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Press Release
CWT Travel Manager Survey Shows Cost Control Continues to Drive Buyer Behavior
CWT report highlights travel buyers’ priorities are identical regardless of company size,
industry type, travel spend or program scope
AMSTERDAM, January 24 – CWT today published its CWT Travel Management Priorities
report based on an international survey of nearly 800 travel managers. The scope of the survey
includes companies with mid-sized national programs and an annual travel spend in the range of US$2
million as well as companies with large, international travel programs with an annual travel spend
of more than US$100 million.
Travel managers concentrate efforts on further savings
The report shows that the overall ranking of priorities for 2013 remains very
similar to the order of priorities for 2012. Travel buyers intend to focus on areas representing
the greatest savings opportunities rather than those associated with the traveler experience. This
is true regardless of the size of the company, the industry type, the budget spent on travel or the
scope of the travel program.
"The challenging economic climate means that there is continued pressure on buyers to both reduce costs and manage travel in a more cost-effective way," commented Christophe Renard, CWT vice president marketing, communications and business intelligence. "As air and ground travel represents the majority of spend within a travel program, it is not surprising that it is the number one priority for most travel buyers, even though it is an area that is already well advanced in terms of optimization."
The measures that travel managers plan to take to achieve these objectives vary according to
region. While North American travel buyers are aiming to further consolidate their programs and
standardize processes, their counterparts in Asia-Pacific are intending to focus more on improving
travel compliance and mandating preferred booking channels; Latin American travel buyers are
concentrating on implementing advanced booking rules and strengthening car rental policies, whereas
travel buyers from Europe, the Middle East and Africa are tightening air and rail policies to drive
down air and
ground costs.
Travel buyers with global responsibility are the only category of buyers to tackle traveler compliance with technology 2.0. Their top three actions to achieve this target include offering mobile services to travelers, implementing a social media tool or apps and providing their travelers with a web-based traveler portal. To achieve the same objective, regional travel buyers are looking at more traditional actions such as communication and training on policy.
"Travel managers with a global scope are more likely to test new procedures and techniques. They tend to be very advanced in optimizing their travel programs and as a result, they are often looking to address new challenges with innovative methods," continued Renard.
Business travel trends indicate the challenges for 2013
The second part of the report covers the Business Travel Trends for 2013 and digs
into the changes that travel buyers are likely to see over the year and the challenges they will be
faced with in the current economic climate and evolving business travel landscape. From a pricing
perspective it is likely that global inflation will hit travel prices modestly overall, with
increases of under 5 percent; in addition, travel managers will need to monitor programs and
suppliers closely, paying particular attention to areas such as rising ancillary fees and fuel
surcharges.
Changes in technology will affect the travel process with consumer-influenced technology
increasingly finding its way into corporate travel through services such as travel review sites and
mobile apps specifically designed for business travelers.
Travel management 2.0 will also be a major theme in 2013 as companies seek to find the right
balance between exercising the right level of control over traveler booking behaviors while
ensuring that travel is still “managed” for budgetary, and safety and security reasons.
Finally, risk management will also play a key role as companies send travelers to
increasingly high risk areas and duty of care during business travel becomes an integral part of a
company’s legal responsibility to its employees.
Read the
full
report here.
Associated resources
CWT Travel Management Institute
Mastering the Maze:
A Practical Guide to Air and Ground Savings
CWT is a global leader specialized in managing business travel and meetings and events. CWT serves companies, government institutions and non-governmental organizations of all sizes in more than 150 countries and territories. By leveraging both the expertise of its people and leading-edge technology, CWT helps clients derive the greatest value from their travel program in terms of savings, service, security and sustainability. The company is also committed to providing best-in-class service and assistance to travelers. CWT services and solutions comprise Traveler & Transaction Services, Program Optimization, Safety & Security, Meetings & Events and Energy Services. In 2011, sales volume for wholly owned operations and joint ventures totaled US$28.0 billion. As part of its commitment to responsible business, CWT is a signatory of the United Nations Global Compact Ten Principles. For more information about CWT, please visit our global website at www.carlsonwagonlit.com. Follow us on twitter.com/carlsonwagonlit.
Media contact
Natasha Harvey
CWT Global
+ 33 1 41 33 62 34 (office)
+ 33 6 74 94 23 81 (mobile)
nharvey@carlsonwagonlit.com
News Release as PDF (76 Kb)
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