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PRODUCT NEWS
Surviving and thriving: a GWS masterclass from Cathy Feliciano-Chon
28 May 2020 . BY Megan Whitby
Feliciano-Chon said:
Feliciano-Chon said: "Resilience is a mindset – a practice honed by failure"
Being open to failure will help businesses survive in the Coronavirus landscape, according to Cathy Feliciano-Chon, founder of Hong Kong-based brand comms agency, CatchOn– a Finn Partners Company.

Speaking in a recent GWS Masterclass, Feliciano-Chon said that in order to be truly resilient, businesses have to be brave enough to take risks they know may lead to failure. She said successful brands will learn from these and become stronger.

Making mistakes is par for the course for any business – ultimately mistakes lay the foundations for long-term success and resilience. She quoted Disney’s Bob Iger: “If you want innovation, you need to grant permission to fail.”

“Resilience is a mindset – a practice honed by failure. This is not a time for perfection – we’re all tolerating imperfections in this crisis.

“Ingenuity is a willingness to work in less than ideal conditions within constraints. It means you’re willing to experience failures and not be self-conscious. It celebrates not getting it right and a certain scrappiness.”

Feliciano-Chon’s 30-year career has involved consulting with global luxury, hospitality and retail brands and during the webinar she shared insight into lessons to be learned from resilient brands to help businesses adapt and thrive in the face of the Coronavirus crisis.

“This pandemic has laid bare our vulnerabilities,” she said, “and it has shown that being resilient is far more important than any other qualities we associate with great brands today, even more so than relevance and innovation.”

Feliciano-Chon outlined qualities that are crucial for brands to be resilient, including agility and adaptability, community and ingenuity. She said combining these with digitisation is vital.

Deeper into digital

Businesses have got to act fast in the face of adversity in order to show operational resilience, and she believes the key to this is digitisation and data analytics.

“Have urgency and purpose,” she said, “don’t dwell, instead, act.”

The crisis has accelerated the shift to digital, said Feliciano-Chon, and brands that didn’t have an omnichannel strategy prior to the pandemic have little chance of surviving unless they develop one fast.

We’re moving into an age of telemedicine and digital wellness, she said, urging companies to review how they incorporate technology into their business to help them plan, run more efficiently and succeed.

Alternative revenue streams

Feliciano-Chon championed the qualities of agility and adaptability and underlined that they help businesses thrive. The key is being fast and flexible enough to look at alternative revenue streams.

“Resilient brands are able to adapt in the midst of adversity and some of them thrive off it. This is a period of immense creativity and there are many ways to take advantage of this time.”

She believes businesses must be flexible and look at their operation, break it down, think creatively about how to repackage their offering and make it marketable for a particular sector, in order to remain relevant and successful.

Feliciano-Chon also placed a large emphasis on the importance of ingenuity and being creative while working within constraints.

“The global crisis has laid bare the practices that need to be thought, rethought or taken away completely. Now is the time for businesses to be creative and rethink their operations.

“Yes there are restrictions we’re going to have to work around, but we’ll emerge from this with different business models.”

A new mission for wellness

In a recent interview with GWI’s Beth McGroarty Feliciano-Chon said: “This is a pivotal time for the wellness movement, which is being called to a greater mission. We need to work hard to pull the polarised worlds of big medicine and big pharma and the prevention and wellness worlds much more closely together.

“We simply can’t be working in two different swim-lanes now. That means working with public health institutions for real change and actually deserving a seat at the table, as opposed to just observing healthcare’s failures.”

“This crisis has validated and exposed what wellness is really about: demanding that we pause, reflect, reset; that we be proactive about our health – and that of our family and community – in ways we never have before.

She concluded by quoting AA Milnes’ Winnie the Pooh: “Always remember you’re braver than you believe, stronger than you seem and smarter than you think.”

