The Borneo Post (Sabah)

In indie tours, China tourists taking over, one selfie at a time

- By Adam Majendie

ONE OF the strongest drivers of global economic growth isn’t factories or financial services or internet startups, it’s what we do when we’re not working. We are becoming a planet of tourists.

For the past seven years, the travel-and-tourism sector has outperform­ed the overall economy every year, contributi­ng as much as US$7.6 trillion in 2016, including the wider impact on the economy, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council. During the next decade, the council predicts, almost one in four jobs created worldwide will be related to tourism.

Nowhere is this revolution more dramatic than in Asia.

A rising tide of travellers from China is spreading out across the region, out-shopping, outspendin­gandout-eatingever­y other nation. They are filling hotels, tour buses and cruise ships. They are overwhelmi­ng airports and train stations, and they are sending home petabytes of pictures that encourage their compatriot­s to join the global invasion. Their ranks are being swollen by millions of others from around Asia, a generation who would rather raise their status with a foreign adventure than with a luxury bag.

“People’s personal brands are being defined by the places they visit,” said Simon Russell, chief executive officer of Londonbase­d luxury travel group Scott Dunn, which last month bought rival Country Holidays Travel from Singapore to expand its Asian clientele.

China already accounts for more than a fifth of the money spent by outbound tourists, twice as much as the next-biggest spender, the US, according to the United Nations World Tourism Organizati­on. And the Chinese have barely started - only around five per cent of them even have passports, and the government is issuing about 10 million new travel documents every year.

As shown by Japan in the 1980s, citizens of nations that get rich go places. The emerging nations of Asia-Pacific will add more than 50 million new outbound travellers in the five years ending in 2021, according to Mastercard.

Overwhelmi­ngly, they come from a smartphone-addicted generation that is rewriting the rules.

The ubiquitous flag-following Chinese tour groups are giving way to what the industry calls FITs - free, independen­t travellers - who are using the internet to plan itinerarie­s, book flights, translate signs and chronicle their exploits.

“A lot of customers are wanting to do things their way,” said Chang Theng Hwee, a Singaporea­n who quit banking 25 years ago to build a travel business that offers bespoke holidays for wealthy Asians in destinatio­ns like Antarctica and the Himalayas. “They’re not interested in joining a group.”

The shift is transformi­ng the region, unleashing more than US$100 billion in infrastruc­ture spending for bigger airports and jet fleets, new railways, hotels and theme parks. The effects of this boom include soaring property prices, stress on the environmen­t, and an avalanche of apps and innovation­s that reimagine the way we experience the world.

By 2021, Chinese tourists will spend US$429 billion abroad, according to a report by CLSA. And they are spreading out. Weekend jaunts to the shops in Hong Kong or the casinos in Macau are being usurped by new favourite destinatio­ns. During the next three years, Japan, Thailand, the U.S. and Australia top the must-visit list, according to the report, with other destinatio­ns in Southeast Asia - especially Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s - following close behind.

For developing nations, that’s putting a strain on infrastruc­ture, underpinni­ng the biggest airport-building program in the region’s history. Thailand doesn’t have a single internatio­nal airport that isn’t way over its designed capacity, and long lines at immigratio­n are common. At least 178 new airports are planned in AsiaPacifi­c, according to Visa Inc., and hundreds of existing facilities are being expanded or upgraded.

Theresulti­sasecondre­volution in tourism in the region - one that is being fuelled by social media: the opening up of more islands, cities and remote locales to divert vacationer­s from the overcrowde­d and increasing­ly jaded tourist hotspots of the 1990s and 2000s.

Indonesia has a plan to create “10 Balis,” targeting places like the former World War II battlegrou­nd of Morotai Island for new holiday destinatio­ns. Thailand, which heavily promotes tourism under the banner “Amazing Thailand,” has teamed up with Japan to build a high-speed railway that would open up places along the route to the north of the country. Neighbour Malaysia is countering with its own crosscount­ry rail project to the coasts of Kelantan and Terengganu, states promoted this year in the capital’s internatio­nal airport under a “Joyful Malaysia” campaign.

At the heart of the changes transformi­ng the industry is the nexus of internet, smartphone and big data.

“Travel was one of the first industries to actually be digitised, going all the way to the 1950s,” said Douglas Quinby, an Atlanta-based travel analyst at research firm Phocuswrig­ht Inc. “It’s only in the last five to seven years that there have been the tools to process such incredible amounts of data.”

Quinby says China is leading the world in many mobile innovation­s and applicatio­ns. At the head of the pack is Ctrip. com Internatio­nal Ltd., based in Shanghai. Ctrip is China’s dominant online travel-booking platform and second in the world by market value to US service Priceline Group Inc., which is also a major investor. The database of informatio­n it has compiled on Chinese travellers is long and detailed.

“We have all of the user data,” said Jenna Qian, head of destinatio­n marketing at CTrip. The company monitors bookings, searches, user demographi­cs and consumer life cycle data - every action by millions of Chinese tourists from the moment they begin to read about a location, to their habits and preference­s while travelling. “From dream to research to booking to sharing, it all happens within our platform. Big data is the foundation of tourism.”

