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Hong Kong Magazine

November 16th, 2001

The Survivor Jon Stonham

The unfortunate thing about dotcoms is that because so many have failed, the few successes are still met with suspicion. "yes, I did lay off people, about nine or 10. It was extremely painful to do," says asia-hotels.com founder and CEO Jon Stonham, in response to the inevitable question. However, in the case of his travel Web site, it was a good move. The spring's layoffs occurred not because the company was suffering (they saw their revenue grow by 400 percent during the fiscal year ending March 2001), but because asia-hotels.com was expanding and relocating to Manila, where both office space and staff were cheaper. This was a move that ensured the company's survival after Hong Kong venture capitalists started pulling out of the Internet industry in late 2000. Currently, asia-hotels.com employs about 45 full-time staff, with about 31 in Manila, nine in Hong Kong, three in Singapore, and several one-man operations in places like Bangkok and Brisbane. According to Stonham, the company books about 1,000 hotel-room and resort-room nights each day, and is breaking even - even post - 9/11.

Stonham first conceived of asia-hotels.com during the dotcom boom of late 1996. It started in the usual, scrappy way, with two guys, a secretary and a server located in the spare bedroom of Stonham's flat. It was also, like most start-ups, a highly personal and idealistic venture. The goal was simple: to give customers travel information that was honest and unbiased. It would do so by working independently from hotel chains, tour operators and travel agencies, relying instead on reader polls and anonymous staff inspections. "Our added value came from the honesty of our site. If a hotel was good, then our readers would say so. If it was bad, the same would happen."

It was the perfect project for Stonham, who himself is the quintessential world traveler. His father served in the Royal Air Force, so Stonham got to sample Canada, Germany, Holland, Singapore, Malaysia and Cyprus at a young age. As an adult, he traveled extensively through Europe, South America and Africa, and then got married in Kenya. Today, he estimates that he's been to about 80 countries.

"It was just so exciting," Stonham remembers. "We go our first reservation from Sudan, and then a second on from Brazil. We just grew." They outgrew that flat when Stonham's wife got sick of techies invading her home; and with a US$1.2 million injection of capital, they moved to Lan Kwai Fong. But then, in a way, they also outgrew Hong Kong. "It's well known that Hong Kong is a good place to start things, to get things done quickly. It's got a flexibility and entrepreneurial spirit that is really impressive. But once you get to a certain size, it starts getting really expensive," Stonham explains.

According to Stonham, It's not just rents that are out of control here; egos are, too. "During the dotcom boom, it was really hard to get hold or good, loyal, qualified IT people. Techies had such an overinflated opinion about their abilities and value, so people with hardly any training were demanding $25K, $30K. Plus, there were so many jobs at the time that once we'd get someone to the point of being useful, they'd leave us for another position."

Although asia-hotels.com made it, Stonham admits that the dotcom industry had serious problems. "The doom-and -gloom coverage in the media? It was probably fair. A lot of dotcoms oversold themselves, overhyped themselves. The fall was a result of an industry that raised expectations to great heights, and then didn't meet them. That's why there was a backlash. You can't promise the world and then not deliver," he analyses. On the other hand, asia-hotels.com's comparatively conservative approach worked. "We were certainly criticized for not spending fast enough, not hyping ourselves enough, not growing fast enough - but we're still here. We've always believed in running a sensible company."

Stonham puts much of the blame on investors. "The venture capitalists have a real herd instinct. They're like a pack of lemmings. At the height of it all, they were demanding impossible, enormous returns from the dotcoms. Now that the bubble's burst, they've all pulled out and have their heads in the sand - like all Internet companies are bad no matter what." Despite it all, though, Stonham remains surprisingly optimistic about the Internet industry. "Are there rough spots ahead? Sure. But the Internet has changed the way we do everything - {we} check our bank statements, buy plane tickets, read the paper, everything," he concludes. "The market has huge potential."



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