malaysiahealthcare.com In The Media
 
malaysiahealthcare.com, 7 May, 2009
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'Advertising & Marketing Magazine interviews Malaysia Healthcare CEO, Suresh Ponnudurai'

With the global economic crisis on the one hand, terrorism threats combined with government instability on the other as well as fluctuating currency prices, the Asia Pacific tourism industry is flying its way through the perfect storm right now – with few signs of blue skies and a safe landing in the foreseeable future.

Of course, while these conditions won’t last forever, they’ve handed travel marketers one hell of a challenge in the meantime. All sectors involved in the industry have been hit hard by the turbulence and all have witnessed consumer demand slip away, as leisure travelers become increasingly cautious about their options and exactly what to do with their discretionary spending.

At the same time, businesses continue to further tighten their belts on travel expenditure and look to carry out their international communications
over the wires. The demand for long-haul travel has dropped dramatically to be replaced by short-haul, the average length of trips has fallen away and all these elements have combined to create a distinct lack of confidence among travelers in 2009.

No travel-affiliated company has been spared while governments throughout Asia Pacific, typically so reliant on the tourism dollar, have seen that all important revenue start to slip out of their grasp. Malaysia’s tourist arrival figures for February 2009 have dropped by 7.4% to 1,613,309 tourists compared to the same month last year. The figure appears to be largely driven by a drop in arrivals from China (includes Hong Kong, Macau, Travel Permit / Portugal CI) which shrank from 99,599 tourists in February 2008 to 73,938 tourist in 2009.

There’s no doubt when you look at the astounding growth of Malaysia’s tourism industry in the last ten years, there is cause for concern the nation could miss out on this cash cow this year if action isn’t taken.

In the last ten years tourism receipts to Malaysia has exploded from just under RM8.6 million in 1998 to last year’s figure of over RM49.5 million.

Where do we go?

The government has made no secret its attempts to lure more foreign investment into the country. The Tourism Ministry recently launched the Malaysia: Truly Business website in which it hopes becomes a resource for potential investors to research and evaluate the country as a business and investment destination.

Developed by ISC Group, and applauded by newly sworn in premier Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, the site leverages on the successful ‘Malaysia: Truly Asia’ campaign. It contains facts on Malaysia, displaying the opportunities in various sectors and also directs visitors to other business agencies.

”Selling the country as a business destination will also further enhance tourism arrivals and receipts and it costs almost the same to market to a MICE tourist as to an individual tourist,” Minister Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said,” says.

“However, an individual MICE tourist generates approximately 30% more income for the country and they generally come in large groups and when multinational companies establish their operations here, they also bring numerous expatriates who do extensive travel within the country, as well as host regional business meetings in Malaysia.”

And while the MICE industry in Malaysia may not yet be as big or as attractive compared to Singapore, things are picking up. The Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (The Centre) just won the bid for six international and regional conferences which will bring in a total of 11,800 delegates between 2010 and 2014.

Banking on the MICE dollar also makes a lot of sense for the smaller brand name hotel chains, who may not charge as much for a room, but are located in prime business hubs.

“The Summit Hotels & Resorts are growing each year and offering new products and improved services especially for the MICE market,” Zamri Saad, group director of sales & marketing, Summit Hotels & Resorts, says.

”We focus our advertising at a targeted market via media publication and print media supplements. We advertise our seminar and meeting packages in MICE publications and in newspapers we specifically advertise in the seminar and meeting supplement.”

Fix me up

If you didn’t know it before, you know it now – medical tourism is fast becoming an important revenue generator for the government.

Malaysia Healthcare is a fast growing healthcare information provider in Malaysia which has been using holiday packages to attract more international tourists seeking medical treatment in Malaysia.

It is endorsed by Tourism Malaysia.

“Health tourism is a new business, offshoot from tourism, which is now seen as a serious component. When you go for your treatment, you have to be sure that all will be taken care of as you don’t compromise the seriousness of your health,” Suresh Ponnudurai, chief executive officer of Malaysia Healthcare, says.

Ponnudurai says health tourism is becoming very sophisticated and a “true business”. Given the current economic climate, he adds that “the government is now looking for revenue and health tourism is a good area to look at as it is a potential niche area to target.”

