Travel, Tourism & Events

Queensland tourism body praises UNESCO decision on Great Barrier Reef listing

DESPITE  a loud campaign by some international environmental groups to have the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) list the Great Barrier Reef as an ‘in danger’ World Heritage Site – and the corresponding defence of its status by Federal, State and Local Governments – the decision not to do so shows faith in the management of the reef, according to the Queensland Tourism Industry Council (QTIC).

QTIC chief executive Daniel Gschwind said UNESCO’s draft decision not to list the Great Barrier Reef as ‘in danger’ World Heritage site, after publishing the results of its report, demonstrated its faith in Queensland and Australia’s long-term ability and commitment to effectively manage one of the world’s natural wonders. 

Mr Gschwind said the decision will be the right move and acknowledged Australia’s strong credentials as an effective environmental manager. But he warned Queensland now needed to implement the plan “and deliver on the trust placed in us as guardians of the Great Barrier Reef”.

“The Reef 2050 Long-term Sustainability Plan, along with numerous other reef research programs and initiatives, demonstrates that Queensland and Australia takes the protection of the Great Barrier Reef seriously but we have to do more,” Mr Gschwind said.

“If the UNESCO draft decision is accepted it will give us a chance to demonstrate our long-term commitment to address the significant issues that affect the future of the reef.

“The Great Barrier Reef is the jewel in Australia’s tourism crown.  The tourism industry understands this and will continue to make a significant contribution to its long term protection.

“Queensland reef tourism operators are at the front line of reef protection, actively working with researchers and reef management agencies to monitor, report on and protect the reef’s health.  In this way, tourism plays an essential part of the reef’s survival.” 

Mr Gschwind said a decision to list the Great Barrier Reef as an ‘in danger’ World Heritage site would have been “catastrophic” for Queensland’s tourism industry, effectively discouraging tourists from visiting and threatening the future of many reef research and monitoring programs.

“It’s clear that the world is watching how we manage the Great Barrier Reef and this should inspire our efforts to ensure it remains a natural wonder that will inspire and delight generations well into the future,” he said.

Tourism is Queensland’s second biggest industry worth $23 billion, and directly and indirectly employs 230,000 Queenslanders.

Key industry figures will address the decision by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee on Friday, June 5, at the Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef: The World’s Best Address forum, one of Queensland’s biggest World Environment Day celebrations.

The forum will feature a keynote address by Queensland Minister for Environment and Heritage Protection and Minister for National Parks and Great Barrier Reef, Steven Miles. 

Also addressing the forum will be Lady Elliot Island Eco Resort managing director Peter Gash; Reef and Rainforest Research Centre chair Ian Poiner; Great Barrier Reef Foundation chairman John Schubert; and Hinchinbrook Island traditional owner Russell Butler.

QTIC is a private sector, membership-based organisation representing the interests of the tourism and hospitality industry across Queensland.

www.qtic.com.au

 

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CeBIT opens with strident address from Guy Kawasaki

 

THE most significant business technology event in the Asia-Pacific region, CeBIT opened today to thousands of people with a charismatic welcome address by NSW Minister for Finance, Services and Property, Dominic Perrottet, who said CeBIT was well known for bringing together the best and brightest of the ICT industry.

Mr Perrottet said, however, more than a great exhibition and conference, CeBIT "is a time for Australians to think about the future challenges to society and how technology can help us face those challenges". 

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, in his video address welcomed local, Australian and international visitors to Sydney to CeBIT, calling it: “The most significant ICT showcase in our region. It’s become the place to connect with global leaders, visionaries, start-ups and multinationals.”

Kicking off day one of the three-day event, chief evangelist of Canva and former evangelist of Apple, Guy Kawasaki shared with the CeBIT audience the lessons he learned from working with Steve Jobs.

“Innovators ignore naysayers,” Mr Kawasaki said. “Can you imagine if Steve Jobs came to a show like CeBIT and told someone that he had an idea to dramatically change computing, and they said, nay, it can’t be done? If Steve had listened to that, we never would have had one of the most successful profitable companies in the world today."

