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Sunday, 23 August 2020
“India has lost a huge opportunity to convert outbound travellers into domestic”
Monday, 10 August 2020
50% of hotels in India in danger of getting sick over the next six months, says Patanjali Keswani, CMD, Lemon Tree Hotels
Fifty percent of hotels in India, according to a top hotelier, are in danger of getting sick over the next six months. And this is mainly due to leverage and liquidity related issues.
Expressing concerns on the overall health of the Indian hospitality industry, Patanjali Keswani, chairman and managing director, Lemon Tree Hotels Ltd, said, ”Short term demand destruction over the next six to 12 months, without an extension of the moratorium, will certainly lead to permanent supply destruction. What this basically means for the industry is that there will be a 10% to 25% reduction in (hotel rooms) supply in the branded hotels space in India by next year. While some of them may come back but new supply will be impacted severely. As far as I know, very few people, if at all, are building (new) hotels or are continuing to build hotels. Right now there are 165,000 hotel rooms and my reckoning is that two years from now there will be anywhere between 130,000 to 140,000 rooms operating.”
And if that happens, added Keswani during an earnings call earlier today, I reckon that hotels that remain operational will not witness a big drop in room rates. “So, maybe this October the pricing (rates offered to corporate clients) will remain the same or may decline marginally compared to last year. However, next October the room rates will certainly bounce back significantly,” he said in response to an analyst’s query on the outlook for corporate rates that get renegotiated annually during this period.
Keswani said that any hotel company that has operating hotels two and a half years from now, will be in a market scenario where supply would have reduced significantly. “While I cannot speculate on the increase or decline of demand for hotel rooms, I know for sure that there will be an enormous reduction in supply of branded hotel rooms in India. Also, whichever corporate that I have spoken to, all their employees are of the view that that cannot go to work. My expectation is that from October next year the market will witness a very large amount of domestic travel. Fear has to go, cure has to come, vaccine(s) may or may not come but domestic travel will kick-start and there is no doubt in my mind,” he said.
The current market scenario has got every organisation in the cash conservation mode. However, there are also talks about an opportunity for companies sitting on cash to acquire hotels that are under financial stress.
”We already own 5,200 hotel rooms and are building another 700 plus rooms so we will be closer to 6,000 guestrooms soon. I don’t think we have an appetite to acquire assets. Having said that, a fund is already in talks with us to manage their hotel assets portfolio. The hotels will be acquired by the fund and we will be managing their properties. We are looking at that opportunity and are hoping that in the next two months we will be able to do a term sheet with them to manage their hotel assets. This (deal) will significantly expand our managed hotels portfolio under the Fleur Hotels joint venture,” said Keswani adding that the focus going forward will be on growing through management contracts, lightening the balance and moving owned assets into Fleur Hotels and its possible listing in the next few years.
Lemon Tree Hotel is also envisaging delays in construction activities as a result of which opening of hotels that are currently under development will take longer. The hotel chain has been developing a five-star deluxe hotel under the Aurika brand, located in the vicinity of the Mumbai International Airport. The largest hotel in Lemon Tree’s portfolio in terms of the number of guestrooms, this property was to open in the third quarter end of calendar year 2022.
“However, for the last five months hardly any work has been done at the site. At Rs 2 crore a month, the expenditure today is not very significant as we are building the shell of the hotel in the vicinity of the Mumbai International Airport. We have kept the project work on with an expectation that it will be delayed by six to nine months. We will take a call in December this year based on what we see because our existing hotel Lemon Tree Premiere in Andheri, Mumbai is already doing 60% occupancy at an average room rate (ARR) of close to Rs 4,000. So, if we feel Mumbai is recovering, and it normally recovers first, we will accelerate the project development.
On the business front, the country’s largest mid-market hospitality chain has operationalised close to 90% of its hotels in the portfolio. It is currently witnessing occupancy levels of about 38%. The hotel chain was operating 3,700 hotel rooms in the first quarter and the number of guestrooms increased to 4,600 in the second quarter.
