Corporate Travel Policies in Europe are Reveled and Examined in a New Study by GBTA and Egencia

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PARIS, LONDON, MUNICH, BRUSSELS and AMSTERDAM, September 22, 2011 /PRNewswire/ —

European Travel Managers Allow More Premium Air Travel to Regions outside of EMEA

More Buyers in Europe are Currently Tracking Ancillary Fees Than North American Buyers

The GBTA Foundation, the research arm of the Global Business Travel Association, and Egencia®, the corporate travel arm of Expedia, Inc., today released results from its second annual Corporate Travel Policy study in Europe, exploring trends and effectiveness in policies. Additionally, key findings from the study on European buyer perspectives can also be compared and contrasted with the North America ‘Corporate Travel Policy: Benchmarking and Insight’ released on August 17, 2011.

“It is crucial that all companies look inward at their policies to ensure they achieve the goals they are after. With every traveller on the road there is an optimal point where they are able to do their business effectively while not breaking the corporate bank and studies like this allow us to find that point,” said Paul Tilstone, managing director, GBTA Europe. “This study shows us that policies are remaining consistent despite the increase in travel spend – the importance and focus on travel polices is a good thing and it appears it’s here to stay.”

Based on best practices and insights from 330 European travel buyers, the study takes a comprehensive look at policy mandates versus guidelines, consolidation, booking procedures, class of service, advance purchases, pre-trip approval, groups/meetings and emergencies, and ancillary fees among other issues – all of which comprise variables that make travel difficult to standardise.

“Negotiating discounts with airlines and other travel suppliers such as hotels is a key travel management objective,” said Christophe Pingard, Senior Vice President Egencia EMEA & APAC. “Our study reveals that the number of companies who do not have a preferred hotel program has increased from 5% in 2010 to 20% in 2011, signalling growing saving opportunities in this area. For instance, the Egencia consulting team partners with clients to implement hotel programs that bring flexibility and control of the costs. By analysing hotel data, consumption and potential per city, the consultants can then negotiate contracts with hotels that respond to clients’ needs.”

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Enforcing Travel Policy

Findings indicate European organisations do review their travel policies regularly, with 87% of managers reporting they have reviewed their policy within the last two years. In addition, the study indicates European companies have become less tolerant of policy infringements in 2011 with possible non-reimbursement climbing to 21% compared to a reported 14% in 2010 and companies that have no consequences for infringements dropping to 13% from 20% in the previous year.

Premium Travel

The percentage of Travel Managers allowing premium class air travel increased to every region outside Europe in 2011 compared to 2010: 46% allow premium air travel to North America vs. 34% in 2010; to Asia-Pacific 38% vs. 28% in 2010 allow premium air travel; to India, Middle East, Africa 50% vs. 38% in 2010 allow premium air travel.

Preferred Vendors

Travel Managers that have negotiated discounts with airlines and/or other suppliers are typically based on volume of travellers.

  • A quarter (24%) of companies require travellers to accept flights on preferred airlines “whenever they are available.”
  • One-in-ten (10%) never require travellers to use preferred airlines.
  • 72% of travel policies limit the amount employees can spend per night on hotels, and 22% set a maximum class/tier of hotels that can be booked.

Ancillary Fees

The survey collected information on if and how companies are tracking ancillary fees, finding that 63% of European buyers are tracking ancillary fees (vs. 21% of North American buyers). Of the 37% of travel buyers in Europe that do not currently track ancillary fees, 25% plan to track them within the next twelve months.

Travel managers in Europe said that they are most likely to reimburse travellers for the following ancillary fees for air and hotel:

  • Air: The top amenities travel buyers will reimburse are for baggage fees (73%), itinerary changes (51%), in-flight meals (30%) and preferred seating (21%).
  • Hotel: The top amenities travel buyers will reimburse are for parking (76%), Internet access (70%), airport shuttle (51%) and for late check-out (25%).
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Lowest Logical Fares (LLF)

The study also explores policy standards around LLFs, which represents the lowest fare that is consistent with a corporation’s travel policy.

  • Booking Windows: 56% of 2011 survey respondents include windows in their policy requiring travellers to consider lower fare alternatives before or after their originally preferred departure time.
  • Connections: 35% of respondents require travellers to accept connections when savings are available and connections do not extend travel time unreasonably.
  • Alternate Airports: 29% of respondents encourage the use of alternate airports if they are reasonably close to actual destinations.

Car Rental and Rail Policies

Sixty percent of travel policies require travellers to book with preferred car rental vendors, up from 57% last year. Thirty-nine percent of travel managers require travellers to book Intermediate (B/C) class vehicles compared to 33% that mandate hiring compact (A/B) vehicles.

For rail, Eighty-seven percent of European companies mandate the class of service travellers are required to book on trains. Of those that do, 33% authorise first class, down from 42% in 2010, and 56% require travel in second class, compared to 64% last year.

The complete Corporate Travel Policy Benchmarking and Insight 2011 study is available through: https://www.egencia.co.uk/public/uk/en/promotion/landing-travel-policy/?Campaign_ID=701200000004GQE and http://www.gbta.org/Lists/Resource%20Library/Forms/Foundation_Research_and_Surveys.aspx, and was revealed at GBTA Europe Annual Conference in Amsterdam.

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Author: Editor