Bruce McIndoe
Denver - IJet Intelligent
Risk Systems in May was acquired by 3i-Mind, a provider of risk management
software. IJet president Bruce McIndoe last week spoke here on the sidelines of
the Global Business Travel Association annual conference with BTN executive editor David Jonas. Topics
included that acquisition, the company's growing sales team, pros and cons of
direct iJet contracts versus using services through travel management company
arrangements, and lessons learned from recent world crises and natural
disasters. Excerpts follow.
Why did the acquisition occur?
The [iJet] board of directors in 2008
said we needed more money to roll out what we are doing globally. They were
going to go into the market to raise funds, but in 2008 the market completely
dried up. In early 2010, we revisited and the board looked at two options:
raising funds or strategic acquisition. The best deal that was put on the table
was a strategic acquisition. It's everything we wanted: deep pockets, global
footprint and technology.
What does all that allow you to do?
They committed as part of the
acquisition to do capital investment for iJet relative to our technology, and
they also committed to building a global sales platform. We will probably
quadruple our sales force in the next 24 months. On the technology side, 3i-Mind
has incredible intelligence processing technology that is going to raise our
game on the intelligence side, so we can be deeper, faster and more specific on
the intelligence we produce for clients. We have almost 70 analysts, and making
them more productive is huge for our clients. Being part of an organization
with offices in many countries gives us more local access to our clients,
partners, etc.
What has been the profile of iJet's
customers?
We have around 600 clients. Probably
two-thirds of those are U.S.-domiciled corporations.
Are they all very large?
They are generally Fortune 2000-type clients.
With a larger sales force, will that
continue to be the profile?
We are basically trying to have the
success that we have had in North America move to Europe and Asia. Our business
is operating risk management, and travel is just one component.
How much work do you do with travel
management companies?
We are the major risk management
partner for American Express. We are the primary partner with Carlson [Wagonlit
Travel]. And we work with dozens of other travel agencies.
What would be different by working with
iJet through an arrangement with a travel management company versus using iJet
services directly?
One is ease of buying. Procurement
people can wrap this up in one contract with a TMC and not deal with two
suppliers. The bigger guys have more volume and margin to usually provide
better pricing than our rack rate if you come to us independently. Some people
who look at working directly say, "The travel piece is nice, but we also
want [support for] expats, facilities and our supply chain." The TMCs
don't sell that. If you want a full operating risk management solution, then
you end up coming direct. Or, we could do a hybrid program where they still buy
the travel [support services] from a partner and we augment the platform.
What new products and services have you
developed?
We upgraded our Critical Contact
[communications service]: mass two-way communication to travelers. I can now go
out and do text, email and voice [messages to travelers]. I can type in a text
message, and [the system] will call your cell phone and speak the message to
you. It may say, "Press 1 if you are OK. Press 2 if you want to be
connected to a response coordinator." It's very useful when an
organization needs to contact dozens, hundreds or thousands of people.
I assume that people in your position
learn new things from each new crisis or natural disaster. Given the earthquake
and tsunami in Japan and upheaval across the Middle East and North Africa, what
have you recently learned?
Egypt was a perfect case where there
was predictive intelligence, but some clients did not heed the predictive
intelligence. Now clients are more attuned to the fact that they need to pay
more attention to things before they become problematic. In Japan, organizations
got religion around the fact that it's not all about transient travelers. It's
about expats on long-term assignments and people in the facilities in Japan.
Some organizations found that the systems didn't work or weren't coordinated.
The travel manager in three seconds could see all the travelers in Japan, but
the rest of the company—mobility, facilities, etc.—fumbled the ball. The second
lesson: when they went to the human resources systems and downloaded all the
information on Japanese employees, [most] of those employees did not have their
cell phone number in the HR system. Some CEOs basically said, "I am paying
for those phones. Why aren't the numbers in the system?" They were really
angry. Lots of companies now are scrambling to get phone numbers loaded in.
Why does it take a catastrophe like
Japan's to force organizations to take these steps?
In general, my clients have 30 things
on their plates, and it's the crisis of the moment. They dealt with it, and
corrective actions fade off into history. And companies are running leaner. It
can't be tasked out to a junior travel person because [many organizations]
don't have any.
What other areas have emerged?
I have been spending time with clients
on cyber information asset protection and social media risk. Those are the new
things that companies have to deal with, balancing the benefit with risk
issues, quantifying it and mitigating those risks.
Is one way to mitigate such risks
sending travelers overseas with clean laptops and requiring them to access files
remotely?
To some degree. Cloud-based storage is
a potential solution. There are all kinds of technical solutions, but the first
line of defense is cognizance. Some are completely clueless about what
competitors or certain nation-states out there try to do. There is basic
blocking and tackling: encrypted USB, encrypted hard drives and virtual private
networks. You do those three things and you are in pretty good shape.
What are the next steps for iJet
particularly or the travel risk management discipline generally?
This whole explosion of mobile
technology is a huge shift for everyone. All industries are scrambling.
Figuring out how to leverage location-based services on mobile devices while
being sensitive to privacy and civil liberties is going to be a big issue in
the travel industry for years.