”While rooms inventory has gone up by 900, we are hoping occupancy to pick up over the next two to three months,” said Keswani adding that business form quarantine guests witnessed a slight de-growth in July. “But that was compensated by pick up in online bookings,” he said adding that market sentiments are undergoing a change and business from quarantine guests is only a filler now.
Online booking stood at 70 per day in April 2020, however it has picked up gradually and currently stands at 300 bookings on a daily basis across Lemon Tree’s hotels network, said Kapil Sharma, chief financial officer, Lemon Tree Hotels Ltd.
The room rates from online bookings, Keswani said, is between Rs 2,800 to Rs 4,000. “A large part of the bookings is in the Rs 2,800 bracket as these are people looking for a break and are staying at the hotel with wife and kid(s) over the weekend. It’s the micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) segment that’s picking up 100-150 rooms a day and paying north of Rs 3,500,” said Keswani.
Business from online bookings stood at between 35% to 37% for the hotel chain during pre-COVID times. Another 35% was coming from large corporates, business from MSMEs was at 30% and 10% was from other categories like meetings, conferences and incentives.
“Contrary to what I have been reading about complete distress in the market, I find that while the large corporates have not started travel, their business continuity teams are travelling and staying in our hotels in Pune, Bengaluru and Hyderabad. However, the MSME sector has started travelling and to me that is an early indication of something to look forward to,” said Keswani.
Lemon Tree Hotels is also planning a rights issue though there is no timeline finalised for the same as yet. While a board approval for the rights issue is already in place and the company management planning to hold a board meeting next month and take a final call on this. “It should roughly take two to three months,” said Sharma.
(The writer is a Mumbai-based independent business journalist and has extensively covered diversified consumer businesses over the last two decades. He can be reached at hello@ashishktiwari.com)
Tuesday, 28 July 2020
Indian hospitality industry on the brink of collapse, says Hotel Association of India (HAI)
The Indian hospitality industry is on the brink of collapse and is in dire need of support from the government and the Reserved Bank of India (RBI) to be able to get back on a revival path. According to the Hotel Association of India (HAI), four key factors are responsible for the deteriorating health of the hotel sector and the situation is only getting more challenging with every passing day.
The apex industry body pointed that being a discretionary spend, there is negligible demand for hotel rooms and services. Absence of air travel, corporate restrictions, cancellation of holidays, state lock-downs and imposition of quarantine on travellers have only added to the turmoil. Furthermore, hotels are bearing the brunt of fixed costs to the tune of almost 70%, which largely comprises payroll expenses and government levies.
Being capital intensive with a long gestation period banking on high cost, short-term debt funding has become a major peril as well. Topping it all is the negative outlook on the industry making it unattractive for lenders thereby leading to a liquidity crunch and increased rates of interest to cover for the perceived risk.
In such a scenario, the Indian hotel sector will collapse if not supported by the Government and RBI, said HAI in a statement earlier today.
The COVID -19 pandemic, HAI said, has led to demand destruction in excess of 90% for the tourism and hospitality sector which employs nearly 4.5 crore people; provides livelihood to around 16 crore people and contributes 9% to India’s gross domestic product (GDP).
Citing a recent McKinsey study, the apex body said that airlines and hotels were the worst impacted sectors in India with around 75% output decline in the first quarter of fiscal 2020-21 over fourth quarter of fiscal 2019-20. Also, the hotel sector features in the list of strained sectors on debt service coverage ratio (DSCR). The overall loss of revenues for the Indian hotels sector in the year 2020 is pegged at Rs 90,000 crore.
While the RBI has announced an immediate term to avert the crisis by allowing relief on Loan moratorium on interest and principal repayment for three months (later extended to six months but that will only help the industry to survive in the short term which may not suffice for revival and subsequent thrival of Indian hospitality that has attained great heights globally for its service standards.
