The Phnom Penh Post

The Big Cheese in the MICE sector

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We first establishe­d an office in Cambodia in 2005, but we do not have a dedicated headquarte­rs here. For Cambodia, all of our sales, marketing and product developmen­t have been done through our Hanoi headquarte­rs. But we have plans to build a dedicated Cambodian branch in the next two years that can operate independen­tly.

Over the last 10 years we have always just focused on selling Cambodia as an add-on to Vietnam. However, now we are seeing Cambodia emerge as an independen­t destina- tion. For our company, we are already seeing a 40 percent increase this year compared to the same period in 2016.

The MICE sector is a very important segment for us because they generate the high-income clients who stay in luxury hotels, need catered meals and who have corporatio­ns pay for their employees’ trips. We are seeing a lot of growth of the MICE segment primarily from countries in Southeast Asia, India, Turkey, Japan, Hong Kong, China and the Middle East coming to Cambodia.

The MICE segment always comes as big groups and Cambodia can benefit more from these business-oriented travellers than from large leisure group tours because MICE travellers spend more on shop- ping, events, team-building exercises and gala dinners.

If you look back over the past 10 years, Siem Reap has always been the preferred spot because of the temples. So, in my opinion, the real challenge is how to expand destinatio­ns across the country so that they are not just spending a couple days in Ang- kor Wat. The country needs to develop new products.

In Cambodia, you have a lot of people talking about Sihanoukvi­lle, but I don’t see it as having the infrastruc­ture yet. The beach product is not there yet compared to Vietnam and Thailand.

I think Sihanoukvi­lle should position itself as an untouched family beach destinatio­n. The country should not promote it like a “Pattaya” of Cambodia. The government should first build the quiet authentici­ty of the place for families and honeymoone­rs so they can forget the world. But it also doesn’t need to be expensive.

I think in a developing country like Cambodia the people that are building these casinos and hotels are just trying to make some quick money and attract the big charter and gambling groups. But this is not sustainabl­e if you look at neighbouri­ng destinatio­ns that have well-establishe­d casinos. If the government only promotes gambling, Sihanoukvi­lle will only have visitors that fly in and out, rather than those that stay for weeks or even months to enjoy the beach.

The government needs to play an active role and spend money. The government should have easily accessible informatio­n websites in multiple languages and also be active on social media promotions. If Cambodia can spend on technology, they will attract more travellers.

But of course, the marketing needs to be consistent to bring people to Cambodia and not just pass through the country. Cambodia has a national tourism slogan, but it doesn’t offer anything tangible besides just putting up a photo of Angkor Wat on display at major tourism expos in Europe.

The Ministry of Tourism is always lacking in providing the adequate material to promote the country. Cambodia will need something new, especially in the next 10 years. It needs to define what type of market segment it wants and that is something it is not fully doing. The government needs to spend money now. Nobody knows anything about Cambodia besides Angkor Wat.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

 ?? SRUN SRENG MENG ?? ASIA DMC Founder and CEO Tran Thanh Nam photograph­ed at his office last week in Phnom Penh.
SRUN SRENG MENG ASIA DMC Founder and CEO Tran Thanh Nam photograph­ed at his office last week in Phnom Penh.

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