2010 BTN Travel Manager Of The Year: J&J's Maria Chevalier - Business Travel News

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2010 BTN Travel Manager Of The Year: J&J's Maria Chevalier

September 06, 2010 - 09:30 AM ET

By Michael B. Baker

Coming into a massive, mature and in many ways already well-managed travel program just two years ago, Johnson & Johnson global director of travel and meeting services Maria Chevalier has tackled global contracts across all categories to largely eliminate ancillary fees, globalized a fragmented meetings and travel program, fostered development of a central database of traveler and trip information and put herself at the forefront of industry efforts to advance crisis management and bolster hotel rate-loading accuracy.

For these efforts, Business Travel News editor-in-chief David Meyer this month named Chevalier as the 2010 Travel Manager of the Year, citing "her innovation, communications skill and teamwork as well as her commitment to advancing industry practices involving global consolidation, supplier relations and data management on several fronts."

Chevalier, who started work at J&J in 2008 following her role in a consulting position with BCD Travel, said the company's structure provided a particular challenge when it came to globalization. It's made up of about 250 operating companies located in more than 80 countries, with its travelers visiting nearly every country in the world, according to Chevalier. In addition, the company has long had a non-mandated culture.

In 2009, Chevalier and her team began their globalization efforts, moving meetings and travel through one source and one technology platform. They put American Express in place as the company's global agency and aggressively implemented and pushed usage of StarCite's meetings technology platform. Most markets are now on board, including many accustomed to using their travel companies for more than a decade.

She and her team also have globalized travel delivery standards, making key service metrics and reporting components common across regions.

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Because of strict regulations on travel in the healthcare industry, Chevalier and her team also worked with American Express to develop a rigid training program for any agents working with J&J. Agents are required to test 100 percent following their training, or they cannot serve on the account, without exception.

Besides the globalization efforts, Chevalier and her team also have focused on a global data management strategy. For example, they've created a central repository of all traveler and trip information, including traveler types, trip purpose and details. This allows the team to better determine goals and policy, she said.

With the data strategy implemented, Chevalier and her team were able to effectively set goals using business intelligence. She compares it to building a house, with the data management strategy as the foundation and business intelligence strategy rising from that.

For example, looking at the 14-day advance rule for air travel, Chevalier said it would be easy to simply set a goal to move it from 50 percent to 60 percent, but having the business intelligence would let the company know whether that was a reasonable goal. The remaining 50 percent could be salespeople who are not able to shift their booking window, so it would be a wasted effort.

The team also constantly has sought traveler opinions on such topics as the quality of preferred hotels and the sort of policies it would take to best monitor their behavior.

With contracting, Chevalier employs what she calls a "supplier-enabled innovation" to extract deeper savings and compliance. It's necessary because much of J&J's travel program relies on an outsourced model and depends on suppliers for innovation, she said.

Recent contracting focus has been on ancillary fees across travel categories. While most companies have focused on an a la carte approach, J&J instead has focused on trying to leverage in those areas where the company has spend. J&J has been largely successful in eliminating ancillary fees globally, she said. For example, the company was able to negotiate Internet access globally with a major hotel company when it was not available from the suppliers locally.

Other contracting success has focused on improving the accuracy of the rate loading process, for which BTN named Chevalier one of the best practitioners in 2009. J&J also has worked to reduce buyer penalties in meetings contracts, such as attrition and cancellation clauses, while instituting service-level agreements for the suppliers for such aspects as meal delivery. Hotel contracts have always been very heavy with penalties should the customer not perform and weak on penalties if the hotel doesn't perform, Chevalier said, and she and her team have worked to undo that.

This year, J&J conducted bidding for its car rental contracts on a global basis rather than regionally and so far is reporting success, Chevalier said. Car rental suppliers have the capabilities and willingness to do it, and the marketplace also has changed with mergers and acquisitions, she said.

Chevalier also has been promoting the use of mobile technology. When J&J rolled out a mobile application for traveler itinerary management in the United States, she was able to reach 50 percent adoption of the tool within 30 days with a single e-mail communication.

While globalization provides travel managers with essential data for sourcing strategies, Chevalier said traveler safety and security was the key driver in the globalization efforts. Little did she know when she began how thoroughly a tongue-twister of a volcano in Iceland would prove the validity of that strategy.

 

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When the ash cloud from the Eyjafjallajokull volcano brought Europe's airspace to a halt in the spring, the one-supplier, one-platform program allowed J&J to immediately assess where all its travelers were. Within minutes, the company had an instant report of where all its meetings were as well as future meetings coming up. J&J then was able to focus on the primary task of assuring security for current travelers as well as the secondary challenge of mitigating costs of those future meetings that would be disrupted.

 

Without the global travel and data platform, compiling such data takes weeks, she said.

As the dust settled, Chevalier also saw the disaster as an opportunity to influence industry change. Systems are designed to handle single events, reacting if an airplane goes down or if a major hurricane hits, for example, and handle one location in one period of time, she said. The volcanic ash situation, on the other hand, was a constant moving target and showed the cracks in the system, which wasn't created to have a handle on an event over that length of time, affecting multiple markets and changing by the minute.

With the Association for Corporate Travel Executives Global Educational Conference in Chicago on the horizon, she consulted the organization's leaders to encourage them to address it. In the end, she found herself leading that discussion at the conference, which also resulted in ongoing discussions via a LinkedIn group and research into a white paper about managing the disaster.

Finding areas to innovate is one of the challenges that faces a large, mature travel program such as J&J's, Chevalier said. While it's easy to show quick results when taking over an unmanaged travel program, it's more difficult to make progress when best practices already are in place across the program.

The question when walking into a travel program that's already a well-oiled machine, she said, is how to take the best of the best and make it better.

Her efforts of the past couple of years were a fitting answer to that question.

This report originally appeared in the Sept. 6, 2010, issue of Business Travel News.

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