Thursday, 7 May 2026

The Art of the Invisible: Why Scott Dunn Is in a Class of Its Own

Forty years in, the British luxury travel company is still setting the bar — and its newly opened Hong Kong office puts the city's ultra-high-net-worth travellers right at the centre of it.

By P. Ramakrishnan · May 2026

There is a particular kind of travel that most people never quite experience. Not the kind defined by first-class seats or five-star suites — though those are part of it — but the kind where absolutely nothing goes wrong, where every detail has been thought of before you knew you needed it, and where the trip you return from is quietly, almost imperceptibly, better than the trip you imagined when you booked it. That is what Scott Dunn does.

Founded in 1986 in the Swiss Alps by Andrew Dunn, the company started with a single, focused ambition: to make ski holidays genuinely exceptional. What began with a love of the mountains and an obsession with the finer points of service — warm chalets, private guides, meals that arrived without being asked for — has since grown into one of the world's most decorated luxury travel companies, operating across all seven continents and awarded Condé Nast Traveller's Top Travel Specialist in the World for thirteen consecutive years.

But the awards, impressive as they are, tell only half the story. What actually separates Scott Dunn from the rest of the market — from corporate travel agencies processing volumes, and even from other high-end operators who do much of what Scott Dunn does — comes down to something harder to quantify: a culture of care that runs through every layer of how the company operates. For this week's column, I wanted to find out the company's raison'd'etre. A deep dive.

What Makes the Difference: Not a travel agent. A relationship.

The distinction Scott Dunn makes — and earns, repeatedly — is the difference between delivering on your expectations and anticipating them. Most travel companies, even good ones, are in the business of logistics. They book well; they execute reliably. Scott Dunn does all of that, but its underlying model is something closer to a trusted personal adviser than a booking platform.

Every guest is paired with a dedicated Travel Specialist who is an expert in their specific destination. These are not generalists working from brochures — they are people who have been to the lodges, walked the trails, eaten at the restaurants, and built personal relationships with the local guides and hotel managers they recommend. The planning process begins not with a quote but with a discovery call: who is travelling, what they care about, what kind of pace they prefer, what they've done before and didn't love, and what they're secretly hoping for but haven't quite articulated yet.

"We do this through our four key pillars — unique to you, seamless service, carefully curated collections, and luxury in every sense. We believe your time away is precious and should be perfectly personalised to you."

That philosophy is not marketing copy. It translates into tangible decisions: the choice of a guide who happens to share your passion for Byzantine history; the lodge selected not just for its views but because the head tracker there has an uncanny record with leopard sightings; the restaurant reservation confirmed before you've landed. The company also maintains its own in-house Crisis Management Team — an unusual commitment that means if something goes wrong while you're travelling, there is a dedicated team whose entire job is to fix it, not a call centre routing you through a script typed in Calcutta [revealing something there from my own travels!].

Real Stories : When it mattered most: two moments that define the brand

Testimonials are easy to collect and easy to dismiss. But two specific instances, documented through verified customer reviews, speak to something real about how Scott Dunn operates under pressure.

The first involves a couple travelling to Nepal and Bhutan — a trip they had long anticipated. The night before their scheduled departure, war broke out in Iran, and their routed flights via Qatar were cancelled with no notice. For most travellers, this would mean hours of hold music, missed days, and a holiday beginning in stress rather than ease.

"The night before we were due to leave war broke out in Iran and our flight via Qatar was cancelled but Scott Dunn managed to move our flights with hardly any notice and we went via Istanbul. Fabulous service."
— Verified Trustpilot Review, Nepal & Bhutan trip

Scott Dunn rerouted them through Istanbul with, in the guest's own words, "hardly any notice." The holiday departed on time. The guest's account is matter-of-fact, which in its own way is the point — that a geopolitical crisis was resolved with the ease of a minor schedule adjustment. That is not luck. It is the result of having the right relationships with airlines and ground operators, and a team with the mandate and the instinct to act rather than wait.