With 400 exhibitors across the two halls of The Dome at Sydney Olympic Park, a fantastic conference line-up and a very strong attendance, managing director of Hannover Fairs Australia, Harvey Stockbridge said he was delighted with the energy on the exhibition floor and how the show has begun.

“We have experienced unparalleled interest from academia, industry, media and government this year and the atmosphere on the show floor demonstrates that," Mr Stockbridge said.

“Already our exhibitors are reporting great leads from discussions on the show floor, and we look forward to another two days of great ideas, business deals and education."

CeBIT’s day one conferences covered the topics of Social Business, Mobile Engagement and Big Data and Analytics.

Speaking in the social business stream, Sarah Bernhardi, Digital Transformation Centre, Telstra shared her experience of how to foster engagement and collaboration through digital transformation.


Under the Mobile Engagement stream, George Lawson, the head of emerging products and innovation for Visa, shared the journey on making the vision of a mobile wallet a reality.

David Boloker, chief technology officer, from IBM’s Emerging Internet Technology Group gave his keynote about his perspectives on Big Data 3.0.

David Shing, the 'digital prophet' for AOL (US) gave the closing keynote today on Recalibrating Digital Conversations.

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China ‘Shanghais’ intelligent technologies

CHINA will present an international trade fair highlighting ‘intelligent’ technologies across a wide range of industry sectors in Shanghai on September 16-18, which may be of interest to leading Australian companies in the field.

Named the iFair Shanghai 2015, the fair is hosted by Shanghai UBM Sinoexpo International Exhibition Co, at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre. 

The iFair has been created in response to the Chinese Ministry of Industry’s drive to ‘speed up’ the development of intelligent technology and products, widely used in retail, education, finance, media, engineering, convenient living, and the consumer electronics industry.

Shanghai is being promoted by the Industry Ministry as the centre of intelligent industry development in China, “as an international metropolis and at the centre of the Yangtze River Delta’s economic circle, with excellent geographical advantages provides unlimited opportunities in the development of the intelligent industry”.

A showcase of national and international intelligent product will be on show for what is also a gathering of government officials, industry leaders, experts and scholars, communicating on the issues of intelligent industry. Organisers said the exhibition would concentrate on policy, markets, technology, capital and other fields to create in-depth exchanges and cooperation, high-end showcases, and promote rapid development of the intellectual industry.

The iFair Shanghai 2015 will include the 12th China International Self-Service, Kiosk, Vending Show, the 7th Shanghai International Digital Signage and Touch Technology Show, 2015 Shanghai International Multimedia Application and Human-computer Interaction Technologies Show and 2015 Shanghai International Digital Conference Show.

The exhibition area of 25,000sqm is expected to attract more than 500 internationally-known exhibitors and more than 20,000 professional buyers.

A key focus of iFair, supported by the Chinese Government, are the fields of Intelligent Cities and Intelligent Industry. This area looks at state-of-the-art software development in general living and the industrial chain, especially equipment manufacturing processes. The area will feature intelligent traffic, intelligent medical care, intelligent retail, intelligent security, intelligent traffic, and intelligent logistics.

Galleries and exhibits include a self-service products and vending machine systems exhibition area; a digital signage and audio-visual integration technology exhibition area; an international digital conference exhibition area; and a multimedia application and human-computer interaction technologies exhibition area.

Associations jointly organising iFair include the European Vending association (EKN), National Automatic Merchandising Association (NAMA), European Vending Publishing Association (EVPA), American Digital Signage Association, Digital Signage Consortium and Nano Opt. Media Inc, China Outdoor Advertising Association branch, Chinese Commercial Display Alliance, Digital Signage Multimedia Alliance Taiwan, along with many domestic and foreign industry associations and organisations.

www.ifairchina.com

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Brisbane hosts generationYOU special event

QUEENSLAND companies seeking to support the next generation are being encouraged to send or sponsor delegates to the inaugural generationYOU event on Friday,
April 17.

An initiative of adult-learning specialists Bright Conferences, generationYOU is designed specifically for millennials (18-28 years old) with the aim of helping them become more ‘employer ready’ by sharing in the experiences of business gurus, entrepreneurs, employers and mentors. 

