year opened the Pullman Tokyo Tamachi,
featuring three banquet and meeting rooms.
– Pamela Chow
(Malaysian) companies are requesting for
more half-board packages, where one or
two times during the entire stay dinner is
not provided for.
Rosli Seth
Managing director,
Feel Japan, Malaysia
Indonesia
Indonesia corporates are hungry for business
events both on home ground and outside of
the country, noted industry players.
Multi-level marketing, automotive and
heavy equipment companies are picking up in
activity levels after a few sluggish years, ob-
served industry players, while insurance com-
panies are expanding their attendee numbers.
Financial institutions are also organising
more business events in and outside of Indo-
nesia.
Rudiana, sales and marketing manager of
WITA Tour said multi-level marketing, automo-
tive, pharmaceutical and consumer goods
companies “have put thousands of their mem-
bers in our listing from year to year”. However,
he cautioned that the rupiah’s poor perfor-
mance and the resulting decline in consumers’
buying power might shift demand for longhaul
destinations to shorter ones.
Simon Lomas, general manager of JI EXPO
Convention Centre and Theatre Jakarta,
credited the country’s “impressive economic
growth over the past decade” for the strong
corporate appetite for business events.
Jona Convexindo is seeing bigger exhibi-
tions and awards events being planned for
2019 compared to 2018, noted director John
Nainggolan.
With the country’s general and presidential
election scheduled for April 17, 2019, business
With an eye on cost efficiency, (Hong
Kong) corporates are preferring to con-
duct a single, big event to consolidate
activities and obtain bulk savings on
transportation and accommodation.
Larry Lo
CEO, Corporate Travel
Management Hong Kong