When coronavirus pulverised business travel in 2020, many companies
effectively adopted a one-sentence travel policy. Across Europe they communicated
to employees the message that employees should restrict trips to “business-critical”
purposes only.
But what does that phrase actually mean? “When we said ‘business-critical’
we meant operational: keeping our plants running, or anything to do with
safety,” says Patrick Kuziw, global travel manager for BASF. “Going to a
supplier meeting would not be classed as business-critical.”
Thinking a little more precisely about the semantics, what BASF and many
other companies really meant, was that lockdown travel could only be for reasons
critical to their business in the immediate short term. Arguably the big
lesson learned about policy was that even after Covid all trips ought to be
business-critical, whether for the immediate needs of the company or for more
long-term viability.
“Policy has become more about making sure employees think about how and
when they travel and that there is a return on investment,” says Festive Road
consultant Carol Peter. “There has been a push to make sure people use virtual
meetings rather than just jumping on a plane; and there is a message around
travelling with intent, to make sure it is purposeful.”
In Peter’s view the biggest policy adjustment has been more emphasis on
pre-trip approval. “Once upon a time there was pre-trip approval for
non-compliance to policy,” she says. “Now we’re seeing approval to understand
the value of that trip. Pre-trip approval has become more popular since the
pandemic because companies really want to understand why their people are
travelling. I think pre-trip approval is important to keep and is here to
stay.”
BASF is a textbook example of the trend identified by Peter. “We’ve
written into the policy that travellers should think about how and why they
travel,” says Kuziw.
To assist that thinking, an intern assisting Kuziw used Microsoft Power
Apps to create a decision tree. “It works on reason for travel, duration,
location and cost,” Kuziw says. “The tool will then say ‘we recommend meeting
virtually’ or ‘we recommend travelling for this meeting.’” If the employee does
elect to travel, consent from a line manager is required.
The Denmark-based pump manufacturer Grundfos also requires pre-trip
approval, although only verbally from a line manager. Very similarly to BASF, “we
now have a sentence in the travel policy that emphasises considering very
strongly whether you need to travel or if a virtual meeting would be
sufficient. That’s the first sentence in the policy,” says senior global
category manager for travel Anikó Nagy.
Line manager consent is also needed
at Grundfos, though this may be given verbally. However, there are other levers
to control demand. A consultancy exercise in 2020 determined that Grundfos was
travelling twice as much as comparable companies. “When this was confirmed,
management made a decision to cut down on the budget, so people are really
conscious about their plans and already know [to be careful about when they
travel],” says Nagy.
Businesses are adjusting travel policy post-lockdown for other reasons
too. One is steering travellers back towards online bookings after a lurch
towards offline during the pandemic when every trip became a complex
undertaking to organise.
Now, says Mihai Dinu, global travel manager for
robotic process automation software provider UiPath, the acute shortage of
travel management company reservations staff is providing strong pressure for a
swing in the opposite direction. “If you have online booking at this time when
you can wait one hour for an agent, it could be a mess, so it’s important to
encourage online booking for simple point-to-point routes,” Dinu says. “Offline
is also more expensive.”
Kuziw is among travel managers addressing this problem. “Online adoption
has not gone back to the level we would like because people have got used to
booking offline,” he says. “We will reiterate what we need people to do. The
wording has always said you should book within the travel service provider’s
online solutions where possible. It’s just trying to reword that a little bit.”
Peter believes labour shortages also help make the case for adjusting
policy to allow purchase of more flexible tickets. “One client has changed to
allow business class because there have been a lot more flight disruptions, so
it’s much easier for travellers when they want to make changes to their ticket,”
she says.
Naturally, upgrading to business class adds cost but Peter draws a direct
line to the growth of pre-trip approval and only travelling when truly
important to the business. Consequently, while cost per trip may rise, this is
offset by the number of trips falling. “It’s probably only for a short period
you need to have that rule in place but if you’re going to have an ROI on the
trip, then maybe it’s worth making those changes,” she argues, adding that
upgrading to business class has the serendipitous bonus of helping companies
fulfil their employee wellbeing aspirations.
For many businesses, however, the trend looming largest at present is not
employee shortages but the growing risk of economic downturn. It is therefore very likely that some
companies will turn off the travel tap off again as they did in early 2020,
though for different reasons.
BASF reduced its bookings by 90 per cent when it switched to
“business-critical” travel in 2020. The company is currently back to 60 per
cent of 2019 levels. “By Q4 we were expecting to be back at about 75 per cent but
with the current economic climate that’s not going to happen; we’re going to be
hovering around 60 per cent,” says Kuziw. “Some countries have actually put in
travel bans again because of budgetary constraints and the need to ensure we
don’t spend too much.
“We wouldn’t write that in the policy itself. The board has said we need
to reduce costs. Travel wasn’t specifically mentioned but whenever this happens
travel is one of the first things to be impacted,” Kuziw says.
Many more such edicts may be issued by companies around Europe over the coming
months.