Incentive Travel: When Disaster Strikes

Incentive Travel & Charity Team Building: After Disaster Strikes

Just when the global economy seemed to be on the upswing, 2011 has ushered in a fresh set of natural disasters and societal turmoil. They have the potential to derail the global economic recovery.

Fresh in our memories are the BP crisis in the Gulf, the natural disasters in Australia and Haiti, Hurricane Katrina, and the boxing day tsunamis in south east Asia. It isn’t news to anyone reading this that there has been an earthquake followed by a tsunami, aftershocks, and instability at a nuclear complex in Japan, the world’s 3rd largest economy.

It is also not news that there have been a wave of protests in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and Bahrain. This is already creating a spike in oil prices and intermittent shortages in some areas.

When disaster strikes, the knee jerk reaction is “Oh, we can’t possibly consider taking our team there for a sales incentive trip or team building retreat”. Naturally, no one would be wise to take their team into an area during a period of instability, combat, or a pending nuclear meltdown. Unfortunately, long after calm has been restored and a crisis has subsided, there is usually a lingering fear of particular destinations. It always astonishes me that so many Canadian and American companies are afraid to take their sales teams to Dubai, Abu Dhabi or Oman because they have read about a crisis in the Gaza Strip, Yemen or some other area that is far away. I am orginally from Jamaica. It also baffles me when companies are nervous about booking incentives and retreats on the north coast because there has been a disturbance 2 to 2 1/2 hours away in a area of Kingston that is smaller than many suburban plazas in North America. I don’t get it but some companies have a tendency to avoid destinations that have gone through a crisis or period of turmoil like the plague. For a number of reasons, this is not a prudent strategy.

It is no longer a cliché that we live in a global village. Around the globe, waves of turbulence are likely to increase rather than decrease. No one knows where they will hit next. If every time a destination experiences a crisis companies cross it permanently off their list as “undesireable”, you’ll end up with fewer options for travel and a shrinking circle of influence. How will the economies of countries that have gone through a crisis ever recover if companies avoid doing business with them?

How is this relevant to incentive travel and foreign team buiding retreats? We are interconnected. If one area of the world does not do well, there will be a ripple effect. It may not be obvious but, ultimately, there will be an impact on the demand for your own products and services. For example, Japan is one of the largest oil consuming countries in the world. If the Japanese economy goes into recession and Japan’s demand for oil drops sharply, this will have an impact on the economies of all oil producing nations.

In 2003, my company launched a new team building programme called Visexecutaries: Seizing Opportunities in our Shifting Corporate Landscape. It includes a real Apprentice style project and a charitable component.

The core messages are:

  • turbulence is the new normal – I can’t take credit for that, Porter said it first
  • it is important to connect the dots as what happens in one part of the world has a ripple effect and may have an impact on your business
  • tunnel vision thinking and the not invented here syndrome are to be avoided at all costs as they can blindside you to changes in your market and untapped areas of growth
  • when one area of your community is hurting, it reduces the potential of the entire community so it’s important to give those in need a leg up

We are now seeing these themes reflected in newspaper headlines daily. In spite of this, many companies still resist those messages. They are stuck in the “not invented here” paradigm, dismissing anything that does not originate in their own industry or country as irrelevant. A news items that scrolled across my television screen on the TV listings channel really hammered this home for me. I am paraphrasing:

“There will not be immediate lay-offs at Japanese automobile factories in Ontario due to the halt of production in Japan”.

Ouch! Talk about connecting the dots. A tsunami that hits Japan on the other side of the world CAN potentially lead to lay-offs closer to home and have a negative impact on your local economy. If your company avoids certain destinations and their tourism industries go into a slump, it will have an impact on their economy and potentially ricochet and hit you in your own backyard.

Instead of permanently crossing certain destinations off your list, when disaster strikes, make them a priority. Clearly, it may not be prudent to hop on a plane and take your team there tomorrow but monitor the situation. Get status updates and re-entertain the possibility 3 months, 6 months, and 9 months down the road.

In the meantime, for your next team building session or corporate event, have a fundraiser or assemble packages with clothing, blankets, diapers, thermoses, canteen bottles, bottled water, non-perishable foods, flashlights, surgical masks, band-aids, bandages, disinfectant, toiletries, medical supplies, chainshaws, tools, nails, and school supplies.