Continuing with its efforts to highlight the hotel industry's plight, the apex industry body, has been recommending more relief measures for the survival, revival and thrival of the sector in the hope of a much needed support from the government at this juncture.
"The hotel industry is now solely focused on survival and has been requesting the RBI to extend more proactive support. The current debt levels in the organised part of the industry (which is less than 10% of the total) stands at Rs 45,000 crore. Unfortunately, an immediate term solution will only defer the crisis as what is needed is a longer-term solution spanning the next 24-36 months which solves for both stakeholders: the borrower (unable to pay the interest and principal for the foreseeable future) and the lender (loans becoming NPAs)," HAI said in a statement.
In this regard, HAI is recommending relief - for those companies with good credit history i.e. Standard Assets as on March 31, 2020. To this effect, the apex body has proposed an extended tenure and a staggered approach to the applicable rate of interest in what it anticipates will be the three stages for a return to normalcy.
-- Survival Phase (next nine months): The moratorium on interest and repayment of principal is extended for the entire FY21 i.e. till March 31, 2021, the interest due is added back to the total principal outstanding and the loan term extended by 12 months. This will solve the current cash crunch as there is expected to be almost no demand for FY21.
-- Revival Phase (following 18-24 months): Interest Rate @ Repo Rate + 200 bps: the lending institution can fund this by borrowing from RBI without being out of pocket.
-- Thrival Phase: At MCLR as the market improves and performance of the industry reaches 50-70% of Pre-COVID levels (expected 30+ months).
(The writer is a Mumbai-based independent business journalist and has extensively covered diversified consumer businesses over the last two decades. He can be reached at hello@ashishktiwari.com)
Tuesday, 21 July 2020
Brookfield-owned The Leela Group is front-runner to manage Sukhani Group’s erstwhile JW Marriott Jaipur Resort & Spa
A handful of international and Indian hospitality chains are said to be vying for a management contract of the erstwhile JW Marriott Jaipur Resort and Spa. While names of international brands are still under the wraps, speculation is rife that the two luxury hotel operators viz. The Leela Palaces, Hotels & Resorts and The Indian Hotels Co Ltd (IHCL) are among the homegrown brands pursuing the property.
In fact, industry sources are certain that The Leela Group, now owned by Canada-based Brookfield Asset Management Inc, may have already succeeded in bagging the management contract from spa resort asset owner viz. Tulsi Palace Resort Pvt Ltd, a part of Sukhani Group of Hotels.
The possibility of The Leela Group branding and managing the spa resort in Jaipur is high considering it doesn’t have a flag in that market yet. Its only presence is a little over 400 kilometers away in the form of The Leela Palace Udaipur. Located on the banks of the majestic Lake Pichola, this 80 rooms five-star palatial hotel offers stunning views of the lake, City Palace and the Aravalli mountains.
UPDATE on September 28, 2020.
In a statement issued on September 28, 2020, The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts said that the hotel chain is expanding its portfolio and has signed an agreement with Tulsi Palace Resorts Group, owners of the erstwhile JW Marriott Jaipur Resort & Spa, to manage the 200-rooms property in Rajasthan’s capital city. The resort spa which is currently not operational is set to undergo enhancements over the coming months and will be branded upon completion of the renovation by early 2021.Establishing a presence in the Pink City would definitely rank very high for The Leela Group management and that probably explains why the hotel chain is understood to be pursuing it very aggressively. Queries emailed to Anuraag Bhatnagar, chief operating officer, The Leela Group remained unanswered.
As for IHCL, the Tata Group’s hospitality business vertical already has four operational hotels viz. Jai Mahal Palace, Rambagh Palace, The Gateway Hotel Ramgarh Lodge and Devi Ratn - IHCL Selections in the Jaipur hospitality market.