The second example is quieter, but in some ways more revealing. A couple booked their honeymoon to Peru through Scott Dunn, working with the brand's resident Travel Specialist, to plan what would be a once-in-a-lifetime trip. The logistics — flights, transfers, lodges, the Inca Trail — were all handled impeccably. But Scott Dunn did something more.

"Scott Dunn went above and beyond, at every turn, to make sure that our honeymoon felt truly special to us. They communicated with every hotel we stayed at to leave a special note/treat. We could not be more grateful for the attention to small details."
— Verified Trustpilot Review, Peru honeymoon

Nobody asked them to do this. There was no checkbox on the booking form for "personal touches at every property." It was, instead, the behaviour of a team that had genuinely paid attention during the discovery call, understood what this trip meant to its guests, and took quiet action to make it feel that way throughout. This is the invisible work that no five-star hotel can replicate independently — it requires someone who knows your whole story, not just your room and champagne preferences.

Hong Kong & Asia Pacific : Scott Dunn Private comes to Hong Kong — and it matters for this city's travellers

For Hong Kong's ultra-high-net-worth community, the news most worth noting arrived late last year: Scott Dunn Private, the company's invitation-only tier for its highest-net-worth clients, quietly opened a new office in the city.

Scott Dunn Private operates on a different plane from even the company's standard luxury offering. It is, in the company's own description, akin to having a wealth manager for your travel — a dedicated Relationship Manager who builds a deep, longitudinal understanding of your lifestyle, your family, your interests, and your travel ambitions across the year, not just for one trip. Membership is fee-free, but the service is curated: it is designed for those whose trips routinely cross multiple continents, require complex logistics, demand total discretion, and involve travel that others might classify as simply impossible to arrange.

The division's head, Jules Maury — twice named among Robb Report's Masters of Luxury — has identified a particular shift in what drives UHNW travellers today. Six-figure bookings through Scott Dunn Private have risen 18 per cent year-on-year, but the motivation, he notes, has changed. Guests are less interested in accumulating destinations and increasingly focused on what the company calls purposeful travel: journeys designed to reconnect, to challenge, to contribute. A family expedition into New Zealand's high mountains. A private philanthropic project embedded within a safari. A cultural immersion that cannot be replicated by a scheduled tour group or a luxury agent who doesn't know the difference.

"The 1% are seeking life-changing journeys and we are the conduits."
— Jules Maury, Head of Scott Dunn Private

For Hong Kong specifically, this is a compelling proposition. The city's UHNW population is sophisticated, internationally mobile, and — crucially — time-poor. The greatest luxury here is not exclusivity for its own sake, but the absolute confidence that every hour of a trip is spent doing exactly what you intended to do, rather than resolving what went wrong. Scott Dunn's ACE portfolio — access, connection, and experiences — offers the kind of extraordinary moments that are effectively unavailable through independent research: private access to Augusta National's greens, pit lane access on F1 race day, Wimbledon Centre Court for a final, after-hours visits to the Pyramids. These are not experiences that can be bought on a website. They are the product of decades of carefully maintained relationships.

There is also a growing appetite among Hong Kong's UHNW families for experiences that include the next generation meaningfully — not just tolerating children on a trip but building itineraries that create genuine memory and engagement for young travellers alongside their parents. Scott Dunn pioneered family travel with its Explorers kids clubs back in 2000, and that institutional knowledge translates directly: multigenerational trips designed so that a grandparent's bucket list and a teenager's need for adventure and a parent's desire for stillness can coexist within the same journey, without compromise.

The Bottom Line : Why this should matter to you

Travel at the highest level is, ultimately, about time. The ultra-high-net-worth traveller has the resources to go anywhere. What they cannot buy back is the time spent on hold, the evening lost to a logistics problem, the moment of a trip that should have been extraordinary but was merely fine. Scott Dunn's value proposition is precisely the elimination of those losses — and the quiet amplification of what remains.

The Nepal couple who took off on time despite a geopolitical crisis. The honeymoon couple who discovered a personal note waiting for them at every property. These are not anecdotes about luck. They are the natural result of a company that has spent forty years building the systems, the relationships, and the culture that makes that level of service possible — and that is now, with its new Hong Kong office, bringing all of it directly to one of Asia's most demanding and discerning travel markets.

