CWT Study Promotes Greater Use Of Meeting Cards - Business Travel News

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CWT Study Promotes Greater Use Of Meeting Cards

August 09, 2010 - 10:00 AM ET

By Michael B. Bakerand Jay Boehmer

Corporate card providers are reporting increased interest in payment products tailored for meeting expenditures, but most corporate planners still have not adopted payment tools as part of their programs, according to a recent study.

A Carlson Wagonlit Travel study of 21 companies released last month said only 10 percent relied on dedicated charge cards for meetings, while others either had no meetings payment strategy or used what Carlson Wagonlit Travel considered less optimal payment methods, such as invoices or payment orders. "Other payment methods provide less transparency and control, depending on how they are used. For example, companies often use purchase orders to work with events agencies, which generally means costs are bundled into a single cost code," CWT said.

CWT said it expects more organizations to adopt meeting cards, "ideally a single meeting card per meeting or planner," to collect spending data as procurement professionals increasingly play a role in meetings management.

Most major corporate card issuers—including American Express, BMO Financial, Citi, JPMorgan Chase and U.S. Bank—offer some sort of meeting card product. U.S. Bank reported that it had issued 400 such cards as of Dec. 31, 2009.

Card suppliers said the economic downturn temporarily might have slowed meeting card adoption. Visa, for example, launched a new meeting card in 2008. Rafael de la Vega, head of large and middle market for Visa Commercial Solutions, said interest in the card started off slowly, as companies were meeting less and thus had less need for such a product. As demand has begun to return, interest in the card has picked up considerably, he said.

"We are pushing the product again in the marketplace," de la Vega said. "We are seeing companies opening their T&E budgets back up, and this is a segment we track closely."

An American Express spokesperson said, "We're seeing meeting card growth globally. Meetings and events represent a significant opportunity for companies to save money, so obviously products like a meeting card can help companies increase their visibility and control over meetings spending."

American Express in 2008 linked its meeting card product with technology from meetings tech firm StarCite to create the Meetings360 tool. Kevin Iwamoto, StarCite's vice president of enterprise strategy, said the partnership places the payment product as a key piece of a strategic meetings management program.

Using other forms of payment when procuring meetings could lead to difficulties, Iwamoto said. For those who use standard travel and entertainment cards, the spending limits generally are not high enough to cover such pricey items as guest speakers, he said.

The bigger challenge comes when it's time to reconcile meeting costs, he said.

"This is when using a procurement card or T&E card gets messy," Iwamoto said. "The spend that you put on those cards isn't necessarily attributed back to the meeting ID number."

CWT said organizations could deploy any number of centralized payment options—from a corporate credit or procurement card to an electronic payment system—but a meetings card is particularly suited to track spending, consolidate expenses by supplier for negotiations, apply expenses to the right cost center, zero in on detailed data points and reconcile spend against budgets.

"Corporate meeting cards can be particularly effective when integrated with strategic meetings management tools for detailed, consolidated data," Carlson Wagonlit said. "Commercial card providers are expanding their solutions to help meetings and incentive planners with reporting and reconciliation. They offer, for example, online summaries of spend per meeting/planner and per supplier, year-over-year trend analysis, market benchmarking information and automatic data feeds into company financial systems."

Meeting cards generally come in two forms: a card attached to a business travel account or standard individual meeting cards with declining balances, StarCite's Iwamoto said. Cards with declining balances usually are the preferred choice among meeting professionals, particularly those responsible for multiple meetings across a company, he said.

"For those power planners, it just makes everything so much easier," according to Iwamoto. "Each budget for each meeting is front-loaded on the card, so all they have to do is pop receipts into a separate envelope for separate meetings."

Jeff Rankin, senior vice president and senior sales and marketing officer for U.S. Bank's corporate payment systems unit, said planners also see them as good negotiating tools with hotels. As a result, interest in the issuer's meeting card product, launched several years ago, has grown steadily over the past few years, he said.

"If I've got a meeting card, I can go to a Marriott or a Hilton and remind them that I did 12 meetings with them last year and spent $180,000," Rankin said. "That way, I can be treated like a $180,000 customer rather than a $10,000 customer 18 times."

Besides better data management, meeting cards can provide immediate cost savings by cutting out the cost of the multiple purchase orders otherwise needed to procure meetings, Iwamoto said.

"These can be very cumbersome, time-consuming and expensive, and you could have as many as seven or eight per meeting," Iwamoto said. "You have to issue a card only once."

This story originally appeared in the August 9, 2010, edition of Business Travel News.

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