Malaysia Healthcare is a brand on its own, privately driven but neutral in that it works with both government and private agencies. A lot of
the marketing and promoting of Malaysia as an ideal health care destination is done online and via the Tourism Malaysia website.

”We believe it is the fastest way to get into somebody’s house and create an impact. The whole idea is to brand the centre and we can’t do that financially because we are talking about a global market,” Ponnudurai, says.

Aside from Malaysia Healthcare’s offline marketing (which includes offices in Dhaka and Dubai as well as partner agencies in the US and South America) a lot of customers are coming through from the Tourism Malaysia website. So far 8000 people have sent queries to Malaysia Healthcare.

“With Tourism Malaysia as the major stakeholder, health tourism now is looking at ways to support us into promoting us. However, health is sensitive issue and we can’t put a billboard on health and we must get to know our target market,” he says.

Malaysia Healthcare says it will continue to create awareness to people who need their services through health tourism conferences.

A regional perspective

The formula for success is not brain surgery. Those who have made ground have identified their problems early, they’ve researched the emerging trends and most importantly, they’ve developed the right message to send and delivered it across all the right platforms. They’ve focused on growth areas, whether it be new markets or existing ones, focused on innovation and been creative with their use of media.

And perhaps not surprisingly, taking into account that the tourism industry has always been at the forefront of online advertising, and that the numbers of online travel transactions are increasing at an exponential rate, all forms of digital are playing prominent roles in tourism marketing strategies.

So as more and more people begin to search online for the best travel bargains, the marketing dollars continue to follow the users. Be it hotels, airlines, national tourism offices, travel media or any other sector of the industry, a majority are funneling a decent proportion of their budgets into a medium from which they can track the return on every single dollar.

The Big Pay-Off

According to Saurabh Varma, chief strategy officer at Arc Worldwide, the exact message you want to convey should carry the highest importance when launching a new campaign in this environment.

“The big challenge in terms of what travel and tourism marketers should be doing at the moment is actually focusing on emotional payoffs,” Varma explains.

“Most people will feel the need to indulge in travel but at this point in time, they’ll need permission to do that. A big emotional benefit for a small investment has to start becoming your promise.”

It therefore becomes imperative to have a very clear message which your travelers can understand and connect with because in this age of cheap deals, low airfares and value packages, some key strategies might be simply forgotten in the madness.

“It’s going to become so tactical and promotional that people might forget the concept of the brand,” Varma says. “Marketers sometimes forget that a lot of people travel because it fulfills something in them. People still travel because it’s magical and a lot of tourism brands tend to forget that in a time of recession.”

So once the clear message is laid out, it’s then all about delivering it in the most effective manner possible to sell your specific product in the current climate.

Digital Direction

One big player in the region, Hilton Hotels, has carried out its research into its consumer trends and is focusing much of its regional marketing on domestic and short-haul travel – leveraging the power of digital to do so.

“Even before this recession came about, we had already embarked on a channel shift – moving quite a lot of our marketing online,” Alfie Yee, Hilton Hotel’s Asia Pacific marketing director, says.

“We’re moving towards a more targeted approach so in a lot of our marketing campaigns we’re going towards contextual advertising.”

Yee explains that a lot of money has been invested in search engine marketing, with one entire division devoted to optimizing search terms.

Vincent Kobler, managing director of EmporioAsia Leo Burnett, who has worked with clients such as Hilton, The Ascott, Conrad and Marriott, has a clear philosophy on where hotels will look to advertise in 2009.

“Hotels do more in terms of below the line – especially digital – and I think going forward into ’09 that’s really where they’re focusing on right now in terms of maximizing their revenue.”

Kenny Lim, the general manager of Club Med Singapore, explains that the tremendous pressure across the industry has forced everyone to watch costs and find new opportunities within the market. He says that while Club Med has seen an upsurge in its regional destinations, the business is still taking no chances and contingency plans have been put in place with marketing activities.

One of Club Med’s key strategies in the next few months is to communicate its all inclusive concept even more clearly than it has done in the past.

“We’re looking at the possibility of a TV campaign to bring an emotional association to the Club Med experience in the latter half of the year. We’re also communicating with consumers right now – whether it’s on the internet or taking out newspaper ads.

“We’re very interested in growing the Brunei market because we feel it’s a market that’s overlooked. I think they have a very strong expat base – Singapore is also such a natural transit point for them.”

