As Anantara Hotels & Resorts marks 25 years since its founding, the luxury brand is making an unusual choice for its anniversary campaign: rather than leading with design awards, RevPAR records or expansion announcements, it is leading with its people.
The brand, the experiential luxury arm of Minor Hotels, has launched a global campaign titled ’25 Years of Unforgettable Journeys’, celebrating the destinations, team members and guests who have shaped the brand since its creation. Central to that campaign is a content series called ‘People Who Inspire’, profiling 25 Anantara team members across the portfolio, one for each year of the brand’s history.
The campaign in context
Founded in 2001 by Minor International Chairman William Heinecke, Anantara opened its first property at Hua Hin in March of that year. The resort’s Thai village-inspired design and focus on local heritage and experience-driven travel set the template for everything that followed.
From that single beachfront property, the brand has grown to a portfolio of more than 50 hotels and resorts across 24 countries, with properties now in Rome, Amsterdam, Vienna and Dublin. Further expansion is planned in Japan, Australia, Egypt, Croatia, Argentina, Turks and Caicos and the United States. The brand is also entering new product territory in 2026, with Anantara Tented Camps launching adjacent to Kafue National Park in Zambia, the country’s largest and oldest reserve.
People as the product
The ‘People Who Inspire’ series has been running since early 2026. It is not a conventional employee recognition programme. It celebrates artisans, conservationists, spiritual guides and long-serving hosts, positioning them as the living embodiment of what Anantara considers the true currency of luxury: human connection.
Earlier instalments have featured a Conventual Franciscan Friar who guides guests through the cloistered history of Anantara Convento di Amalfi Grand Hotel; a Khmer history scholar at Anantara Angkor Resort who takes travellers beyond postcard views into a deeper connection with the land; and a historian at Anantara New York Palace Budapest Hotel who has spent more than 15 years giving voice to the property’s 130-year Neo-Renaissance legacy.
The latest profile returns to Hua Hin, where the brand’s story began. Yingsuphat ‘Alex’ Wrarapho, Chief Experience Insider at Anantara Hua Hin Resort, has worked alongside the brand for more than 20 years. His role is to read guests’ needs before they are voiced, to know when to offer conversation and when to offer silence, when to introduce a local artisan and when to step back entirely. The choice to place him at the centre of this instalment is deliberate: the founding property, the long-tenured host, the founding values. It is a statement of continuity as much as celebration.
The workforce signal
For HR and people leaders in hospitality, the series operates on two levels simultaneously. Externally, it differentiates Anantara in a saturated luxury segment by making individual expertise, rather than amenities, design or loyalty points, the brand’s primary value proposition. Internally, it signals to employees across a 50-property global portfolio that specialist knowledge, long tenure and community embeddedness are valued, named and publicly celebrated.
The role titles themselves are worth noting. ‘Chief Experience Insider’, ‘Temple Exploration Insider’, ‘History Insider’. These are not marketing constructs. They dignify expertise that would otherwise remain invisible, converting deep local knowledge into a defined professional identity within the organisation. For a sector that continues to struggle with retention and the perceived devaluation of frontline expertise, that is a meaningful design choice.
Research on employer branding in hospitality consistently identifies purpose-driven recognition as one of the most effective levers for attracting and retaining skilled employees. Anantara’s anniversary campaign fits that framework more precisely than most.
What the brand is betting on
Dillip Rajakarier, Group CEO of Minor International, has described the next phase of growth as ‘thoughtful, disciplined expansion’ guided by cultural connection and a strong sense of place. That framing is significant. As Anantara prepares to enter the United States, Japan and Australia, three of the world’s most competitive luxury hospitality markets, the ‘People Who Inspire’ series functions as a pre-entry statement of identity. It tells prospective guests, future staff and potential partners what Anantara is: a brand that believes its competitive edge lives in its people, not its product specifications.
Whether that proposition holds as the portfolio scales beyond 50 properties and into markets where the brand has no cultural heritage to draw on will be the real test. For now, the anniversary campaign makes clear that Anantara intends the answer to be its workforce, named, visible and at the centre of the story.

