Princess Cruises local sales team undergoes major restructure – Travel Weekly travelweekly.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from travelweekly.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
11 May 2021
Princess Cruises has made several strategic changes to its sales division to strengthen its support for travel agents across Australia and New Zealand.
The changes include the creation of five new state manager leadership positions across Australia for the cruise line, and a new national manager position planned for New Zealand.
Princess Cruises’ new state managers are Rachaelle Tyrrell (NSW and the ACT), Jared Voss (Victoria and Tasmania), Helen Mezzen (Queensland) and Emma Pequin (Western Australia), with roles covering South Australia and the Northern Territory to be announced in the future.
In addition, there will be expanded key and national account management and sales analytics teams within the Princess Cruises sales division, as well as a sales operations support group.
Corporations considering a headquarters move to Charlotte or the Triangle would be offered an additional incentive â potentially worth millions of dollars â to spread the economic benefits to less vibrant areas of the state under a bill that cleared the N.C. Senate last week.
Republican-sponsored Senate Bill 493 modifies the stateâs Job Development Investment Grant program â the primary economic-recruitment tool for corporations being recruited by other states.
The co-primary sponsors include Sens. David Craven Jr. of Randolph County and Vickie Sawyer of Yadkin County. The Senate voted 49-0 for the bill.
An economic reality for much of this century â oftentimes to the frustration of Triad civic and elected officials â has been that most corporations contemplating a headquarters move into North Carolina look only at the stateâs two primary economic engines in Wake and Mecklenburg counties.
Current and coming: Exceptional Impressions at the Dixon Gallery Editorial Staff
The Delaware Valley by William Langson Lathrop (1859–1938), c. 1899.
Brandywine River Museum of Art, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, purchased with funds provided by Mrs. David Craven; all images courtesy of the Dixon Gallery and Gardens, Memphis, Tennessee.
Impressionism was somewhat slow to gain a hold on the American consciousness, among both the public and most artists. Manet, Cézanne, and Pissarro were displaying their work in the 1860s; the first official impressionist exhibition in Paris took place in 1874. But it was not until 1886 that the impressionists had an exhibition in the United States, in a show in New York City organized by a French art dealer. But once impressionism took root in American culture, it proved to be not only the most popular and enduring artistic style ever to captivate the nation’s art lovers, but also a style that was uniquely adaptable to the American scene.
Wykeland Group and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust team up over green space plans
The partners have agreed a management scheme for the Melton West site
The Long Plantation woodland includes a section of the Wolds Way (Image: R&R Studio)
Sign up to the Hull Live newsletter for daily updates and breaking newsInvalid EmailSomething went wrong, please try again later.
Sign up here!
When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Sometimes they’ll include recommendations for other related newsletters or services we offer. OurPrivacy Noticeexplains more about how we use your data, and your rights. You can unsubscribe at any time.