Last year in May, IHCL had signed new management contract (its seventh hotel in Jaipur) for a Vivanta hotel in Jawahar Circle, Jaipur. This 200-guestrooms greenfield hotel asset is being developed by Kalpsagar Pvt Ltd and slated to open sometime in 2023. The Indian hospitality chain added another management contract in February 2020 with Kanha Hotels & Spa Pvt Ltd's brownfield development featuring 250-rooms. The Taj branded hotel is also expected to open sometime in 2023.
IHCL has pursued a multi-property strategy across various markets in the country, and the hotel chain claims to have nine properties (operational and under development) across its brands in the Jaipur hospitality market. It thus remains to be seen if the Taj Group management would want to make further additions in its approach to replicate this strategy in the capital city of Rajasthan.
An IHCL spokesperson said in an email response, “We do not respond to market speculation, we will not be participating in this story.”
The luxurious JW Marriott Jaipur Resort & Spa featuring 200 guest rooms, owned by the Sukhani Group of Hotels, was launched amidst massive fanfare back in March 2018. Earlier this month, the partnership between Sukhani Group's Tulsi Palace Resort and the Indian subsidiary of Marriott International Inc was called-off and Marriott vacated the spa resort effective July 7, 2020.
This long-term relationship between the American hospitality giant and the Jaipur-based hotel asset owning entity was to last for 30 years. However, the short lived alliance ended within a little over two years of being together.
Both Marriott International and Sukhani Group are yet to issue an official communication about their breakup. Marriott International has however removed JW Marriott Jaipur Resort & Spa from its list of properties on www.marriott.com. In fact, this spa resort was showing up on Marriott’s network till a week or 10 days ago. And now only four hotels viz. ITC Rajputana, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Jaipur; Four Points by Sheraton Jaipur, City Square; Jaipur Marriott Hotel and Le Méridien Jaipur Resort & Spa feature in the property search results. This is pretty much an indication that the Jaipur resort and spa is out of Marriott's hotels network.
Considering negotiations for the new management contract are at a very advanced stage, the asset owners (Sukhani Group of Hotels) along with the new hotel management company are likely to announce the relaunch under a new brand in the coming weeks.
What really went wrong with this hotel brand and asset owner partnership and who was at fault couldn’t be ascertained. In fact, an FIR filed by the asset owners against Marriott India and its hotel employees has been quashed already by the Jaipur Bench of the Rajasthan High Court.
As per an ANI report, Vikram Sukhani (on behalf of the asset owner of the luxury five-star property JW Marriott Jaipur Resort & Spa) had leveled various accusations against the hotel management company (Marriott India) and its employees.
The plea, according to the ANI report, stated that the criminal complaint initiated by Vikram Sukhani falsely and mischievously insinuated that certain employees of the hotel and Marriott India had allegedly conspired and cheated the complainant by misappropriating and siphoning-off monies belonging to the hotel. It was falsely alleged that the said employees conspired with Marriott India to unjustly award bonuses to themselves while at the same time denying statutory bonus payable to other employees of the hotel.
Emails seeking clarity on this issue did not elicit a response from Marriott International’s India office as well as the Sukhani Group of Hotels.
Hotel management contracts typically comprise clauses that are aimed at safeguarding the interest of the hospitality brand and the asset owners alike. Among various terms is one about a lock-in period that penalises the brand or the asset owner for calling-off the association within a specific time frame of property becoming operational.
The compensation to be paid to either party for breach of this specific clause is arrived at after taking into consideration the revenues clocked in by the hotel, the share (percentage) that goes to the hotel brand operator and the asset owning entity and, the number of years remaining in the contract period.
In fact, the penalty amount could go into crores of rupees if the association between the hotel brand and asset owner gets called-off within the first few years.
The Indian hospitality market has seen quite a few short term associations in the past, the prominent ones being Swissotel Goa and Convention Hotels India Pvt Ltd that merely lasted six months. The other high profile break-up was between Shangri-la Hotels & Resorts and Mumbai's Pallazzio Hotels & Leisure, a part of mixed-used developer The Phoenix Mills Ltd, that was called-off in nine months.
