How the tedium of approval stresses travellers out – and inflates costs
People often have a romantic view of business travel – flying business class, five-star hotels, lobster dinners, piling up the points, cutting epic deals. And sure, it has its perks! But ask anyone who travels more than three or four times a year, and they’ll tell you it can be stressful too.
People often have a romantic view of business travel – flying business class, five-star hotels, lobster dinners, piling up the points, cutting epic deals. And sure, it has its perks! But ask anyone who travels more than three or four times a year, and they’ll tell you it can be stressful too.
For many travellers, the stress begins long before they board the plane.
Getting approvals, for example, can be a soul-cleaving experience.
Most companies demand employees seek approval before booking. And in
theory, this makes sense. Companies don’t want employees booking trips
willy-nilly, racking up costs.
But pre-trip approval processes have become so onerous that the booking
experience is about as streamlined as a Lego bulldozer.
This applies across Asia. In India and China, travellers can require
four or five levels of approval before booking. Even in Singapore, that beacon
of efficiency, travellers may require two or three. So, they typically wait
around three days – sometimes even a week – before booking.
As mortals wait, airfares rise.
In Asia, business trips are usually booked two to four weeks in
advance. Waiting three days bumps airfares up four per cent on average. A week?
Seven per cent.
Worse, if the fare goes up in the interim, it can be back to square one
– the company’s travel policy might require the traveller to restart the entire
approval process all over again.
You might ask: “Isn’t the ability to hold a booking one of the benefits
of using a travel management company?”
And the answer is yes – but only for certain fares. It doesn’t apply to
cheaper fares, which are ticketed instantly. Consider China, where
approximately half of all airline seats are ticketed instantly, and these are
around 30 per cent cheaper than the flexible seats.
It seems absurd to waste your travellers’ time – while costing the
company money. Particularly since a whopping 98 per cent of trips are approved
in the end. For domestic travel, approval rates are even higher.
What to do?
Start by identifying which trips require approval. Then set thresholds.
For example, you can modify your policy to auto-approve any flights under
US$500. And for flights over US$500, if fares increase only 10-12 per cent
while you’re waiting for approval, you’re good to go.
Next, consider post-trip instead of pre-trip travel approval. Since
almost all trips get approved anyway, just trust your employees to do the right
thing. Deal with issues when they file their expenses after the trip.
And of course, use technology. Some apps send push notifications when a
trip needs approval. This can cuts approval times massively. Technology can also auto-approve trips if the approver
doesn’t approve them in time.
We’ve worked with our clients to find savings of up to five per cent.
That might seem piffling, but when you’re spending US$5 million a year on
flights – not uncommon for mid-to-large sized companies in Asia – that’s a
quarter of a million dollars. Plus you have happier and more productive
travellers. Result!
Blog Author: Akshay Kapoor, Senior Director, Multinational Sales, Asia
Pacific, Carlson Wagonlit Travel. CWT are exhibiting at Business Travel Show, register for FREE now and visit the team on stand B230 www.businesstravelshow.com
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