Training the pleasant way

Martin Hager

 · 29.03.2017

Training the pleasant wayPhoto: Unbekannt
Training the pleasant way | rt
The Azimut Benetti Group invited superyacht captains and industry experts to its Yachtmaster event for the 17th time.
boote/exclusiv/M3551694Photo: Unbekannt

Around 200 guests from 19 countries travelled to Montecatini Terme, an idyllic small town in Tuscany, for the European edition of the 17th Yachtmaster event to take part in the Azimut Benetti event.

The aim of the Yachtmaster event is to offer Benetti crews a uniform standard of service and to present standard methods for certain work and scenarios on board.

During the three-day event, the participants worked on and discussed crew management, new tax and charter regulations, safety and crisis management.

Numerous workshops covered topics such as etiquette, service standards, communication, leadership skills and team building.

In addition to the work in the workshops, the Yachtmaster programme also included numerous excursions, group activities and entertaining dinner parties.

Dinner party with the theme "Alice in Wonderland". | ".Photo: UnbekanntDinner party with the theme "Alice in Wonderland". | ".

The event is to be expanded next year and will last four days for the first time.

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Martin Hager

Martin Hager

Editor in Chief YACHT

Martin Hager is editor-in-chief of the titles YACHT and BOOTE EXCLUSIV and has been working for Delius Klasing Verlag for 20 years. He was born in Heidelberg in 1978 and started sailing at the age of six, in an Opti of course. This was soon followed by 420s, Sprinta Sport and 470s, which he also sailed on the regatta course with his brother. His parents regularly took him on charter trips through the Greek and Balearic Islands. Even at a young age, it was clear to him that he wanted to turn his passion for water sports into a career. After graduating from high school and completing an internship at the Rathje boatbuilding company in Kiel, it was clear that he did not want to become a classic boatbuilder. Instead, he successfully studied shipbuilding and marine engineering in the Schleswig-Holstein state capital and focused on yacht design wherever he could. His diploma thesis dealt with the “Testing of a new speed prediction method for sailing yachts”. In 2004, the superyacht magazine BOOTE EXCLUSIV was looking for an editor with technical and nautical background knowledge, a position that was perfect for Martin Hager. The application was successful and a two-year traineeship was arranged. After twelve years as an editor, the editorial team changed and he took over responsibility for BOOTE EXCLUSIV as editor-in-chief in 2017. After long-time YACHT editor-in-chief Jochen Rieker moved to the role of publisher, Martin Hager also took over the position of editor-in-chief of Europe's largest sailing magazine YACHT, which is celebrating its 120th anniversary this year, at the beginning of 2023. When he's not working on topics for the two water sports titles, Martin Hager likes to go out on the water himself - preferably with kite and wingfoil equipment or on a little after-work trip across the Alster.

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