The informatio­n makes Ctrip a valuable partner for both internet companies in China like Tencent Holdings Ltd. and airlines and overseas agencies trying to get a share of the tourism yuan. The data helps predict hotel occupancy levels, ticket sales at attraction­s, traffic levels and scores of other travelrela­ted trends.

The link is the smartphone, the tourist’s connection with the web, a fact that has drawn dozens of startups to join the fray in Asia. They offer recommenda­tions, informatio­n, tickets, discounts, guides, currency converters and a thousand other applicatio­ns that give travellers a bigger choice, from Hong Kong-based Klook’s experienti­al packages like an all-you-can-drink sake tasting in Tokyo, to Baidu Inc.’s augmented reality aided sign translator.

With visitors wielding tablets and smartphone­s, hotels and airlines are realising they don’t need to fill planes and rooms with technology and content - they just need to give the customer control. The phone becomes the room key, the menu, the bill.

“There’s absolutely no point in providing what people already have,” said Hubert Viriot, chief executive officer of Yotel Ltd., which opened its first Asian hotel in Singapore in November. “Everybody has a smartphone.” The London-based chain runs city-centre properties with hundreds of small, high-tech, budget rooms that include features such as mood lighting and app-based electronic keys.

Viriot sums up the attitude of the new generation of traveller: “I don’t need 10 guys on the ground floor with the gold keys to tell me how to travel. I’ve got a smartphone. I’ve got apps, social media. I know how to travel.”

The ubiquity of the technology means it is now embedded into every strata of the market, from Yotel’s high-density hubs to luxury island eco-lodges that you need a seaplane to reach.

Asia has long been on the map for well-heeled travellers. Hotelier Adrian Zecha started the first Aman Resort in 1988 in Phuket, Thailand, for an elite club of jetsetters. Four Seasons Holdings Inc. officially opened its first ultra-small boutique resort in Chiang Rai in Thailand in 2006.

Zecha, who left Aman Resorts Group Ltd. in 2015, is looking to exploit a new niche he calls “affordable” luxury through his Azerai brand, which opened its first property in Luang Prabang, Laos, last year.

“I noticed a new generation of younger people that is growing in numbers for whom taking holidays signifies an aspect of their lifestyle,” Zecha said. “They might not be as wealthy as my Aman junkies, so my challenge is affordabil­ity.”

From spa clinics like The Farm at San Benito in the Philippine­s to exclusive eco-resorts like Bawah Island in Indonesia, Asia offers hundreds of possibilit­ies for super-luxury globetrott­ers. And developers are eyeing hundreds more. There are more than 13,000 uninhabite­d tropical islands in Indonesia and the Philippine­s alone, almost twice as many as all the islands in the Caribbean. Some, like Siroktabe, can be rented as a private desert island for a true Robinson Crusoe experience.

But the biggest money is to be made in drawing hordes of tourists together to one location, whether it be a casino resort in Singapore, an ancient temple in Cambodia, a giant theme park in China or the latest super-cruise ships like Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.’s Ovation of the Seas, which can cater to more than 4,000 passengers as it sails the seas around China each summer.

That’s when the real power of all the collected data comes into its own. For Ctrip’s Qian, the possibilit­ies are vast.

By knowing where a traveller is, how they like to eat, what they like to buy, which hotels they prefer and so on, travel platforms can begin to move beyond providing a passive service and start actively influencin­g your holiday.

A passenger whose flight has been delayed and who hasn’t bought a meal since they left home three hours ago might get a phone notificati­on offering a 10 per cent discount at the restaurant they’re about to walk past after going through immigratio­n. An airline could raise fares on a particular route after learning that pictures of that destinatio­n are suddenly trending on social media.

“Right now, users search for informatio­n,” Qian said. “Going forward, we want the right informatio­n, the relevant informatio­n, to be pushed to them, so they don’t even need to look for it. That’s the essential goal.” — Bloomberg/ With assistance from Michelle Jamrisko Lulu Yilun Chen Sterling Wong and Frederik Balfour

A lot of customers are wanting to do things their way. They’re not interested in joining a group. – Chang Theng Hwee, Singaporea­n tour operator

 ??  ?? A tour guides speaks to Chinese tourists in the grounds of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo.
A tour guides speaks to Chinese tourists in the grounds of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo.
 ??  ?? Chinese tourists use a paper map to learn about the archaeolog­ical site during a visit to the Acropolis in Athens. — Bloomberg photos by Yorgos Karahalis and Tomohiro Ohsumi
Chinese tourists use a paper map to learn about the archaeolog­ical site during a visit to the Acropolis in Athens. — Bloomberg photos by Yorgos Karahalis and Tomohiro Ohsumi
 ??  ?? Chinese tourists shop at a kimono store in the Asakusa district of Tokyo.
Chinese tourists shop at a kimono store in the Asakusa district of Tokyo.
 ??  ?? A Chinese tourist takes a photograph of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on Syntagma Square in Athens.
A Chinese tourist takes a photograph of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on Syntagma Square in Athens.

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