Please Wait...

Loyal to the Pledge

Chinese Boss Pays For 6,400 Employees to Go on Luxury French Vacation

Chinese Boss Pays For 6,400 Employees to Go on Luxury French Vacation
folder_openMiscellaneous access_time10 years ago
starAdd to favorites

Local Editor

A Chinese billionaire paid for a massive four-day corporate trip to France, covering the costs for over half of his 12,000 employees, to celebrate the firm's 20-year anniversary. The gesture cost the tycoon about $15 million.

Chinese Boss Pays For 6,400 Employees to Go on Luxury French Vacation

The head of Tiens Group Company, Li Jinyuan reserved 140 hotels in Paris alone indicated a French Foreign Ministry spokeswoman. The group visited the capital and Cote D'Azur in the south of France.

Further, another 4,760 rooms were booked in 79 four- and five-star hotels in Cannes and Monaco. At least 146 buses were also rented for transportation.

This was the biggest vacation booking ever in France.

The generosity took social media by storm. The 57-year-old Li was included on the Forbes 2011 list of world billionaires, but this trip was also going to land him in the book of Guinness World Records as well.

In Cote D'Azur, the entire 6,400-strong crowd gathered on Nice's famous Promenade des Anglais dressed in blue and white, their company's corporate colors, and formed a line to spell out "Tiens' dream is Nice in the Cote d'Azur."

Hence, the human chain broke the Guinness World Record for the longest phrase visible from the sky.

Chinese Boss Pays For 6,400 Employees to Go on Luxury French Vacation

As for the visit to Paris, it included a private viewing of the Louvre and the Moulin Rouge cabaret show.

Li founded the Tiens Group Company in 1995, and since then it has grown into a huge international conglomerate working in various fields such as biotechnology, health management, e-commerce, and hotel and tourism.

France welcomed the idea of the colossal corporate getaway with open arms, as tourism accounts for 7 percent of the nation's GDP - around $177 billion.

However, the positive publicity from the lavish mass vacation may also help improve the image of Chinese tourists, notorious for their misbehavior abroad.

Recently, the Chinese government has stepped up measures to increase people's awareness of good manners while on holiday, and even created a black list for travelers accused of extreme rowdiness.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

Comments