The
pandemic brought multiple facets of the employee experience into focus. Hybrid
working styles became the norm. Technology jumped forward to power a new style
of collaboration. We got used to bringing our whole selves – and our kids and
pets – to meetings. The buildings we are returning to have been redesigned,
with fewer cubicles and boardrooms and more open spaces and meeting places.
Corporate policies have had a radical rethink post COVID.
Yet, while companies are redefining workplace
experiences and implementing new collaboration tools, business travel has not
evolved for modern teams, leading to revenue leakage from employees not
sticking to their employers’ travel platforms.
Multiple studies show that
between 31% to 53% of workers still book travel
on the platform of their choice. Aside from the inability of a company to offer
the appropriate duty of care to employees by knowing where they are, this
well-documented breach of policy has created a significant problem for finance
managers for decades. Without discounted rates, expenditure tracking and the
ability to see travel data and trends over time, leakage increases the chances
of employees booking out of compliance, let alone the potential to cost
businesses thousands.
So
if other corporate policies have been rewritten to fit the post-pandemic work
style, why are travel managers still struggling to modernize their approach to
travel?
Rebuilding travel from the ground up
Offices,
utilities, technology, financial services, benefits and travel were once
thought of as essential workplace infrastructure. Today, they are essential
workplace services. People don’t merely expect those services to work – they
expect them to surprise and delight, using technology enabled by artificial intelligence to preempt
a worker’s needs while flexing to fit the work styles in the company globally,
in their local currency and culture.
Travel,
for most organizations, has mostly been an exercise in forecasting and
budgeting. “How much do we need to spend on travel to make a multiple of that
amount in sales?” ask the business leaders. “What percentage of our revenue
can we carve out for travel expenses before it negatively impacts the bottom
line? Who will give us the best travel deals?”
Employees
want mobile tools from a responsible employer that make it easy for them to
book their business travel and not miss out on the best deals or loyalty
programs. When the business doesn’t give them what they want, they go outside
the travel policy, causing a drop in compliance and eventual revenue leakage.
When
employees book direct or via their preferred third-party site, the problems
created for business managers compound quickly. For one, it’s impossible to
control the way people travel – not just the overall cost, but the cabin class,
dates, extras and add-ons all become invisible and uncontrollable. Once the
trip is complete, it can take time to even see the expense show up. At best,
it’s at month-end. At worst, it’ll be whenever the employee does their expenses
and the reimbursement request comes in.
The
result of these two competing expectations – the finance leader wanting to
budget better and the employee wanting a more delightful experience – can
create dissonance and non-compliance. What if modern solutions could keep both
sides happy?
Time to stop and think
In the second half of the year, corporate leaders start budgeting for the following year and there is a ton of (sometimes contradictory) data to consider when looking at their travel policies. They will begin to forecast and make investments in travel to achieve business goals while also accounting for anticipated leakage. If that’s what you’re about to do, I recommend you consider the below:
- Build a modern employee experience. Treat your travel the same way as your workplace. Remember, people aren’t just moving from office to office when they travel – they’re working from the sky, the road and the hotel room. We spent so long thinking and rethinking workplaces, so let’s do the same for travel – collaborate with your human resources team to poll people. Ask questions that include space for anecdotal feedback and preferences. Think of travel as a service that needs to be designed to empower employees, not just a line in the budget that must be minimized.
- Create a hybrid tech stack. Look at your travel policy in the context of your technology choices. Consider solutions that can integrate the booking experience into your existing platforms and tools to manage travel spend. Look at the apps and sites people use, both at work and at home (not just for travel!), and think about how your employee experience can match their favorites. Make decisions on how to use new technology to drive greater employee productivity and satisfaction when they travel – from searching through booking and traveling to the automation of expenses. Are you using next-generation tools across the board, with open APIs and predictive AI, to make the experience feel bespoke and the process frictionless? Is that having a positive impact on usage over time, therefore reducing non-compliance?
- Make it easy for everyone to do the right thing. Chief financial officers want their managers focused on strategic work, not chasing down employees over policy violations. You can drive higher compliance in a travel platform by cutting down on the need for policing or troubleshooting by the finance team. Tech will let you do much more than automatically keep people compliant – it can use AI to ensure suggestions are the best value and personalized, while expense filing and reimbursement is fast and automated. Letting technology do the work not only improves the experience for employees, it can boost financial efficiency too.
Best of both worlds
Non-compliance
with travel policy can have a big impact on a company’s bottom line. And as
expectations from employees continue to go up, it’s time to rethink your travel
policy with both the employee and manager experiences in mind. Economic
headwinds and technological leaps continue to demand that companies become more
efficient and optimize spend without sacrificing productivity or speed of
innovation.
To
all leaders concerned about managing travel spend, I encourage you to think
about preventing leakage through multiple lenses. Use the lessons the pandemic
taught us. Keep modernizing the workplace. Test and learn through regular
communication with your employees to show you take your duty of care seriously.
Rethink the tech stack through the employee and manager experience.
By making
things seamless and integrated, you’ll find that – even though your destination
is efficiency and compliance – people will be much more likely to go on the
journey with you.