(The writer is a Mumbai-based independent business journalist and has extensively covered diversified consumer businesses over the last two decades. He can be reached at hello@ashishktiwari.com)
Thursday, 9 July 2020
Accor's loss could be IHCL's gain: Erstwhile Swissôtel Kolkata likely to become a Taj hotel
This is an EXCLUSIVE story. Do not reproduce or use in any manner whatsoever without the writer's permission.
IHCL already has a management contract in place for Ambuja-Neotia Group's luxury resort "Chia Kutir" in Makaibari Tea Estate in Kurseong, Darjeeling. There are strong rumours about a management contract in the works for another luxury resort "Guras Kutir" spread over eight acres at Pangthang in east Sikkim
The Indian Hotels Company Ltd (IHCL) and Ambuja-Neotia Group (ANG) are said to be in advanced stages of discussion for a management contract of the erstwhile Swissôtel Kolkata property. Located atop the City Centre Mall in Kolkata’s New Town area, this five-star business hotel was recently vacated by French hospitality major Accor after the completion of its 10-year management contract tenure.
According to multiple industry sources, if talks between IHCL and ANG materialise, the Tata Group’s listed hospitality company will operate this hotel under its Taj brand.
The reason IHCL is likely to bag the management contract, industry sources said, is that it already has an existing association with ANG for a luxury resort “Chia Kutir” at Makaibari Tea Estate in Kurseong, Darjeeling. In fact, ANG had planned another luxury resort spread over eight acres at Pangthang in east Sikkim. Christened Guras Kutir, luxury resort and spa was to be built in three phases comprising boutique cottages, villas and a premium five-star hotel with a casino. There are strong rumours that IHCL and ANG have already or are in the process of finalising a management contract for this property as well.
When contacted, an IHCL spokesperson did not respond to a query about their discussions for a multi-property management contract including the erstwhile Swissôtel Kolkata. Over a dozen-odd queries emailed earlier to Puneet Chhatwal, managing director and chief executive officer, IHCL, remained unanswered. The hotel company spokesperson chose to comment on just one query about ‘whether IHCL has bagged the management contract for the erstwhile Swissôtel Kolkata property’ saying, “This is incorrect.”
“The discussions for a management contract between the two parties might still be work-in-progress hence, the denial from IHCL,” said one of the industry sources requesting not to be quoted.
Executives from the Ambuja-Neotia Group could not be reached for a comment. Apparently, recent media reports quoted Harshavardhan Neotia, chairman of Ambuja-Neotia Group, saying that they were exploring possibilities including renewing the management contract with Accor or onboarding a new hotel management company for the erstwhile Swissôtel Kolkata property.
Multiple industry sources, familiar with the development, however, said that the Indian Hotels Company and Ambuja-Neotia Group have been in discussions for a multi-property hotel management contract. “The (former Swissôtel Kolkata) property is becoming a Taj hotel,” said another industry source. Validating it further, another top hotel industry executive said, “This is in addition to a few other (management contracts with IHCL for) Ambuja-Neotia Group’s (existing / under development) hotel projects.”
“Post completion of the 10-year contract with Accor, the (Swissôtel Kolkata) property will open as a Taj branded hotel,” said a top executive from a leading consultancy who is familiar with this development.
Sources added that the Kolkata hotel is non-operational owing to the lockdown situation and is currently undergoing renovation/ refurbishment. “This is likely being done to conform with the Taj brand standards,” said one of the sources.
It is understood that since the management contract tenure with Accor was nearing completion, the Ambuja-Neotia Group had sought a brand other than Swissôtel for the Kolkata property. “I believe the asset owners wanted a Sofitel flag but Accor wasn’t open to this idea. This difference of opinion eventually led to the non-renewal of the management contract with Accor,” said one of the sources.
