Jin Bo
Aug 26, 2010

Starwood names new marketing director for two hotels in Tibet

LHASA - Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide has named hotel veteran Elfa Cleofe as the complex director of sales and marketing for the St. Regis Lhasa Resort and Four Points by Sheraton Lhasa.

Starwood names new marketing director for two hotels in Tibet

Cleofe has over 20 years' hotel marketing and sales experience at luxury hotels throughout the world. During her time working at Four Seasons Hotels in Tokyo, New York and Philadelphia, and the Ritz-Carlton Hotels in both New York and Washington DC, she gained extensive experience in international luxury hotel brands.

Cleofe began her career as reservations manager for the Ritz Carlton Hotel, Washington DC and New York before moving to the Four Seasons Philadelphia and later to the Four Seasons Seattle as corporate sales manager.

Four Points has been in business since 2007, while St. Regis is scheduled to open in November. Lhasa, the capital city of China's Tibet Autonomous Region, is a popular destination for international tourists.

Related Articles

Just Published

6 hours ago

Asia-Pacific Power List 2024: Robin Liu, Miniso

Through strategic co-branding and localisation, Liu is steering Miniso towards global super-brand status with innovative marketing strategies and leveraging relevant IP.

7 hours ago

Creative Minds: Koji Kanzaki on turning childhood ...

From aspiring comedian to comic fan and now creative director, Dentsu China’s ECD Koji Kanzaki loves uncovering beauty in the mundane, dreams of dining with Banksy, and keeps his inner child alive.

7 hours ago

Wieden+Kennedy retreats from India, shuttering its ...

The agency's leadership in India including Ayesha Ghosh, Santosh Padhi and Shreekant Srinivasan have resigned.

8 hours ago

Exit player zero: A creative director’s brush with ...

When a dream role at a gaming startup pulled in Robert Gaxiola, the veteran creative director and Playbook XP managing partner, quickly realised the cost to play was far too steep. Now, he’s urging fellow creatives to be wary of the same traps.