PenthouseX Management
The ladies of PenthouseX Pattaya in March. (Photo: Digital a-Go-Go)

After only four months, Pattayaโ€™s PenthouseX management has pulled the plug, leasing out the Indian-owned go-go to a Chinese group.

The changeover to Chinese management has been anything but smooth. Only about five of PenthouseXโ€™s original 50 girls remain. The DJ has departed, with music now consigned to a YouTube playlist. And the barโ€™s experienced general manager, who led the go-go to 20%-plus month-on-month increases in customers, has been left in limbo.

Itโ€™s only three days into the new Chinese regimeโ€™s tenure, but the new managers have dug themselves a deep hole to start in.

Short Notice for PenthouseX Management

The PenthouseX management change came about swiftly, with staff and employees only notified a couple days before the keys were handed over. But, for those who know the Jalwa Group, which owns the newly renovated Penthouse Hotel, the PenthouseX go-go bar inside it, plus the massive Jalwa Indian nightclub complex on Walking Street, it wasnโ€™t a complete surprise.

PenthouseX launched in the last week of November and, in early December, the group opened the Jalwa Indian a-Go-Go inside the Jalwa complex. It was to be the first go-go bar where Indian customers were actually welcomed. It lasted one week.

It was as clear of a sign as there is that the group chairmanโ€™s patience for non-core businesses โ€“ particularly red-light businesses โ€“ was extremely limited. After creating a fantastic looking club covered ceiling to stage in LEDs, the group reversed course and turned Jalwa Indian into an after-hours club for Jalwa thatโ€™s open until 9 a.m.

Mazement said in December that the cost of running an after-hours club was exponentially less than a go-go with its expensive agency dancers.

Short Leash for PenthouseX Success

The leash was only slightly longer for PenthouseX management but, even in February, there were rumblings from the chairmanโ€™s office that business needed to explode or there would be a course change. Revenue increases of 30% were demanded.

The rumblings came despite the fact that, for a new go-go bar in Pattaya, PenthouseX was growing extremely quickly. The general manager, who led Soi LK Metroโ€™s Bachelor club in its heyday among other redlight bars, was increasing walk-ins faster than most would think possible. And his DJ nights were sellouts. His large network meant the bar could always count on a โ€œwhaleโ€ or two dropping in and running up bills of 35,000 to 75,000 baht.

But the executive office tied the PenthouseX managementโ€™s hands in their efforts to grow business faster. PenthouseX last month launched a massive advertising campaign on the Pattayaโ€™s baht buses. It led to people showing up in the hotel lobby looking for the go-go. But it came three months after the budget request was first put in. Similarly, a relatively tiny budget request to overhaul the go-goโ€™s Line Official Account was binned.

Not Enough Runway

The refusal to spend money tied with the corporate demand for immediate profits not only frustrated PenthouseX management, but perplexed even competitors.

โ€œA go-go bar, particularly one not on Walking Street, needs at least a year to find its feed. You canโ€™t expect success in three months, especially on the down-side of high season,โ€ said one 25-year Walking Street veteran.

โ€œYou gotta play the long game. You canโ€™t expect overnight success,โ€ said another bar manager with decades of experience in Pattaya and Bangkok.

Itโ€™s assumed that the new Chinese managers will bring in โ€œtheir own teamโ€ but there are no signs of that yet. Odds are, however, that arguably the best-looking go-go bar in Pattaya will become a stop on the Chinese tour bus circuit.