Debuting in the Indian hospitality market back in July 2010, the Swissôtel brand hasn’t been very successful in the country. In fact, the second Swissôtel property, owned by Convention Hotels India Pvt Ltd, in Goa turned out to be the shortest owner-operator alliance. Swissôtel Hotels & Resorts, a part of FRHI Hotels & Resorts with brands like Fairmont, Raffles and Swissôtel, had pulled out of this five-star deluxe resort at Calangute within six months of launching the property in March 2013. In December 2015, this 135-room resort debuted as the Hard Rock Hotel Goa.
Later in July 2016, Accor acquired FRHI Hotels & Resorts. However, this development didn’t bring any drastic change for the Swissôtel brand in the Indian hospitality market. Another management contract for a 300-rooms five-star boutique property Swissôtel Grand Mumbai was signed with Ashok Mittal’s Litolier Group in April 2012. However, the hotel hasn’t seen the light of the day as yet.
Non-renewal of the 10-year management contract between Accor and the Ambuja-Neotia Group has resulted in the Swissôtel brand being wiped out from the Indian hospitality market. Also, with no newer signings anywhere in sight, it is going to be a tough road ahead for the Swissôtel brand to make inroads in the country all over again.
(The writer is a Mumbai-based independent business journalist and has extensively covered diversified consumer businesses over the last two decades. He can be reached at hello@ashishktiwari.com)
Saturday, 4 July 2020
COVID-19 impact: Accor pulls the plug on Swissôtel Kolkata
This is an EXCLUSIVE story. Do not reproduce or use in any manner whatsoever without the writer's permission.
No clarity on the operational status of 300-rooms five-star boutique hotel Swissôtel Grand Mumbai in association with the Litolier Group
Accor, the French multinational hospitality company, has discontinued its association with hotel asset owner Ambuja-Neotia Group for Swissôtel Kolkata effective July 1, 2020. The management contract tenure for this five-star business hotel, according to Accor India, had ended and hence the decision to move on.
Responding to queries, Accor spokesperson confirmed the development saying, “Effective July 1, 2020, following the conclusion of our management contract with Ambuja-Neotia, Swissôtel Kolkata will no longer be a part of the Accor network in India. We are thankful for our decade-long partnership and to the hotel team for their support.” There is no clarity about whether hotel employees are being reassigned to some other property (as and when the market opens up) or laid off post this development.
Swissôtel as a hotel brand has not had a great run in the Indian hospitality market. For instance, the Swissôtel Goa property (owned by Bangalore-based Convention Hotels India Pvt Ltd) launched amidst great fanfare in March 2013 was, in most likelihood, the shortest owner-operator alliance the Indian hospitality market has seen thus far. Swissôtel Hotels & Resorts had pulled out of this five-star deluxe resort at Calangute in Goa within six months of launching the property. This 135-room resort was relaunched as Hard Rock Hotel Goa in December 2015 and it continues to be operated under the same banner.
Coming back to the topic of management contracts, it appears hotel asset owner Ambuja Neotia Group is the first casualty of the COVID-19 pandemic situation that’s creating havoc in the Indian hospitality industry. Accor did not respond to queries seeking clarity on whether the ongoing COVID-19 situation was instrumental in not renewing the Swissôtel Kolkata management contract. The spokesperson also did not respond to queries on the status of other management contracts for its other brands in India that are likely to come up for renewal and whether Accor will let them expire as well.
This development has also brought to light the fact that COVID-19 is not only impacting business for industry players but also souring relationships between the hotel brands and asset owners. The situation raises concerns on the future of hotel management contracts that are up for renewal over the next six to 12 months.
In fact, taking into account the fate of Swissôtel Kolkata, the current market scenario poses a major risk to hotel asset owners as the business impact due to COVID-19 pandemic may result in a lot of the management contracts not getting renewed at all. While some may say there is a brighter side to it because some other hospitality brand/ chain will pick up the property and sign a new management contract. That’s a possibility for sure, but given the prevalent and near future market conditions, it looks unlikely that a new brand would take up the stress when there is hardly any business in the market.