Looking Outside The Square

Competition among accommodation brands in Singapore in particular, which is already fierce, is set to get stronger with the opening of The Ibis on Bencoolen hotel and plans for nine other new hotels to open this year. Expansion into new markets like Shanghai, in the case of CTC Holidays which this month opened a hotel in China and is planning to build around 20 more across the region in the next five years, makes sound commercial sense.

Singapore Airlines is also focused on targeting new markets through different marketing activities. While its primary response has been to reduce capacity to match demand, vice president of public affairs Stephen Forshaw says one of the markets they’ve been putting capacity into during the last two or three years is Russia.

“The world’s a big place – we need to go looking for the opportunities around it to try and develop those new markets,” Forshaw says.

The first goal in markets like Russia and the Middle East is to get in and introduce the brand, principally through visibility campaigns and advertising on a tactical level.

“Obviously these days there will be a fairly heavy online component but for a market like Russia where the online penetration is still fairly small, we’re still going to rely on perhaps more tried and true methods to introduce the brand.

“In other markets like Saudi Arabia where online penetration is growing at an exponential rate, we’re clearly going to want to be a part of that.

“In order to promote destinations, you need to have transport links so in this case airlines are the arteries to feed the destinations with demand. Frankly, with the amount of money the government’s putting in through stimulus packages to promote tourism, if we can use some of that to open access to markets then we do not have to reinvent the wheel ourselves.”

For low-budget outfit Jetstar Asia, the challenge is different – leverage on its cheap airfares and effectively get that message out to the consumer.

According to Leslie Ng, head of commercial at Jetstar Asia, the airline will be using more traditional mediums such as television and print – two platforms which have proved successful in the past.

“Airfares have come down quite a lot so in all of this, our challenge will be to keep repeating that message to the market and that’s what I intend to do.

“How do we go about doing this? We just removed our fuel surcharges which gives savings to the consumer so our fares are quite low to start off with. We’re actually embarking on a new campaign soon which will be very technical.”

Ng says Jetstar Asia will keep working hard in the area of business travel, having previously actively engaged SMEs to fly with them by way of customised benefits to its corporate clients.

Online travel group Zuji is another player which has been flat out in recent times. It’s been under the pump getting the cheap deals to the market, though as its Asia Pacific marketing director Tai Parata explains, Zuji recently developed some products to place the company in a good position and keep up with the massive demand for its services – both from users and suppliers – that has grown tremendously over the past few years.

Zuji launched its Trip Saver Technology around the middle of last year – a programme which pulls together all of its available flights and their own hotel suppliers, which amount to around 60,000, and combines them automatically online with package deals.

“The soft launch was the middle of last year and we’re going a bit more above the line in the next few months,” Parata says.

“Most of our marketing is online – it’s cost effective, it’s measureable and there’s a lot of organic growth in the Asian markets. We still have a lot of ground to cover just in achieving brand recognition and penetration in the online market let alone going offline.

“Basically we’ve pushed it through our internal channels, worked out how consumers respond to it and now we’re taking our Trip Saver out to the consumer.”

Media Mix

Asian travel magazine DestinAsian is also trying to captialise on the online travel boom. The publication is re-launching its website with booking capabilities and as Asia Pacific marketing manager Liz Reading explains, it’s a sign of the times that they are now looking to generate most of
their advertising revenue online.

“We’re finding that our more traditional advertising clients are looking away from block advertising and more towards targeted approaches,” Reading says.

“I think they’re looking for a higher return for their investment so rather than putting out a full-page advert where they can’t really tell what the return is, they’re looking to channel their resources into events or direct database access – they can actually register if a person has visited their website through our website.”

“Our online presence is definitely something we feel is a bit overdue but we’re investing heavily in it. We feel that this will give advertisers a much clearer way of being able to assess their return on investment.”

A significant proportion of BBC Worldwide Channels Asia’s output is around travel, with shows like Fast:Track and Holidays in the Danger Zone attracting a large audience and commercial sponsorships have played their part.

“Away from sponsorships, we have created advertising campaigns for travel industry clients too,” says Sunita Rajan, BBC Worldwide Channels Asia’s vice president of advertising sales Asia and Australasia.

Rajan says some of the broadcaster’s most interesting work for travel clients has revolved around multi-platform campaigns, which has involved “linking a sponsored TV series with print and online advertising, PR, podcasts, events and a range of cross-media activity”.

