Jakarta, Indonesia – PT Aviasi Pariwisata Indonesia (Persero), widely known as InJourney, has been recognized with a prestigious accolade at the TJSL & CSR Award 2025, presented by BUMN Track, in acknowledgment of its InJourney Hospitality House (IHH) program — a strategic initiative designed to elevate human capital within Indonesia’s tourism sector.
The award reflects InJourney’s ongoing commitment to balancing its dual role as a value creator and an agent of national development. As the strategic holding and orchestrator of Indonesia’s tourism ecosystem, the company has embedded CSV (Creating Shared Value) principles into its operations, with IHH standing as a flagship example.
“InJourney Hospitality House is not just a program. It is our way of implementing the government’s Asta Cita vision through direct investment in people,” said Herdy Harman, Director of Human Capital & Digital at InJourney. “We’re honored to receive this recognition from BUMN Track, which affirms our mission to create positive and measurable impact through our social and environmental responsibility programs.”
Launched to support major international tourism events — from the Grand Prix of Indonesia in Mandalika to powerboat races at Lake Toba — the IHH initiative delivers practical, values-based training to local participants in designated Super Priority Tourism Destinations (DPSP). The program covers everything from service attitude and cleanliness to guest communication and professional appearance, delivered in a dynamic, community-based format.
By the end of 2024, IHH had reached 3,768 participants across 18 cities and regencies, completing 61 training batches facilitated by 12 local heroes — young talents from within each destination who exemplify service excellence and cultural pride.
Training sessions have been hosted in key tourism hubs where InJourney operates, including Lake Toba, Borobudur, Mandalika, Labuan Bajo, and Likupang. In 2025 alone, IHH completed three new batches: in Labuan Bajo (June 18–20), Lake Toba (June 24–26), and Borobudur (June 24–26).
Positioned under the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 4 (Quality Education), IHH is not merely a training initiative — it is a social investment, empowering communities to become true stakeholders in Indonesia’s tourism revival. As the sector prepares for a new era post-pandemic, programs like IHH could serve as a blueprint for inclusive, bottom-up transformation.