The full day event on Friday will tackle practical skills such as decision making, communicating face to face, problem solving, networking, building a personal brand and more.

Bright Conferences CEO Nadine Zrinzo said the idea for the event stemmed from a common conversation amongst employers on how to turn young hires into great employees.

“Millennials bring with them several skills which their older colleagues might not have, however they are also pre-packaged with common challenges which can be tough to address. We are looking to change that,” Ms Zrinzo said. 

Guest speakers already announced include Kelly Pfeffer from Suncorp, Daniel Scaysbrook from Amnesty International, Rachel McLean from McLean Social Media, Nic Blair from Search Factory, Louisa Dahl from and Jack Perlinski from branding specialists DAIS. 

“The challenge for GenerationYou, is how to leverage their own competitive advantage,” Mr Perlinski said. 

“That advantage is already available to them but hidden inside their own mindsets and expectations, it is the key to unlocking their personal brand and realising aspirations.”

Ms Zrinzo is keen to make the event as beneficial for employers as it is for their current and future employees.

“Although the event itself is for millennials, the content is also of interest to their managers who might be looking for cost effective training, particularly in a conference/corporate setting,” she said.

“There are plenty of skills and areas of training which are not necessarily easy for a manager to impart, making the investment in a one day event worthwhile.” 

www.generationyou.com.au

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CeMAT international intralogistics event comes to Australia

 

KNOWN as the world’s leading business event for intralogistics, materials handling and warehousing, the CeMAT exhibition and conference is launching its event for the Australasian region in Sydney on May 5-7.

Developed by Hannover Fairs Australia, based on its long-standing CeMAT format for Europe, staging CeMAT Australia at Sydney Olympic Park means, for the first time, professionals from the Asia-Pacific region will not have to travel to Europe to find the latest in innovative intralogistics solutions. 

Following its winning formula worldwide, CeMAT will bring a wealth of international exhibitors and renowned industry leaders to share solutions and showcase innovation in warehousing automation. In Europe, CeMAT is held every two years in Hannover, Germany and is also staged in Russia, Asia, India and South America.

CeMAT Australia will feature a conference program featuring regional and global leaders in their sectors, live product demonstrations, product launches and on-stand events to provide visitors with a hands on experience during the three day event. The show will also feature case studies and highlight industry trends during its dedicated conference, panel sessions and workshops.

Hannover Fairs Australia managing director, Harvey Stockbridge said he was keen for the Australian market to be exposed to international trends at CeMAT Australia with the core intention to share industry knowledge and explore how to create a smart, efficient and integrated supply chain.

“With 15 percent of Australia’s GDP coming from the transport and logistics industry, it’s a critical component of our economy,” Mr Stockbridge said. “No other industry offers companies such huge scope for rationalisation and savings as the materials handling and logistics sector.”

Foodstuffs New Zealand logistics operations manager, Kris Lancaster, whose organisation makes up an estimated 52 percent of the New Zealand grocery market, will assess the key drivers for automation or manual picking to enable better business outcomes. During his keynote address, Mr Lancaster will candidly weigh up the cost of automating versus the potential value it can provide in reducing costs and increasing efficiencies.

Australia Post general manager for global e-commerce platforms, Ben Franzi, will share his journey on how he managed the transition from a traditional mailing business to making Australia Post a thriving e-commerce service provider. He will discuss how e-commerce is changing the transport and logistics industry and how other businesses can build resilience into their system design. 

The deputy managing director of Europe’s leading engineering association, VDMA, which represents member companies in mechanical engineering, Armin Weih, will show how the organisation is leading the way in developing intralogistics solutions for the world market. Mr Weih will also discuss global trends, challenges and ‘industry 4.0’.

CeMAT’s Mr Stockbridge said CeMAT Australia represented a fast-growing sector of more than 165,000 businesses, consisting of lifting equipment and crane manufacturers, forklift truck and warehouse technology producers, software developers and even complete system providers.

