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2026 Programme
09:40 – 10:25 Market Insights

Beyond the Horizon

A sharp, data-driven deep dive into the financial and economic currents shaping the UK hotel industry. The panel will unpack raw macroeconomic data, tying CPI changes and debt finance realities directly to RevPAR, ADR, and disposable guest spend.

Jeavon Lolay
Jeavon LolayLloyds Banking
Dave North
Dave NorthLloyds Banking
10:25 – 11:10 Operations

Frontline Fortitude

Hotel operators are caught in a pincer movement: skyrocketing supply chain and labour costs on one side, guests demanding flawless value on the other. This panel digs into asset management, smart cost-control, and building operational agility across diverse portfolios.

Julie White
Julie WhiteAccor
David Anderson
David AndersonAimbridge EMEA
David Hart
David HartRBH Hospitality
11:30 – 12:15 Leadership

The Modern Anchor

Managing a modern hospitality workforce demands a shift from old-school hierarchy to empathetic, visionary leadership. These industry standard-bearers explore how to inspire loyalty across multi-generational teams, foster open communication, and maintain personal mental resilience.

Christian Masters
Christian Mastersart'otel Hoxton
Caroline Gregory
Caroline GregoryThe Lovat Hotel
Simon Numphud
Simon NumphudAA Media Services
12:15 – 13:00 Events Market

The New Roar of MICE

The MICE sector looks radically different than it did a few years ago. From hyper-personalised retreats to tech-heavy hybrid conventions, this session uncovers what today's corporate planners actually want from a venue — and how to maximise yield per square foot.

Shonali Devereaux
Shonali DevereauxMIA
Varun Shetty
Varun ShettyThe Belfry Resort
14:00 – 14:45 Development

Blueprint for Growth

Despite tight credit markets, the appetite for strategic hotel development remains fierce. Brands and asset managers discuss the shift toward conversions, brand repositioning, and adaptive reuse over ground-up builds.

Tim Davis
Tim DavisPACE Dimensions
Gavin Taylor
Gavin TaylorClermont Hotels
Paul Blackmore
Paul BlackmoreHilton
David JM Orr
David JM OrrResident Hotels
14:45 – 15:30 Technology

Beyond the Buzzwords

AI is already driving revenue and plugging labour gaps. This panel cuts through the jargon to showcase how automated guest messaging, contactless check-ins, and predictive analytics can save thousands of labour hours.

DB
David BeersChoice Hotels
RBH
AI SpecialistRBH Management
CT
Canary PanelistCanary Tech
15:55 – 16:40 People & Culture

People First

Recruitment is tough, but retention is where the real battle is won or lost. Industry leaders share actionable advice on mental health initiatives, flexible working models, and defined career progression pathways.

Mark Lewis
Mark LewisHospitality Action
Suzanne Speak
Suzanne SpeakRadisson Group
16:40 – 17:05 Crisis Management

When the Custard Hits the Fan

In a 24/7 digital world, a single bad incident can escalate into a viral PR nightmare within minutes. A compressed, highly practical session delivering an actionable blueprint for emergency communication and brand protection.

CC
PR Leadership TeamCustard Comm.
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Home > Editor's Blog > Business Bites > Asos bounces back from tricky period
Asos bounces back from tricky period

Asos bounces back from tricky period

In this episode we speak to Nico Tréguer, co-founder of Roberts and Treguer and The Culpeper Family. Nico spoke about founding the group alongside his longtime friend Gareth, having had a vision for bringing more nature spaces to cities, the planned extension of The Buxton in Spitalfields, and how the site’s storytelling engages guests and the local community, how the Culpeper Family’s core sustainability ethos helped it secure its B-Corp status and why hospitality has a responsibility to educate and innovate when it comes to sustainability.

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Back in July last year Retail Sector reported that Asos was having problems. It had issued a profit warning, suggesting profits were likely to be about one-third of what was originally anticipated. It was an interesting moment in the retail world, because the narrative for the whole of the last decade was that bricks-and-mortar outfits were under assault from all sides, but the online challengers were living it up.

To see one of the most successful online-only brands taking a hit didn’t change the narrative, but it did provide reassurance to traditional retailers that perhaps it wasn’t just them. This impression was augmented by reports that October online retail growth had slowed to its lowest rate on record.

But Asos seems to have turned things around, reporting today that Black Friday was the main driver of sales growth in its final four months of accounts. Sales grew 20% to £1.1 billion for the period, significantly faster than the 13% growth it recorded in the same period the previous four months. It’s a remarkable return to form, given there were actually two other profit warnings last year, driven by what the firm said was its “underestimation” of the extent to which rivals were discounting during the Christmas period of 2018.

The chief exec Nick Beighton said the good results could be chalked up to a wider range of products, higher availability of stock, superior presentation of offers and an increased presence on social media channels – seen by most new-generation retail businesses as one of the key routes to market.

He said: “The actions we took to rebuild customer momentum during the peak trading period delivered a better than expected sales performance largely driven by Black Friday weekend.”

The turnaround has come at a cost though: Asos has invested at scale in its logistics and digital infrastructure, but it seems to be paying off nicely.

The Jeff Bezos intimate WhatsApp story gets weirder and weirder

OK, so this story is way too long and convoluted for me to try to reproduce in a morning blog here. But it is worth reading, so I would recommend reading The Guardian’s coverage of it – it is they who broke the most recent iteration of the story.

In short, it involves the world’s richest man, the Washington Post, an angry president, sexting, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and a murdered journalist. A more fantastical precis for a screenplay I don’t think it would be possible to produce.

The reason I am raising it in my blog today without going into detail is just to fill you in on the very latest development, which is that the UN rapporteur thinks the United States should investigate Saudi Arabia for its role in the story.

The recommendation concerns a very specific piece of the story, which is that the way some potentially embarrassing information about Jeff Bezos, the founder and chief executive of Amazon, came to light appears to be because the crown prince of Saudi Arabia personally sent him an infected video file on WhatsApp which then hacked his phone and infiltrated a load of private information.

I will leave it there, suitably vague, whetting appetites to go and read more. Actually, I will chuck in one more juicy bit: here was Bezos’ public blogpost a little earlier in the story explaining to the world that he was being blackmailed. As scoops about business people go, it doesn’t get much better than this.

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