It’s not practical to travel to deliver them at the height of a severe disaster or with a potential nuclear nuclear meltdown pending. In those situations, dispatch the supplies through a respected charity or the local consulate for that country. The information with this video has a list of organizations that can quickly get aid to areas that have been struck by disaster:

If travel to the area is possible, arrange for members of your sales team to personally deliver the supplies you have collected during a sales incentive trip and do it sooner rather than later.

Companies that really have heart can use disasters to transform their incentives and foreign retreats forever. If your team has special skills and expertise, why not dispatch a group to help with the clean up? The skills of construction workers, firefighters, medical professionals, mdeical social workers, helicopter pilots, and search and rescue professionals are all needed during periods of disaster.

What about snow plough operators, architects, landscapers, chefs, waiters, dieticians, and caterers. Food and beverage companies can send a team to a foreign destination to distribute some of the non-perishable items they manufacture. The team can spend part of its time at a resort and most of its time clearing debris, assisting with agricultural projects, digging wells, planting vegetable gardens, delivering supplies, distributing food, repairing local schools, and houses.

Making a difference when disaster srikes will be a truly rewarding experience for your team. It’s definitely a paradigm shift worth making.

Oman Incentive Travel – Summer in Salalah

Incentive Travel in Oman – Salalah in Dhofar

If you want your team to experience a mountain team building adventure or a desert safari, you usually have to arrange your trip to Oman from October – April each year. Some companies in GCC countries find it easier to travel between May and September. They travel to Salalah for relief from the heat in other parts of the Arabian pennisula. Why? The Khareef. The remnants of Asia’s monsoons spray a cooling mist all over Dhofar and transform an area that is normally desert and rocky mountain into tropical oasis. Companies from around the world can take a leaf out of the book of companies in the gulf region and offer memorable and affordable summer incentives  and retreats in Salalah. Hotels and resorts in Salalah are more affordable than those in Muscat even in off-season.

Salalah – A Comfortable Oasis for Summer Incentives

Salalah, a coastal town, is much cooler than Muscat and Nizwa, the focus of our last blog about Oman. It’s a tolerable 28 – 30 degrees Celcius even during the hot summer months in Oman. Here is a glimpse of Salalah:

Located in Oman’s southern Dhofar region, in Salalah you’ll enjoy the contrast and beauty of mountains, watefalls, caves, cliffs, and the Indian ocean. Known as the Garden City in the Land of Frankincense, legend has it that ancient beauty the Queen of Sheba travelled to Salalah in search of this treasure. Here is a more in-depth tour of Salalah, taking in the city and surrounding areas:

Salalah Adventures

In Salalah, you can enjoy a variety of beach and water based activities including diving and surfing. Desert and mountain based adventures including caving also await you. If outdoor adventures are you forte, your team can go for an off-road adventure and then camp out at Jebel Samhan and other mountains nearby.

You also have the option of going dune bashing, participating in a series of team challenges in the desert and cammping out overnight at a Bedouin camp in the desert at Rub Al Khali – Empty Quarters, the world’s largest desert with spectactular 300′ dunes.

Giving Your Team a Sense of Oman’s Rich History and Culture

At Salalah Museum you can explore ancient Arabian history and culture. At Al Balid Archaeological Park, a UNESCO heritage site, you’ll view archaeological finds and learn about marine history at the Frankincense Land Museum. There are a number of anceint souqs for you to explore including Haffa Souk (the oldest and largest), Al-Husn and Al Hafah. A visit to the gold souk and the the frankincense souk are a must. An orienteering treasure hunt combined with a team shopping challenge is the perfect way to explore a souq. In Salalah you’ll also find the tomb of Biblical prophet Job (Nabi Ayoub). Be sure to build time into your itinerary to see the Taqah Fort in the nearby village with the same name.

CNN Tour of Salalah – Eco Tourist’s Dream


Let Executive Oasis International Take Your Team to Salalah, a Coastal Oasis

Even during the summer you can enjoy incentive travel and facilitated business team building in Salalah, Oman:


(c) Photo Credit: (c) Reehan

(c) Photo Credit: (c) riy

(c) Photo Credit: (c) usr.c

Corporate Incentive Travel: Giving Your Team a Sense of the Local Culture

Corporate Incentive Travel: Giving Your Team a Sense of the Local Culture


by Anne Thornley-Brown, President,

Executive Oasis International

Specializing in escorted Incentive Travel and sales incentive trips.We provide one stop shopping and will help you plan and organize your next incentive trip to any of our featured destinations.

Anne is @executiveoasis on twitter.