“Bringing innovations from across the globe, CeMAT will also feature a large number of international visitors from China, Malaysia, India, Korea, Thailand, Taiwan and Japan,” Mr Stockbridge said.

In its launch year, CeMAT Australia has drawn the support of key industry players including Adaptalift Hyster, DB Schenker, Knapp and Dematic.

Entry to the exhibition is free.

Conference: http://www.cemat.com.au/register-expo-conference/

www.cemat.com.au

 

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Over 1.1 billion international tourists in 2014 ... and more to come

EXTRA >> INTERNATIONAL tourist arrivals reached 1,138 million in 2014 – a 4.7 percent increase over the previous year, according to the latest UNWTO World Tourism Barometer.

For 2015, UNWTO forecasts international tourism to grow by 3-4 percent, further contributing to the global economic recovery.

The number of international tourists was 51 million more than in 2013, realising the fifth consecutive year of above average growth since the 2009 economic crisis.

“Over the past years, tourism has proven to be a surprisingly strong and resilient economic activity and a fundamental contributor to the economic recovery by generating billions of dollars in exports and creating millions of jobs,” UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai, said when opening the recent Spain Global Tourism Forum in Madrid.

“This has been true for destinations all around the world, but particularly for Europe, as the region struggles to consolidate its way out of one of the worst economic periods in its history.”

By region, the Americas (+7%) and Asia-Pacific (+5%) registered the strongest growth, while Europe (+4%), the Middle East (+4%) and Africa (+2%) grew at a slightly more modest pace.

By subregion, North America (+8%) saw the best results, followed by North-East Asia, South Asia, Southern and Mediterranean Europe, Northern Europe and the Caribbean, all increasing by 7%.

As in recent years, the growth in international tourism receipts in 2014 is expected to have followed that of arrivals fairly closely, but the UN’s 2014 results for international tourism receipts will not be released until April. In 2013, international tourism receipts reached US$1,187 billion, which was $230 billion more than in the pre-crisis year of 2008.

POSITIVE OUTLOOK

For 2015, UNWTO forecasts international tourist arrivals to grow between 3-4 percent.

By region, growth is expected to be stronger in Asia and the Pacific (+4% to +5%) and the Americas (+4% to +5%), followed by  Europe (+3% to +4%). Arrivals are expected to increase by +3% to +5% in Africa and by +2% to +5% in the Middle East.

“We expect demand to continue growing in 2015 as the global economic situation improves even though there are still plenty of challenges ahead,” Mr Rifai said.

“On the positive side, oil prices have declined to a level not seen since 2009. This will lower transport costs and boost economic growth by lifting purchasing power and private demand in oil importing economies.

“Yet, it could also negatively impact some of the oil exporting countries which have emerged as strong tourism source markets,” Mr Rifai said.

The positive outlook for 2015 is confirmed by the UNWTO Confidence Index. According to the 300 tourism experts consulted worldwide for the Index, tourism performance is expected to improve in 2015, though expectations are less upbeat than a year ago.

MOST VISITED

Europe (+4%), the most visited region with over half of the world’s international tourists, saw an increase of 22 million arrivals in 2014, reaching a total of 588 million. Thanks to these results, tourism has been a major contributor to the European economic recovery. Northern Europe and Southern and Mediterranean Europe led growth (both +7%), while results were more modest in Western Europe (+2%). Arrivals in Central and Eastern Europe (0%) stagnated after three years of strong growth.

International tourist arrivals in Asia and the Pacific (+5%) increased by 13 million to 263 million. The best performance was recorded in North-East Asia and South Asia (both +7%). Arrivals in Oceania grew by 6 percent, while growth slowed down in South-East Asia (+2%) as compared to previous years.

The Americas was the best performing region in relative terms with growth of 7 percent, welcoming an additional 13 million international tourists and raising the total to 181 million. Growth was driven by North America (+8%), where Mexico posted a double-digit increase, and the Caribbean (+7%). Arrivals to Central America and South America (both +6%) grew at double the rate recorded in 2013 and well above the world average.

International tourism in the Middle East (+4%) shows signs of rebound with good results in most destinations. The region attracted an additional 2 million arrivals, bringing the total to 50 million. 