Industry experts are of the view that there is significant churn in the market and contractual relationships are being re-looked and re-discussed across the hospitality industry. “Generally speaking, every association between hotel brand(s) and asset owner(s) be it management contracts, franchise agreements or lease arrangements is being reconsidered or getting restructured. Seeking safer avenues hotel asset owners are demanding income/ revenue guarantees, capping of operational costs and downside protection from the hotel brand operator,” said Abhijeet Umathe, chief executive officer, Eco Hotels India Pvt Ltd.
Players in the Indian hospitality market have been bleeding financially ever since the lockdown began in March 2020. Almost negligible business and zero visibility on revenues in the near or even distant future for that matter is forcing hospitality chains and hotel asset owners to reassess their business continuity plans. While branded hospitality chains managing the hotel asset(s) have to option to move on, that’s definitely not the case with the asset owner(s) who are stuck with the property and possibly no takers for their hotels in the market.
(The writer is a Mumbai-based independent business journalist and has extensively covered diversified consumer businesses over the last two decades. He can be reached at hello@ashishktiwari.com)
Thursday, 25 June 2020
IHCL to home deliver dishes via Qmin mobile app starting July 25
Qmin home delivery service will cover top 10 markets including Delhi, Chennai, Bengaluru etc. over a period of five weeks
Come July 25 and South Asia’s largest hospitality firm IHCL, a Tata Group company, will introduce the Qmin, a mobile application for home delivery of dishes from some of its iconic restaurants. That's not all. This will be followed by the launch of the gourmet Qmin Shop in August and a loyalty platform in September.
A repertoire of culinary experiences, Qmin will commence home delivery of dishes from the hotel chain's eight iconic restaurants in Mumbai, in the first phase. Among the list of restaurants are Golden Dragon and Souk from Taj Mahal Palace; Thai Pavilion and Trattoria from President; and Ming Yang from Taj Lands’ End to name a few. To start with the Qmin service will cover top 10 markets in India including Delhi, Chennai, Bengaluru etc. over a period of five weeks.
According to Puneet Chhatwal, MD and CEO, IHCL, this addition will augment the group’s food and beverage (F&B) offerings leveraging a digital platform to address a growing consumer demand for online gourmet food delivery services. “Qmin will scale up in the months ahead to include the gourmet Qmin Shop with delicatessen-based food choices. Taj has been home to our guests for more than a century. With the launch of Qmin, we bring Taj to their homes,” he said.
Qmin will bring curated dishes made using the highest quality ingredients and a variety of cuisines, delivered in the comfort and convenience of the home. Available on both android and IOS mobile devices, Qmin will offer its guests a differentiated delivery experience with an enhanced focus on maintaining stringent protocols of safety and hygiene.
This will include contact-less delivery and the mandatory use of protective gear for delivery executives in extremely sanitised vehicles. The packaging will be eco-friendly utilising bio-degradable materials and with customised insulation boxes to preserve the food whilst being delivered. A dedicated toll-free number 1800 266 7646 will also be made available for guests to place orders.
Qmin will expand its scope and bring Taj@Home to other cities in the near future. The gourmet Qmin Shop presenting epicurean specialities and authentic artisanal brands will open in August. Qmin will be integrated with IHCL's loyalty program in September, where guests can earn and burn points using Qmin services.
(The writer is a Mumbai-based independent business journalist and has extensively covered diversified consumer businesses over the last two decades. He can be reached at hello@ashishktiwari.com)
Thursday, 11 June 2020
Indian Hotels to debut own home delivery business under a new brand
This is an EXCLUSIVE story. Do not reproduce or use in any manner whatsoever without the writer's permission.
Tata Group's hospitality company will launch state-of-the-art mobile application in a week
(The writer is a Mumbai-based independent business journalist and has extensively covered diversified consumer businesses over the last two decades. He can be reached at hello@ashishktiwari.com)