Safety and Efficiency
While the monetary benefits of a managed travel program to
a company's bottom line are clear, there are also valuable
strategic, non-monetary benefits that may be less visible.
Corporate travel professionals are responsible for providing
a valuable service to their customers, the company's travelers.
This involves ensuring travel is both safe and productive.
Travelers need a smooth, efficient travel process in order
to reach a company's business objectives. And during times
of national, corporate, or personal crisis, travel management
professionals are crucial to reducing the risk to a company
and its travelers through employee tracking and emergency assistance.
The corporate travel professional's important role is never
more visible than during time of crisis. On September 11, 2001,
professionals at all levels realized the enormous non-monetary
benefits of their corporate travel departments and the value
of the human factor. Lessons learned from that day show that
effective communications and tracking systems managed by the
travel office are essential for locating travelers, speeding
their return, comforting their families and keeping the normal
flow of business in times of crisis.
The new security concerns and constant changes in the travel
industry have expanded the role of the corporate travel department
as a provider of critical information. In a 2002 NBTA survey,
38% of travel managers said they were instituting new travel
communication procedures and 23% said they were revising their
current crisis management programs. The role of the corporate
travel department has evolved into an information center that
provides valuable insights on how to travel safely and efficiently.
The travel department can now be seen as a critical segment
of any crisis management plan.
Successful travel management also has a substantial positive
effect on employee satisfaction and increased productivity.
A recent survey of 300 Internet business users revealed that
a staggering 89.9% of employees utilize the internet for personal
use, mainly to make travel arrangements. By-passing the travel
manager thus decreases employee productivity. In addition,
providing good service to a company's travelers makes it more
likely that those employees will book their travel through
the travel department, increasing compliance with travel policies
and ultimately allowing the corporation to realize greater
financial savings.
Today's environment presents real opportunities for travel
managers to demonstrate their value to their companies and
the industry as a whole, both financially and through traveler
efficiency and safety. And with CEOs and CFOs now focused more
on corporate travel and its effects on a company's bottom line
and risk management, anyone who can deliver accurate data that
can strategically help the company chart through tough times
will continue to be a valued and key player in any organization.
As technology progresses and as there are more and more developments
in the business travel industry, corporations will need to
rely even more on the expertise, experience and insights of
the often undervalued corporate travel manager.
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