Africa’s international tourist numbers grew by an estimated 2 percent, equivalent to an increase of one million arrivals. The region reached 56 million tourists.

While arrivals to North Africa were weak (+1%), Sub-Saharan Africa saw international tourist numbers rise by 3 percent despite the Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in a few West African countries. UNWTO warned that data for Africa and the Middle East should be read with caution as it was based on limited and volatile data.

TRADITIONAL DEMAND RETURNS

A pick-up in expenditure on international tourism from traditional source markets compensated for the slowdown of the large emerging markets, which had been driving tourism growth in previous years, UNWTO reported.

The total number of trips abroad from China is estimated to have increased by 11 million to 109 million in 2014. Expenditure was up by 17% in the first three quarters of 2014, a strong result but slower than in previous years (40% in 2012 and 26% in 2013, respectively).

China has been the world’s largest outbound market since 2012, with a total expenditure of US$ 129 billion in 2013.

Among the other two main emerging markets, the Russian Federation (-6%) clearly lost strength in 2014, while Brazil still grew by 2%, despite the appreciation of the US dollar against the Brazilian real and slower economic growth.

Beyond the top 10, some smaller emerging markets saw expenditure grow substantially, with Saudi Arabia, India, the Philippines and Qatar all reporting increases of 30 percent or over.
A pickup in demand from traditional source markets compensated for the slowdown of the large emerging markets.

Expenditure from the US, the second largest outbound market in the world, grew by 6 percent. Noteworthy is also the rebound of France (+11%), Italy (+6%) and the UK (+4%).

www.unwto.org

Useful links:

UNWTO World Tourism Barometer

 

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CTM’s technology smarts hit the suite spot

EXTRA >> CORPORATE Travel Management (CTM) is well known in the travel industry for being “ahead of the game” when it comes to information and communication technology (ICT) services for customers.

The technological tools CTM has developed – which is referred to as the SMART Suite, including the Smart Portal, Smart Taxi, Smart Approve, Smart Alerts and Smart Data – have become an integral part of the positive customer experience in two distinct ways: the way customers use these intelligent tools while travelling, and also in the data that is provided to both the client company and the CTM travel consultant. 

According to CTM managing director Jamie Pherous, the CTM business case for developing its own technology was simple: the online tools help with both customer retention and customer attraction – and the data generated in real time helps both the traveller and the travel consultant to manage the right outcomes.

A challenge CTM’s developers had to overcome was that different air travel and accommodation booking systems – the industry calls them Global Distribution Systems – dominate in different regions. The CTM SMART Suite and other tools had to seamlessly deliver information to the customer no matter what region they were travelling in, so they had to integrate with whatever systems are best of breed in any region.

“We made a conscious decision that we think it is unlikely that one provider is likely to have the best booking tool in every single market,” Mr Pherous said.

“They might in one region but it is probably unlikely it is going to be in the other. The same goes for expense management tools, security tools and the like.

“So we’ve made a conscious choice to build our own platform – a smart platform – that gives the client the same look and feel and the same tools, but behind the scenes it can then link to the best booking engine. But to the customer, it looks and feels the same, whether it is in North America, Europe, Asia or Australia,” he said.

“That’s the way we’ve gone and by having great data and controlling the data we have our own tools that fulfil the need.”

CTM’s travel consultants and technology development teams constantly look at the data and use it to refine the technologies it can offer to clients.

“So the idea is not just to have been tools in market, but also best innovations within our SMART Suite that is going to be relevant to that market,” Mr Pherous said.

“That’s where we believe we can get it right, because we believe within any region we have local ownership and local supply knowledge and, by using the best local tools, we can pull that together.

“So, by definition, we should have not just the best value proposition locally, but also regionally and globally at any time. And that is our opportunity.”

This approach has often taken CTM out of the strict travel realm as customer surveys bring through new ideas for better service.

“In terms of technology we are also building things that aren’t even to do with travel,” he said.