Top 10 takeaways

  • Develop resilience, agility, creativity, ingenuity and adaptability


  • Don’t be afraid of failure


  • Take well-calculated risks and learn from them


  • Tolerate imperfections in striving for your goals


  • Focus on community


  • Be fast and flexible - don’t dwell – act


  • Look for alternative revenue streams


  • Have urgency and purpose


  • Communicate clearly with customers


  • Be innovative while working within constraints

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Elemis’ first standalone store to open in London’s Covent Garden
British spa and skincare giant Elemis is making a grand entrance into London's retail scene, handpicking Covent Garden's Seven Dials for its inaugural standalone store.
Myndstream teases new breathwork series in collaboration with Grammy Award winner Peter Kater
Freddie Moross, founder of wellness music provider Myndstream, has announced plans to launch Spiritus – a brand new breathwork series by Grammy Award-winning musician and composer Peter Kater – onto the company’s music streaming service, The Stream.
Full Balance reveals all-natural reflexology board
Austrian-based Full Balance has created a Big Foot massage board for communal spa areas which guests stand on to "closely mimic the experience of professional reflexology treatments".
Scottish spa industry to gather at first-ever Spa Life Scotland event
Industry event organisation Spa Life is gearing up for the first-ever Spa Life Scotland Convention, due to be hosted at the Radisson Blu Hotel in Glasgow from 28-30 April.
We Work Well organises annual pre-ISPA charity hike in Scottsdale
We Work Well founders Monica Helmstetter and Lucy Hugo have called on ISPA members to join their annual SpasPushingLimits charity hike in Phoenix, Arizona, on 22 April.
MyEquilibria combines art and outdoor exercise
"We summarise what we do in two words – functional art," says Gian Luca Innocenzi, CEO and founder of MyEquilibria, which specialises in high-end outdoor exercise equipment.
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Bioline Jatò unveils revamped Primaluce Exfo&White line and facial
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Immunocologie strikes up partnership with Satteva Wellness Group
NYC-based lifestyle, spa and skin science brand Immunocologie Skincare has embarked on a strategic collaboration with Satteva Wellness Group, marking its foray into the Latin American market.
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PRODUCT NEWS
Surviving and thriving: a GWS masterclass from Cathy Feliciano-Chon
28 May 2020 . BY Megan Whitby
Feliciano-Chon said: "Resilience is a mindset – a practice honed by failure"
Being open to failure will help businesses survive in the Coronavirus landscape, according to Cathy Feliciano-Chon, founder of Hong Kong-based brand comms agency, CatchOn– a Finn Partners Company.

Speaking in a recent GWS Masterclass, Feliciano-Chon said that in order to be truly resilient, businesses have to be brave enough to take risks they know may lead to failure. She said successful brands will learn from these and become stronger.

Making mistakes is par for the course for any business – ultimately mistakes lay the foundations for long-term success and resilience. She quoted Disney’s Bob Iger: “If you want innovation, you need to grant permission to fail.”

“Resilience is a mindset – a practice honed by failure. This is not a time for perfection – we’re all tolerating imperfections in this crisis.

“Ingenuity is a willingness to work in less than ideal conditions within constraints. It means you’re willing to experience failures and not be self-conscious. It celebrates not getting it right and a certain scrappiness.”

Feliciano-Chon’s 30-year career has involved consulting with global luxury, hospitality and retail brands and during the webinar she shared insight into lessons to be learned from resilient brands to help businesses adapt and thrive in the face of the Coronavirus crisis.

“This pandemic has laid bare our vulnerabilities,” she said, “and it has shown that being resilient is far more important than any other qualities we associate with great brands today, even more so than relevance and innovation.”

Feliciano-Chon outlined qualities that are crucial for brands to be resilient, including agility and adaptability, community and ingenuity. She said combining these with digitisation is vital.

Deeper into digital

Businesses have got to act fast in the face of adversity in order to show operational resilience, and she believes the key to this is digitisation and data analytics.

“Have urgency and purpose,” she said, “don’t dwell, instead, act.”

The crisis has accelerated the shift to digital, said Feliciano-Chon, and brands that didn’t have an omnichannel strategy prior to the pandemic have little chance of surviving unless they develop one fast.

We’re moving into an age of telemedicine and digital wellness, she said, urging companies to review how they incorporate technology into their business to help them plan, run more efficiently and succeed.

Alternative revenue streams

Feliciano-Chon championed the qualities of agility and adaptability and underlined that they help businesses thrive. The key is being fast and flexible enough to look at alternative revenue streams.

“Resilient brands are able to adapt in the midst of adversity and some of them thrive off it. This is a period of immense creativity and there are many ways to take advantage of this time.”

She believes businesses must be flexible and look at their operation, break it down, think creatively about how to repackage their offering and make it marketable for a particular sector, in order to remain relevant and successful.

Feliciano-Chon also placed a large emphasis on the importance of ingenuity and being creative while working within constraints.