Stop: Even if you don’t have the budget for international travel this year, here is how you can still give your team an international experience without getting on a plane:

If you do have the budget, keep reading:

I’ve often wondered why companies fly their sales and executive teams halfway across the world just to lie on the beach and get drunk at the bar. Particularly in these challenging economic times, companies can do that at home at a fraction of the cost. A foreign incentive trip or retreats provides an opportunity to give your team a rich, unique and memorable experience. All you have to do is build a few experiences into your itinerary that provide a glimpse of the local history and culture of your incentive travel destinations.This is easier to do than you may think and it doesn’t have to take a lot of time.

Before your trip, you can use social media to provide an orientation to the destination. During your sales incentive trip, visit one of the many cultural centres, heritage villages and museums that are designed to give visitors a glimpse into the history and culture of your chosen destiation. Here are a few ideas:

Jamaica:

Before you go:

Where to go:


  • Visit my favourite place on the planet, The Enchanted Garden in Ocho Rios
  • Tour The Outameni Experience where you can travel back in time and explore the 6 cultures that have shaped modern Jamaica.
  • Visit Brimmer Hall Estate, a historical working plantation that happens to be located in my family’s hometown.
  • Go horse riding and tour the ruins at Seville, one of the first Spanish settlements in Jamaica.

Dubai:

Before you go:

Dubai Department Of Tourism And Commerce Marketing (DTCM) has several helpful social media resources that you can access at:


Where to go:

  • Spend an evening at the Dubai Heritage and Diving Village.
  • Tour the Sheikh Saeed Al Maktoum House next door.
  • Take a dinner cruise in a traditional Dhow.

Oman:

Before you go:


Where to go:

  • Visit Muscat’s Bait Al Zubair Museum, located in a traditional Omani house.
  • Tour Nizwa’s Fort and browse for treasures in Nizwa’s traditional Souq.

Malaysia:

Before you go:

Where to go:


  • Take a 2 night trip to Kuching in Malaysian Borneo. Spend an afternoon at the Sarawak Cultural Village. You’ll explore the 7 major ethinic groups that have influenced Malysia’s culture and visit traditional homesteads.
  • Take a day or overnight trip to Malacca, a virtual time capsule into Malaysia history with traditional Malay, Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch, British, and Japanese influences. There is even a full size replica of a historical Sultan’s Palace.

Singapore:

Where to go:

Japan:

Before you go:

Where to go:


  • Explore the Edo-Tokyo Museum with replicas of traditional buildings and interactive exhibits that provide insights into Tokyo’s rich culture and history.
  • Stay at a traditional Ryokan for 1 or 2 nights.
  • Be mesmerzied as you take in a traditional Kabuki performance at the Kubuki-za in Tokyo

Canada:

Before you go:

Where to go:

Even if you have to extend your sales incentive trip by half a day or a full day to make time to build a cultural excursion into your itinerary, it will be time well spent. You’ll broaden their horizons and provide your team with a truly memorable and meaningful experience of a lifetime that they would never be able to have back home.

Afternoon Tea Around the World

 Anne Thornley-Brown is the President of Executive Oasis International, a Toronto based firm that regularly organizes incentive travel and executive retreats in  Dubai, Oman, Jamaica, Malaysia, Singapore, and Canada. They provide  one stop shopping service with  a  personalized approach to incentive travel for corporate groups of 10 to 60.  Customized itineraries include travel, transfers, hotel, tours, team activities, and special events.

(c) Fairmont Express, Victoria

 

Afternoon Tea Spots

I didn’t grow up with an afternoon tea tradition and I can’t remember the first time I had afternoon tea. Perhaps it was at Bermuda’s Harmony Hall resort in Paget but I’m not sure. Clearly, I enjoyed it as, over the years, no matter where I have travelled I have looked for opportunities to enjoy tea personally and to incorporate it into my work with clients. I have many warm memories involving tea. There was the afternoon I spent exploring the grounds at the Palace of the Golden Horses in Kuala Lumpur. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the tea they had advertised was more like a meal. 

 

 

 

I had been to Singapore many times but it wasn’t until about 3 years ago that I finally had a chance to have tea at the Raffles hotel. After a meeting with a prospective client in the area,  I just walked over to Raffles. Even though they were fully booked, they managed to find a table for me. It was a most enjoyable  high tea and I finally had a chance to try the famous Singapore Sling.