“An example is our taxi-share service. This came from a client who said to us they were sick and tired of going to head office and seeing 50 people who have come from other cities and they probably used 50 different taxis to get there. So we built a solution that identifies when people travel together, or close to, from other cities. Then through e-mails and text they are able to contact each other to share transport into the office and back.

“That came from client feedback. So that’s a good example. Nothing to do directly with travel, but it’s more logistics.

“Another one is what we call the Travel Tracker. It was used just to find out where people are … but what we found was it could be used by people, say, who might have to go to a meeting in Perth but they could look on this site and in one simple view see where other key managers might be.

“So if someone was already in Perth, they could hook that meeting up for them to see them. Again, feedback from clients and how we use this information. Nothing to do with travel, but more logistics – within an organisation.

“So you can go onto a screen, whether it is on an Apple (phone or tablet) or your (PC) desktop and see where all your people are. We found that clients are using that in very innovative ways.”

Mr Pherous gave the example of a CEO travelling to London for a meeting, who found one of his international managers was also to be in London at the same time and he was included in the meeting to great effect.

“We are really selling on value,” Mr Pherous said. “I really believe those two examples of logistics really save our clients money – and not just money but time. We can help them to be more efficient and effective.

“It fits right in with our commitment that the savings that we make (for clients) must outweigh the fees that we charge.”


CTM uses a range of developers for its products, with an internal team leading the projects but accessing the best talent available externally. Typically, an app might take two years of development and proving before it would be released.

“We’ve got a bit investment in IT development. That whole group is a very important part of our business,” Mr Pherous said.

“If we look now at our global objectives, how we win and retain business is pretty critical and so is the technology solutions in both reporting suites – for clients and internally – as well as the client tools and apps that we want to roll out globally.”

Technology was moving to use data in real time, Mr Pherous said, and CTM was at the cutting edge of that trend.

“I think reporting has had a big move in the past 24 months,” he said. “Getting reports historically doesn’t really help. The idea of our reports, and indeed our whole SMART Suite of apps, is there to identify things before travel is taken.

“We have acknowledge that saving along is somewhere like 7-8 percent, just by being able to see things up front. So the reports are more interactive, to show what-if scenarios.

“As well as the apps, another example is one of our tools for clients that allows them to look forward 14-21 days for booking discretionary travel,” Mr Pherous said.

“Often what people don’t realise is that they can get the cheap airfare (weeks out) but they don’t realise there may be a conference, say, in Melbourne at the same time which means the rooms rates are $500 a night. Our clients are able to, in a one screen view, look forward and say, you know what, if I go on Thursday or Friday it is going to be $200 a night, on average, versus $500 a night if I go Monday-Tuesday.

“These are tools that are doing two things: they are helping clients make better decisions and more effective travel, and as well it is freeing up our staff to get down into the stuff that really matters.

“We are finding now that if you look at client service, technologies now are a key part of that service. But we want to use technology to leave our people free for the really difficult itineraries.

“We believe the industry has dropped the ball on that. We know that having an expert travel adviser can make the difference between having a $10,000 and a $20,000 ticket, when it comes to complex itineraries.

“Free the travel organiser up though technology … but also make the travel more interactive between the traveller and the travel organiser.”

Mr Pherous said CTM’s teams realised that data makes a difference to the travel adviser and the client company.

“Data is the key in any business,” he said. “We use that data both internally and for clients.

“The more aware you are of data in real time, the greater ability you have to look at what-if scenarios, forwards as opposed to backwards. Clearly that can change options and opportunities – and that’s what we are seeing in our client base.

“So people who don’t have access to that are foregoing savings, generally.”

Mr Pherous said there was a pipeline of new technology products and tools being developed by CTM teams.

“We’ve got roughly a two-year build cycle and a pipeline of the things that we want to build,” Mr Pherous ssaid.

“But the key for us at the moment is making these tools accessible everywhere that CTM operates. For clients that want a regional solution, this is really relevant technology.”

Mr Pherous said CTM was  rolling these out progressively through all its global regions.

“The philosophy is that once we’ve got them rolled out, we want the same innovation structure across each region,” Mr Pherous said.

www.travelctm.com

 

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