“The global crisis has laid bare the practices that need to be thought, rethought or taken away completely. Now is the time for businesses to be creative and rethink their operations.

“Yes there are restrictions we’re going to have to work around, but we’ll emerge from this with different business models.”

A new mission for wellness

In a recent interview with GWI’s Beth McGroarty Feliciano-Chon said: “This is a pivotal time for the wellness movement, which is being called to a greater mission. We need to work hard to pull the polarised worlds of big medicine and big pharma and the prevention and wellness worlds much more closely together.

“We simply can’t be working in two different swim-lanes now. That means working with public health institutions for real change and actually deserving a seat at the table, as opposed to just observing healthcare’s failures.”

“This crisis has validated and exposed what wellness is really about: demanding that we pause, reflect, reset; that we be proactive about our health – and that of our family and community – in ways we never have before.

She concluded by quoting AA Milnes’ Winnie the Pooh: “Always remember you’re braver than you believe, stronger than you seem and smarter than you think.”

Top 10 takeaways

  • Develop resilience, agility, creativity, ingenuity and adaptability


  • Don’t be afraid of failure


  • Take well-calculated risks and learn from them


  • Tolerate imperfections in striving for your goals


  • Focus on community


  • Be fast and flexible - don’t dwell – act


  • Look for alternative revenue streams


  • Have urgency and purpose


  • Communicate clearly with customers


  • Be innovative while working within constraints

If you would like to get each issue of Spa Business and Spa Business insider magazines sent direct to you for FREE, plus the weekly Spa Business and Spa Business insider ezines, sign up now!
PRODUCT NEWS
Elemis’ first standalone store to open in London’s Covent Garden
British spa and skincare giant Elemis is making a grand entrance into London's retail scene, handpicking Covent Garden's Seven Dials for its inaugural standalone store.
Myndstream teases new breathwork series in collaboration with Grammy Award winner Peter Kater
Freddie Moross, founder of wellness music provider Myndstream, has announced plans to launch Spiritus – a brand new breathwork series by Grammy Award-winning musician and composer Peter Kater – onto the company’s music streaming service, The Stream.
Full Balance reveals all-natural reflexology board
Austrian-based Full Balance has created a Big Foot massage board for communal spa areas which guests stand on to "closely mimic the experience of professional reflexology treatments".
Scottish spa industry to gather at first-ever Spa Life Scotland event
Industry event organisation Spa Life is gearing up for the first-ever Spa Life Scotland Convention, due to be hosted at the Radisson Blu Hotel in Glasgow from 28-30 April.
We Work Well organises annual pre-ISPA charity hike in Scottsdale
We Work Well founders Monica Helmstetter and Lucy Hugo have called on ISPA members to join their annual SpasPushingLimits charity hike in Phoenix, Arizona, on 22 April.
MyEquilibria combines art and outdoor exercise
"We summarise what we do in two words – functional art," says Gian Luca Innocenzi, CEO and founder of MyEquilibria, which specialises in high-end outdoor exercise equipment.
Sothys launches pro-ageing Sun Range
French spa brand Sothys has developed the Sun Range to protect the skin against sun damage.
Bioline Jatò unveils revamped Primaluce Exfo&White line and facial
Bioline Jatò has reformulated its Primaluce Exfo&White skincare line, 30 years after it first launched.
Gaia Skincare expands presence in UK and Europe with four new spa accounts
Spa and wellness brand, Gaia Skincare, has announced it’s collaborating with another four spa partners in the UK and Europe.
Immunocologie strikes up partnership with Satteva Wellness Group
NYC-based lifestyle, spa and skin science brand Immunocologie Skincare has embarked on a strategic collaboration with Satteva Wellness Group, marking its foray into the Latin American market.
Myndstream partners with SleepScore Labs to reveal hidden power of spa treatments in improving sleep
Global wellness music provider Myndstream has released the second episode of its new educational content series Mastermynds, in partnership with Universal Companies.
Book4Time unveils enhanced day and resort pass functionality
Book4Time has announced the launch of Day & Resort Passes on its award-winning platform to help hotels and resorts drive staycation business.
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Terres d' Afrique

Dr Stephan Helary created the company 10 years ago. He is committed to demonstrating the power of p [more...]
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CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

28-30 Apr 2024

Spa Life Scotland

Radisson Blu Hotel, Glasgow,
08-08 May 2024

Hospitality Design Conference

Hotel Melià , Milano , Italy
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024

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