Cutting travel program fat without
compromising strategic objectives
The global economic downturn is hitting business
travel where it hurts: According to a new survey by the Association of
Corporate Travel Executives (ACTE), more than 70 percent of U.S. travel
managers plan to spend less on corporate travel in 2009. The results
represent a sharp shift from an earlier ACTE poll (Sept. 2008), which
found that only 33 percent of U.S. travel managers were planning on
cutting travel spend in the year to come.
While the ACTE survey may have focused on the
U.S., the challenges faced by travel buyers and travel managers cut
across all sectors of the globe. From reducing travel to tightening
travel policy, and from renegotiating with suppliers to adjusting
travel behavior, travel program stakeholders are intent on cutting
trips and curbing expenses.
The silver lining to the financial storm clouds,
says Kathy Jackson, executive vice president.
Story highlights:
* Travel buyers and managers now able to make
changes that were impossible in the past
* New role for account managers in understanding
and supporting client business drivers
* Changes to travel policy, approval process,
traveler behavior are leading savings mechanisms for cost-conscious
companies
* Demand management and online technologies are
key supports
For Global Client Management at BCD Travel, is
that the economy is enabling travel buyers and their respective teams
to make changes that, quite frankly, have never been achievable in the
past.
The challenge, adds Jackson, is to save on travel
spend without compromising on business objectives: "As hard as it may
be to foresee, the recession will not last forever. Companies will need
to emerge from the downturn with plans for growth and solid business
relationships in place- and travel is a crucial element in supporting
growth and retention initiatives."
Teri Miller, senior vice president for Global
Client Management in the Americas for BCD Travel, sees a major
opportunity for travel management company account managers in the
current situation: "Account managers need a deep understanding of the
customer's business drivers to enable them to anticipate and add value,
rather than react. As an example, if a client is closing manufacturing
plants in three countries, our account manager will explain how travel
patterns will shift as a result, illustrate what effect that may have
on supplier contracts and provide a plan for optimizing potential
impact."
What steps are BCD Corporate Travel
clients taking to combat the recession?
Companies need to look beyond the big-ticket
items, says Jackson, and filter adjustments through every component of
a trip. "It may be tempting to focus exclusively on air ticket costs,
but for some programs, air may make up only as much as 20 percent of
total T&E expenditure. Our account managers, often with the
support of a consultative engagement from Advito [the independent
consulting branch of BCD Travel], help clients focus on the total cost
of trip, including hotel, ground transportation and even restaurant
costs."
A list of some of the decisions in which BCD
Travel is supporting its clients' recession-management travel
strategies is below.
The choices and decisions being made represent a
major opportunity for companies to make lasting beneficial changes to
their travel programs, says Jackson: "As with any diet, success is
incumbent on making change a way of life, not a 30-day wonder regime."
Changes in travel policy
Growing corporate cost-consciousness is
manifesting itself most prominently in the refinement and enactment of
more stringent travel policies. Among the common cost-cutting elements
BCD Travel is seeing: shifting from business class to coach class
(variations include mandating coach class for all travelers regardless
of hierarchical level and increasing the business-class flight-time
threshold); down-tiering hotels (i.e., three-star instead of
four-star); mandating the use of public transport rather than taxis;
and retaining frequent flyer miles for business travel rather than
personal travel.
BCD Travel is also seeing an increase in the use
of rail and low-cost carriers within EMEA, says Felix Vezjak, senior
vice president for Global Client Management in EMEA: "Companies are
much more likely to accept what were formerly seen as inconveniences
(i.e., secondary airports) in exchange for savings. However,
particularly in the case of low-cost carriers, companies need to ensure
that their travelers always use the preferred booking channels (online
booking tool and agency) of choice to ensure adequate reporting and
security tracking."
For further suggestions on refining and enforcing
travel policy, see our Feb. 2009 article "Reliance on compliance."
Changes to travel approval process
Whether it's instituting an official approval
process where one might not have existed or - as is more common -
making existing processes more restrictive, this cost-cutting method is
winning wide-spread support among BCD Corporate Travel clients as an
easy "quick win."
As part of a concerted travel-cost reduction
effort, one of BCD Travel's global clients, which has over US$450
million in annual travel spend and more than 325,000 employees
worldwide, changed its travel approval process radically to incorporate
the following:
# No travel unless approved by a vice president on
a single trip basis (<150 VPs in the company)
# No last-minute travel (under seven days' advance
purchase) unless approved by an executive vice president (<15
EVPs in the company)
Demand management (travel reduction
or travel freeze)
More and more companies today view demand
management as one of the biggest opportunities they have to control or
reduce costs without compromising their overall business goals and
requirements.
Among the possible steps companies can take to
reduce travel demand:
# Eliminate all non-client-related travel
# Freeze attendance at industry conventions and
conferences
One BCD Travel client refers to internal meetings
as the "mother of all travel," and has implemented the following
methods to reduce the travel they generate:
# Prioritize video/web-conferencing for internal
meetings
# Reduce number of meeting participants (all
participants must be on agenda)
# Require meetings to be planned around travel,
rather than vice versa
# Eliminate hotel nights before and after the
meetings
# Choose meeting venues based on total cost,
including travel and employee time spend
Travel management company as
educational and staffing resource
BCD Travel has played an important role for
several major clients in helping educate travelers and travel arrangers
on a range of subjects in order to improve their ability to support the
companies' savings initiatives. For some clients, BCD Travel account
management has provided workshop sessions for travel bookers; for
others, the company has created "Tips and Tricks" documents for
cost-savvy travel that clients have made available to all travelers.
Some clients have also had to face internal
downsizing, resulting in the loss of key travel personnel. In one
recent case, following the departure of the travel manager, BCD Travel
has been able to dedicate a resource to that role. The account manager
has also supported the client by conducting analyses to forecast
further headcount reduction ahead of online adoption drive. This
headcount reduction has been written into the budget for 2009.
Increased use of online booking tools
In order to save on transaction costs and
streamline processes, companies are increasingly mandating that all
domestic or point-to-point travel be booked online. Online tools can
also play an important role in supporting changes to the travel policy
and to traveler behavior, says Miller: "Companies can modify booking
tools to ask travelers about the necessity of a trip or offer
alternatives to the journey before proceeding to booking."
Program consolidation
Finally, says Jackson, the economic downturn may
present a significant "carrot" for companies that had been looking into
consolidating their travel services regionally or globally:
"Consolidation of multiple country services into a multinational
service center, for example, can represent considerable savings in
resource and process costs. However, companies must be sure that their
organization is prepared to fully support consolidation in order to
fully achieve the benefits. That means asking questions like, 'Do we
have a consistent travel policy in place that spans the markets
involved? Are there language constraints that would be met by the
service center?'"
Article Source: http://
www.articlesbase.com/strategic-planning-articles/the-economic-
recession-diet-for-business-travel-843962.html About the Author
BCD Travel is your all inclusive corporate travel
agency offering competitive ongoing
corporate
travel management solutions to companies across Australia. We
do more than simply organise your corporate travel,
we also coordinate conferences and incentives and assist staff with
personal holiday planning to any destination worldwide. |