Seize The Spend: Maximizing Card Usage Improves Data - Business Travel News

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Seize The Spend: Maximizing Card Usage Improves Data

February 21, 2012 - 03:30 PM ET

By Mary Ann McNulty

The more spending that corporations capture through their corporate card program, the better the data and the reconciliation, and the greater the benefits, according to a survey and assessment of card best practices conducted by the Association of Corporate Travel Executives and Citi.

What are the traits of high-spend-capture organizations? In companies that capture at least 75 percent of travel and entertainment spending on a corporate card, finance/treasury and procurement departments most often owned the corporate card program with travel as a distant third, according to 115 qualified respondents to an online survey fielded last fall. (Only respondents who said their companies captured a minimum of 25 percent of T&E spending on a corporate card were considered in the results.) At companies that captured less than 75 percent of their T&E on the card, half of the respondents said card programs were owned by travel, one-third said programs were owned by finance/treasury, and the reminder said procurement or human resources. Nearly 70 percent of responses were from companies headquartered in North America, with other responses from Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Among those that captured 75 percent or more spending on the card, nearly 60 percent said they had a centralized, standardized global policy implemented across their entire organization. Respondents who captured less spending on the card were more likely to have regional or decentralized policies.

Policies With Teeth  

At companies that captured the highest spending on the card, nearly half of respondents said noncompliance is reported to line managers, more than 30 percent said noncompliance results in revoked card privileges and about 20 percent don't reimburse expenses outside policy. After follow-up interviews with respondents, ACTE and Citi noted that "many high-spend-capture organizations said their policies use tone and wording that convey a high expectation for compliance without using the term 'mandate.' " Rather than react in a punitive manner, "many travel managers and their companies viewed noncompliance as an opportunity for communications or re-education."

At companies that captured less of their T&E spending on the card, more than 30 percent of respondents said there were no consequences of not complying with policy. About 30 percent said their companies reported policy violators to line management.

"The group with the higher-tier spend capture is focused on data integration as a key priority in the next year," according to the study. "The lower-capture group is mainly looking at reconciliation processing, a basic utilization of card data in the managed corporate program. The inability to optimize data capture inhibits the lower-spend-capture group's success in maximizing the value provided by the card program." The higher-tier spend-capture group also indicated much greater reliance than others—nearly 80 percent of respondents—on card data to monitor compliance, negotiate better rates with key suppliers and prepopulate expense management systems.

Ways To Boost Spend Capture 

ACTE/Citi recommended the following tactics to capture the largest possible portion of T&E spending on cards:

Secure a senior management champion with influence across the enterprise to sponsor the program and communicate policy.

Define and communicate a standard expense policy with stated consequences for noncompliance.

Implement a T&E program with the traveler at its center that provides consistent and supported experiences.

Continuously communicate the benefits the T&E program brings to all stakeholders. "One travel director from a global 500 company emphasizes the enhanced safety and security aspect that T&E card usage brings in cases of crisis management, as well as the savings accrued to the company and travelers."

Use expense policy noncompliance as an opportunity to communicate the program's benefits to employees.

Prescribe a preemptive process for travelers to follow in cases where card acceptance is low, such as with restaurant charges.

Integrate T&E cards with other travel tools to increase seamlessness for travelers.

Use providers' analytic tools and consultative services.

Work with providers' merchant acquisition processes to increase merchant acceptance among your program's heavier-spend vendors.

This report originally appeared in the February 2012 issue of Travel Procurement. 

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