Competitor CNN is also seeing growth in cross-platform deals and William Hsu, CNN’s vice president of advertising sales Asia Pacific, believes 2009 will see the highest number of tourism groups ever advertising with CNN in online, TV and their CNN Traveller magazine.

In Hsu’s opinion tourism groups in the region are “still a little bit more traditional because most are still leaning towards magazines and television”.

“They haven’t quite fully understood the internet yet,” he says. “They are spending but proportionately not as much as television. This year I also think people are going to take fewer risks. Obviously the ones who have tried it out and had success will continue to spend online but the people who are just learning about it won’t experiment with it this year.”

Flexibility, innovation, integration, creativity and daring to be different. These are the five mantras that will see the great tourism industry rise triumphantly from the canvas.


Tourism Queensland – Best Job in the World

Due to its huge popularity and even larger media exposure, this innovative word-of-mouth campaign from Tourism Queensland certainly doesn’t need too much more explaining here.

But its success comes down to the fact the campaign managed to identify a common desire in all of us – to get paid a lot of money to do very little at all.

Following this, everything else simply fell into place.

The campaign, thought up CumminsNitro, kicked off with its job advertisement – a AUS$150,000 six-month contract to become a ‘caretaker’ on Hamilton Island – immediately garnering massive international media coverage. In doing so, the campaign got people everywhere talking about the Great Barrier Reef, consequently lifting its profile as a holiday destination

It then used the power of social media to make it completely interactive. Applicants were instructed to upload video applications, virals hit YouTube, and the job website crashed in the first few days due to the staggering amount of traffic jumping online to have a gander at the ‘Best Job in the World’.

“No one has done anything like this before and the concept aims to showcase Queensland’s unique island experiences and provide something different in what is a very competitive global travel environment,” Tourism Queensland’s CEO Anthony Hayes said.

“We want to show the rest of the world just how amazing the islands of the Great Barrier Reef are through the eyes of someone who is exploring the destination first-hand.” It’s no flash in the pan either. The successful applicant will post blogs and upload video content to the Tourism Queensland website for the six months – further promoting the region as a tourist destination. The campaign kicks off a three-year, AUS$1.7 million global marketing strategy aimed at increasing the profile of Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef islands.


Discover Hong Kong – Reality tourism TV

For tourism boards across the region looking for the best way to leverage the power of social media, the discoverhongkong.com website would be an ideal place to start.

The site’s interactive corner is outstanding – including a link to its “Hong Kong Reality Channel” on YouTube. The Hong Kong Tourism Board has developed the page with close to 50 videos, welcoming feedback and personal contributions, as well as links back to its website which highlight vacation packages, tours and the exceptional MICE component of the site.

The interactive corner also has a link to the “Discover Hong Kong Group” on Flickr.com, a group with close to 5,000 posted photos, as well as up-to the-minute webcams from some of Hong Kong’s most popular tourist attractions.


Anantara Si Kao Resort – Spreading the word

Recognizing the fact a holiday is something people tell all their peers about and share their experiences when they return home, this fivestar luxury resort in Krabi approached wordof-mouth marketing agency Vocanic to handle their marketing.

The client, a medium-level player with resorts in Thailand, Bali and the Maldives, was eager to launch its new resort without putting money behind above the line advertising. Using a platform called Groundswell, a Vocanic creation which is a survey to identify individuals with influence, the agency is selecting a group of consumers who fit the ideal demographic in Singapore and Malaysia and offering them a stay at the resort with discount rates.

A photographer will accompany the holiday-makers, hand over the snapshots at the end and all that’s then required is a survey to be filled out – as well as passing the good word on to their friends and colleagues. “It doesn’t matter what you say about your product in a traditional press release or launch these days, if it’s not any good then everyone’s going to know about it in 10 minutes through something like Twitter, Facebook or a blog,” says Vocanic business development director
Liam McCance.

“With the economic situation and Thailand’s political situation, this is a way for the resort – rather than have empty rooms and still spend on media – to fill rooms, give people experiences and keep the money in the pocket.” The general manager of the resort, Mark Hehir, says the campaign wants to reach the right people and harness the power of personal recommendation by letting these customers experience the resort-stay for themselves.

“These personal stories and photos sell the resort far better than I ever could via a press ad.”

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