2010 Business Travel Survey - Business Travel News

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2010 Business Travel Survey

June 30, 2010 - 10:50 AM ET

For the business travel industry, 2009 was a year in which the financial underpinnings of the business shifted substantially, prompting nearly every buyer to revisit nearly every supplier contract. The depth and length of the drop in demand was unprecedented and restructuring of relationships and service levels became ubiquitous.

(Click here to download  BTN's 2010 Business Travel Survey as a pdf.)

While the business travel industry has weathered many a crisis, the duration of the downturn highlighted communications and crisis management skills. The elimination of jobs and the deep cuts in travel budgets made travel buyers vulnerable, but the focus on cost control also cast a light on the value that managing travelers and spending can bring to corporate productivity.

As in previous financial crises, awareness of and involvement in travel management decisions by senior management reached all-time highs and empowered travel buyers to reconfigure their programs and policies. In many cases, by embracing if not leading demand management efforts, such as employing videoconferencing and pre-trip reporting tools, travel buyers positioned themselves to gain support for other travel management moves.

The challenges gave travel buyers and their travel services providers a real opportunity to prove the value of their expertise and relationships in supporting the business mission and making the most of the business travel investment. Focus on the return on the travel investment and the tradeoffs regarding costs and benefits of services last year helped cement a new foundation of travel management on which many companies will build in the coming years.

While companies last year instituted further restrictions on the use of premium class air, hotel and chauffeured services, there has been a loosening of some restrictions, particularly in the vertical markets that cut them most, but many companies are unlikely to return to the same level of use of these services for quite some time.

As always, Business Travel News appreciates the representatives from the six major segments of business travel service suppliers who contributed information for this 26th Annual Business Travel Survey, including the chief executives and owners of the 36 travel management companies who released their ARC air transaction and sales data. Business Travel News particularly appreciates the cooperation of the Airlines Reporting Corp. in providing that data from its Compass data warehouse to create an apples-to-apples comparison for the chapter on corporate-owned agencies.

Thanks to these sources and many others who enabled us to create this picture of how last year's performance and decisions helped create the environment that we find ourselves in today. 

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