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Many Harvard students come here planning to try a host of extracurriculars and maintain a grade point average that will win them spots in Harvard Med or jobs with Morgan Stanley in four years. Many Harvard students change those plans...

Author: By Julie L. Belcove, | Title: Harvard Life and how to live it | 9/15/1986 | See Source »

With all the marketing savvy of a Hilton or Sheraton, Club Med is urging companies to take over villages for conferences and as sales-incentive rewards to employees. Frenchman Gilbert Trigano, 65, hardly talks like a man who flirted with Communism before he founded Club Med. Now the organization's president, he says that "we make a special effort for corporations. They are especially precious...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sun, Fun and Sales Meetings | 7/14/1986 | See Source »

Renault, the French automaker, rents a village for nine weeks each year so that 17,000 of its workers can stay for a few days or more. France's Total, a petroleum refiner and marketer, takes about 650 people a year to a Club Med as a plum for good performance. Says Philippe Morot, a Total executive: "It is remarkable what work gas-station managers will do to win." Other corporate clients have included Japan's Sony and Nikon, as well as Harley-Davidson and Pizza Hut from the U.S. Trigano plans to step up efforts to attract American companies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sun, Fun and Sales Meetings | 7/14/1986 | See Source »

Like Club Med's individual customers, corporations are drawn by the promise of a relatively inexpensive package deal. It typically includes airfare, accommodations, three buffet-style meals a day, theme parties and nightly entertainment, all for an average per-person price of $1,100 a week. More than 20 villages, from Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic to Phuket in Thailand, have installed personal computers for executives to toy with when far away from the office. The new appeal to companies helped increase Club Med's revenues by 17% last year, to $843 million, and profits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sun, Fun and Sales Meetings | 7/14/1986 | See Source »

Trigano thinks Club Med would be luring more corporate clients were it not for its original racy reputation as a place for swinging singles. Says he: "There is an extraordinary difference between the image people have of a Club Med village and what it actually is. Paradoxically, we are almost trapped, caught between our image and the reality." But with all those computers and golf courses, corporate types are beginning to feel right at home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sun, Fun and Sales Meetings | 7/14/1986 | See Source »

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