The best travel, the kind you actually remember, rarely announces itself loudly. It simply unfolds exactly as it should — which, when you stop to think about it, is the hardest thing in the world to arrange.

Scott Dunn Private has offices in London, New York, Singapore, and Hong Kong. Membership enquiries for the Asia-Pacific region can be directed through scottdunn.com.

Submitted to China Daily< Weekend Edition

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Food photography with Samantha Sin

For the food column, restaurant review and dining features, I've worked with two truly great photographers. David Hartung in Macau. Samantha Sin in Hong Kong.


Sam earned her stripes at Crave magazine and is one of the most thoughtful, inventive food photographers in Asia. A joy to work with - just give her time and space and let her work her magic. Have had to work with clients who... like to put their two cents in and I usually usher them away. Their expertise of scrolling on social media versus her on hand experience. 
 

Monday, 4 May 2026

First Person: Adam Raby of Mazu Resortwear

Profile, interview, feature and shoot with Adam Raby for my First Person column in the magazine. 

Shot by Dino Busch. 



 

Sunday, 3 May 2026

Well, its Caturday.

 

Friday, 1 May 2026

What to wear: Loro Piana

Photography: Dino Busch
Full look: Loro Piana
Model: James Wong
MUA: Gloomy Kwok

Thursday, 30 April 2026

3 Magazine: Self Discoveries with Ansheles Artem: The Most Famous Russian in Hong Kong


 

My first feature for 3 magazine, a chat with Hong Kong's most popular, fluent-Cantonese speaking Russian export, the fab @ansheles_artem 

With identities that have evolved over time and place, Third Culture individuals share how they continue to explore their own culture and heritage. 

Many of us, especially my media crew, are from elsewhere, work in foreign land and spaces. A weird sense of belonging together binds them; they belong everywhere and yet, nowhere. Nomads all, "all those who wander are not lost...". 💯 

Thanks to Erica for the opportunity, was fun to chat with and know more of Ansheles } originally introduced to me by Yana banana. Who I miss daily as she's busy being a Grecian mother artist goddess in... Cyprus... I think. 😮 

You can read the full feature at the magazine's official site... eventually. 

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Natasha Moor: More than Makeup


Nomination for Woman of Power: Natasha Moor

Natasha Moor is my nomination for Woman of Power. More than a highly accomplished makeup artist, she is a visionary entrepreneur, global changemaker, and philanthropist who has transformed the beauty industry from the inside out. From humble beginnings in Hong Kong — a small albeit influential dot on the global map — Natasha has built an international beauty empire and turned her name into a global brand that stands for something far greater than cosmetics.

Through Natasha Moor Cosmetics, she has proven that beauty is a powerful vehicle for confidence and self-worth. Her clean, high-performance, inclusive products — crafted to flatter every skin tone — carry empowering names like Fearless, Conquer, Game Changer, and Self-Made. They are daily affirmations in lipstick and liner form. 

However, for Natasha, it’s never just about selling a lipstick or an eyeliner; it’s about painting on a radiant layer of self-confidence that allows women to step into their power. She innately, deeply understands that female empowerment often begins with how a woman sees and feels about herself. By making women look and feel their best, she gives them the courage to show up boldly in the world. 

Beyond business, Natasha’s heart for service is remarkable. Through her Happiness Project and the #DoMoor initiative, she has dedicated her time, resources, and platform to uplifting underprivileged women — including survivors of human trafficking, acid attacks, homelessness, and substance abuse. 

She has traveled to shelters and rehabilitation centers to personally give makeup makeovers, reminding women of their inner strength and beauty when life has tried to strip it away.

Still only in her mid-thirties and in the first act of what promises to be an extraordinary life, Natasha Moor is just getting started. Her second act is already burgeoning — with expanding global reach, deeper philanthropic impact, and new ventures on the horizon.

We are witnessing the rise of a force who doesn’t just sell beauty — she weaponizes it for good. Natasha Moor is the embodiment of what it means to be a Woman of Power.