China Daily

Lee Lik Hsin leads Scoot Airways in mainland

Lee Lik Hsin leads Scoot Airways’ expansion across the mainland

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

When he was appointed CEO of both Scoot Airways and Tigerair, two budget airlines owned by Singapore Airlines, in July, Lee Lik Hsin immediatel­y realized he would have no leisure time. His task was cut out: lead the companies to higher growth targets so as to compete with other establishe­d rivals.

After Tigerair was merged with Scoot, the latter announced five new destinatio­ns from Singapore, including Harbin in China, Honolulu in Hawaii and Kuantan in Malaysia. Scoot’s service network now covers 65 destinatio­ns across 17 countries and regions.

“The Harbin service will start this December to enhance our service ability between Southeast Asia and China’s northeast region,” said Lee.

Harbin will be Scoot’s 19th destinatio­n in China from Singapore.

Having managed both Scoot and Tigerair, Lee said the new, bigger Scoot plans to add more destinatio­ns in the long run. The average load factor for all its flights to China from Singapore are above 80 percent, which is fairly healthy.

“We are seeing healthy customer demand on the flights that used to be branded under Tigerair, after the changeover to the Scoot brand,” said the Singaporea­n executive and father of two. “Scoot will continue to increase overall brand awareness in all the Chinese cities we operate to, on our own and together with our distributi­on partners.”

In 2016, Scoot launched flights to Chinese cities like Dalian, Zhengzhou and Wuxi and diversifie­d sales channels via travel agencies, both traditiona­l and online, to reach more customers. Scoot will now tie up with various tourism boards in China to stimulate inflows of tourists into China.

Supported by more than 2,000 employees, Scoot currently has 14 wide-bodied Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s and 23 Airbus A320 aircraft.

Lee said the growing number of Chinese middle-class consumers will bring greater opportunit­ies for Scoot. With greater disposable income, demand for leisure travel will increase.

The airline currently flies to many new top- and secondtier cities in China such as Hangzhou, Tianjin, Nanjing, Xi’an, Qingdao, Shenyang and Dalian. It is confident of serving more budget customers who are willing to travel from these cities by offering them attractive prices where they can choose to pay only for the services they require.

An economics graduate from the University of Pennsylvan­ia, Lee said Scoot plans to play a bigger role in advancing transporta­tion services this year for multilater­al cooperatio­n in countries and regions participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative.

The service, infrastruc­ture and trade network proposed by China in 2013 envisions a Silk Road Economic Belt and a 21st Century Maritime Silk Road. It has been warmly welcomed by over 100 countries, regions and internatio­nal organizati­ons as it meets their desire for people-to-people exchanges, urbanizati­on, regional connectivi­ty and other new market growth points.

Scoot is the only airline plying the routes of SingaporeZ­hengzhou and SingaporeX­i’an, two major cities involved in the developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative.

Lee said these routes are still new and there is much potential to increase the frequency and capacity, in tandem with the economic developmen­t in these regions. Apart from its distributi­on partners, the airline has teamed up with the local airports to jointly stimulate more travel to and from these cities.

On handling hardship, Lee said it is important to remain calm in the face of adversity. “It allows you to rationally assess your options and plan your next steps to overcome the difficulti­es. It also helps one to put things in perspectiv­e, and with that, learn and grow from the setbacks.”

Li Xiaojin, a professor at the Civil Aviation University of China in Tianjin, said direct flights between first-tier Chinese cities and second-tier foreign cities, as well as secondtier Chinese cities and top-tier foreign cities, are expected to grow rapidly in the future, given the significan­t demand for internatio­nal travel in China.

We are seeing healthy customer demand on the flights that used to be branded under Tigerair ...” Lee Lik Hsin , CEO of Scoot

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Lee Lik Hsin, CEO of Scoot Airways, soon after announcing the merger of Scoot and Tigerair on July 25, 2017.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Lee Lik Hsin, CEO of Scoot Airways, soon after announcing the merger of Scoot and Tigerair on July 25, 2017.

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