One particularly memorable experience was the time I went to the Cameron Highlands. I was on my own and since there weren’t enough people for a bus, the tour company arranged a car for me and matched me up with 2 gentlemen from Kuwait.   We went higher and higher up in the hils.  Eventually, we arrived at a tea plantations.  We had a full tour of the plantation and saw exactly how tea was grown and processed. Then, we had some scones with cream and tea fresh from the plantation as we relaxed and took in the view.  Later, we went strawberry picking.  As I was returning to Toronto the next day, I saved my strawberries for a special treat. At the KLIA,  one of the restaurants let me have some whipped cream and they didn’t even charge me for it. After the plane took off, I enjoyed the fresh strawberries that I had picked the day before and then I had a cup of tea.  I remember thinking “Now this is the life”. I encourage all of my clients travelling to Malaysia to make a visit to a tea plantation in the Cameron Highlands a part of their itinerary.

Afternoon Tea for your Incentive Trip

So, if you want to include afternoon tea as a part of your corporate incentive trip, where can you go? At many destinations, your group has the option of:

  • arranging a private tea in your meeting room or a hotel function room….many hotels will upgrade your meeting pacakge and do this for you
  • going to a local tearoom or hotel that serves  tea – always book WELL ahead of schedule as  tea is popular and usually sells out early.

 A Crash Course in Tea:

There are many ways to enjoy tea around the  world:

Cream Tea: This usually consists of choice of tea and scones with Devonshire Cream and preserves.

Traditional Afternoon Tea: Includes choice of tea, sandwiches, scones with Devonshire Cream and preserves, and pastries.

(c) Fairmont Express, Victoria

High Tea: Includes choice of tea, sandwiches, cheeses, meats, scones with Devonoshire Cream and preserves, and pastries.

Specialty Teas: Venues and hotels around the world have created their own specialty tea packages that sometimes include strawberries, champagne and a host of other local treats. In Asia, you’ll often find that the tea is a full buffet that you can easily use as a substitute for a meal.

Japanese Tea Ceremony: In Japan, the tea ceremony is steeped in tradition and a very relaxing interlude. Here is where you can get more information:

About the Japanese Tea Ceremony

 Japan

  • Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Chinzan-so (Traditional Afternoon Tea)

Japanese Tea Ceremony

Tokyo

  • Hotel Okura (Choshoan Tea Room)
  • Imperial Hotel

Kyoto

  • Wak Japan
  • Westin Miyako Hotel (Shikushi Tearoom)

Singapore

  • Raffles Hotel
  • Four Seasons Hotel (The Bar)

Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur

  • Regent Hotel
  • Palace of the Golden Horses
  • Carcosa Seri Negara

Cameron Highlands

Enjoy scones and fresh tea on a tea plantation. There are many but I had the pleasure of enjoying tea at one of the:

Sultanate of Oman

Salalah

  • Haffa House Hotel

Muscat

  • The Chedi

 

United Arab Emirates

Dubai

  • Burj Al Arab
  • Madinat Jumeriah (Al Fayrooz lounge)
  • Raffles Dubai (Raffles Salon)
  • Desert Palms Resort – Enjoy your tea and snack in one of their polo pavilions while you watch polo
  • Hyatt Regency (The Kitchen) – For a change of pace from tea, enjoy some of the most delicious Arabian specialty coffees you’ll find anywhere

Abu Dhabi

  • Emirates Palace

Jamaica

  • Royal Plantation Hotel (Ocho Rios)
  • Ritz-Carlton (Montego Bay)
  • Terra Nova (Kingston)
  • Firefly (Port Maria)
  • Strawberry Hill  – On weekends (Blue Mountains)
  • Mocking Bird Hill Hotel (Port Antonio)

Afternoon Tea in Jamaica

Canada

Toronto

  • Old Curiosity Tea Shoppe (in Markham)
  • Windsor Arms Hotel
  • The Old Mill (Toronto)
  • King Edward Hotel (Downtown Toronto)
  • Four Seasons Hotel (Downtown Toronto)
  • Fairmont Royal York (Downtown Toronto)
  • The Red Tea Box‎(Queen St. West)
  • Tea Emporium (Eglinton Ave. West)
  • Millcroft Inn (Alton)
  • Princely Pear Tea Room (Alliston)
  • Prince of Wales Hotel (Niagara on the Lake)

Montreal

  • Ritz Carlton Hotel
  • Fairmont Queen Elizabeth Hotel

Victoria

(c) Fairmont Express, Victoria