Travel and Tourism
The road less traveled
Take a proactive approach to keep your travel costs in check.
By Jessica Tremayne
Smart Business | December 2008
With tough economic times taking a
toll on all of us, your first instinct to rising business travel costs might be to
eliminate the expense across the board.
Don’t do it.
Travel leads to growth and cutting it is
counterproductive. If you’re looking to
adhere to a more realistic plan, consider
re-evaluating your travel policy and consulting with a travel management company to save 20 to 30 percent on travel
while keeping worthy trips in the budget.
Travel is the second-largest controllable cost for the average U.S. business,
seated between data collection and
salaries, yet most companies have little
or no management of it.
While your company may have an unofficial policy instructing employees to
‘get the cheapest rate,’ a policy that isn’t
managed and enforced is equivalent to
not having one at all.
A Smart Business poll showed that 84
percent of respondents’ employees are
responsible for making their own travel
arrangements. The problem is, if your
employees are utilizing online booking
agencies or different vendors, your company is likely losing out in the long run.
If you lump your travel needs together
with selected vendors and submit
requests for proposals, your annual
negotiated rate will outweigh nickel-and-dime savings earned on a case-by-case
basis.
Why travel management is important
If you take steps to retain a travel budget and manage it efficiently, you will
most likely see a significant return on
your investment.
Sixty-nine percent of companies polled
in an October Association of Corporate
Travel Executives survey say they will
be spending less or the same on travel in
2009.
“Businesses citing lateral travel expenditures in 2009 will likely just be traveling less as the cost of travel has climbed
significantly,” says Susan Gurley, executive director, Association of Corporate
Travel Executives. “Even those who say they are spending more are barely keeping up with the increase.”
You’d like to think your employees
have the company’s best interest in
mind, but statistics show companies that
place a travel manager or an outside
agency in charge of travel finances stay
within the confines of their budgets
while employee-handled travel has a less
successful return on investment.
You need to take a proactive approach
to managing your travel costs if you
expect to get bottom-line results for a
minimum of expense.
But being smart about your budget
entails more than waiting for the computerized ping alert of a reduced airline
fee like one of Pavlov’s dogs. While airfare is the most costly aspect of travel,
you don’t want to arbitrarily eliminate it.
“The first step is to differentiate
between strategic and nonstrategic travel,” Gurley says. “Strategic travel generates revenue while nonstrategic travel is
anything that results in cost but has no
substantial gain in revenue.”
In most cases, meetings with customers
are justifiable, as there is a direct correlation to revenue gains. On the other
hand, meeting with the head of the
Omaha office may not have much effect
on your bottom line this year, so consider cutting that and other trips like it
out of the budget. Use videoconferencing
or teleconferencing equipment for these
internal meetings whenever possible.
Why? Because internal travel can
account for about 40 percent of a business’s travel. Don’t worry, technology
has come a long way since the early days
of choppy robotic movements and outof-sync voices. Look into Skype and
WebEx as a couple of travel alternatives
that could save you money while still
keeping you in touch with your people in
a more personal manner.
What you need to know
Getting your travel budget under control starts with the assembly of an in-house team of policymakers who vow to
prevent travel anarchy while clearly
defining your terms and expectations. A good policy will answer why travel management is necessary, detail the value of
expectations, cite the requirements and
give examples of useful practices.
“We’re seeing many businesses saying
no to first-class travel, even for executives,” says Bonni Simon, president, TLC
Philadelphia. “So, if upgrades were previously part of the travel policy, they’re
being largely eliminated. We’re in the eye
of the storm with current rates for travel. I see rates trending up into 2009.”
The team involved in policy planning
should include you, a scheduler, travelers and the finance team. After the policy is made, one person should oversee
its enforcement and keep up to date on
travel industry policy. This could be a
part-time or full-time position based on
need.
A realistic travel budget must be based
on destination costs versus a flat-rate
figure that is impossible to meet in all
travel locations. A rate for things like car
rental, hotel and food must be figured
depending on the median rates in that
city.
A policy needs to be revised annually
to adjust to economic and company
needs, and some flexibility is required in
any plan. For example, an employee’s
time may be more valuable than the cost
savings from putting the person on a
later flight, especially if arriving later
could jeopardize a meeting with a client.
Also, you want to make sure the
employee’s time is used efficiently on
any business trip. A policy should entail
what is expected of employees during
travel and ways they should make the
best use of time outside of the office.
Meeting with multiple clients during a
conference or calling on one located en
route are a couple of ideas to maximize
the value of a trip.
Some businesses use online booking
agencies, believing their rates will be
lowest and eliminate travel management
company fees, which can account for 3
percent of all travel costs. But the majority of costs 97 percent goes to airfare, hotel and car rental, which is the
same arena in which a travel manager will save money.
While travel costs are unlikely to
decrease anytime soon, getting through
the initial pain may be the biggest challenge facing business.
“Most businesses have put a restriction
on travel,” says Dawn Friedman,
account executive with Marriott
International and a Philadelphia
Business Travel Association board member. “They’ve been cutting travel by 10 to
20 percent. This decrease shows the
industry that we’ll have to look at ways
to offer better rates to compensate for
the economy.”