BIZCHINA / Biz Who

High-flyers
(China Daily)
Updated: 2006-04-10 07:32

Corporate culture

The first place to start is to review your organization's corporate culture.

Some organizations grant different levels of employee travel privileges aligned to the levels of seniority within the organization, whilst others apply a blanket view to traveller privileges.

In the main, senior executives in most global and multinational organizations travel long haul in first class, short haul in business class and may be allowed a choice of preferred hotel. This is often deemed as part of their entitlement and recognition of their seniority.

Middle managers in global, multinational and large local organizations mostly travel long-haul in business class and short-haul in economy class on an approved airline. They stay in approved hotels mandated by their company policy.

However, there are many exceptions to this rule. Some organizations have an economy air travel only stance, irrespective of who you are within an organization or the length of flight time. Others allow middle management to travel business class on short-haul routes, even for hour-long flights.

Much of the variance in company policy can be attributed to corporate culture and this can vary from market to market. It may also be driven by changes in the economic conditions the company operates in or the specific circumstances of the travel.

For example, in some banking and finance firms, the people travelling may be involved in multi-million dollar deals. Arriving fresh and feeling looked after are critical elements of putting employee's in the right frame of mind to strike the best deal for their organization. In such circumstances, other factors are more important than finding the lowest available airfare. On the other hand, organizations in tight competitive environments, such as manufacturing, seek to contain costs, so finding the lowest airfare is extremely important and overrides individual traveller preferences.

Whatever industry sector your organization fits within, a travel manager needs to consider the organization's corporate culture and whether it provides the right balance in business travel to support the true needs of the organization.

Invest the time

More often than not, organizations make decisions without first understanding the needs and experiences of the traveller. As a result, many logical and cost-effective options are overlooked. The reality is that there will be many employees in an organization that travel more frequently than the travel manager. Their experiences, knowledge and insight should be harnessed by the travel manager in order to make informed and relevant decisions. Obviously such a mindset can leave travel managers susceptible to expensive expectations but that is where their own skill and the counsel of a Travel Management Company (TMC) are important.

One way to use the travellers' knowledge is in the negotiation of route deals with an airline. In many instances, a travel manager is so driven by the need to reduce the face value cost of the ticket they overlook the downstream business costs associated with this decision, such as unproductive time waiting between flights or on multi-stop routes.

The challenge for today's travel manager is to find the right balance for their organization. What do travellers consider reasonable? What costs are necessary? What technologies can your organization put in place to reduce the burden and inconvenience of idle time when travelling? By addressing questions like these for their organizations, travel managers are able to create real clarity on their travel programme to strike the right balance between cost and value.
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