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Guiding Travel Through Uncharted Territory

businesswoman, leadership, travel manager

It¡¯s no surprise that travel has been up in the air for a few years now, and the air has been pretty rough. Volatile, uncontrollable market forces ¨C from staffing shortages and supplier stability to rising costs and fears of recession ¨C have made it difficult to manage any travel program at any level.

Rising employee expectations have put greater demands on your organization, and because travelers are willing to decline a trip or quit altogether if travel doesn¡¯t meet those expectations, your organization is putting greater demands on you. Your business needs increased visibility into what you¡¯re doing, they want to know the value of your program ¨C they want tangible ROI ¨C and like everyone in your organization, they want an increased focus on safety. All, of course, while prioritizing on sustainable practices and DEI efforts.

  • 55% of travel managers say their job is already as or more stressful than last year.1
  • 49% say the stress is also caused by scrutiny from above.1

Add to this the growing operational hurdles you¡¯re facing: Getting travelers back into booking online, dealing with decreased budgets, trying to keep tired tech in working order, and managing a work-from-anywhere environment.

The bottom line is this: Corporate travel has changed, and to take on a leadership role, you need to change too. So what does it take to grow your leadership role within the company while growing your travel program?

For 6 Tactics for Personal and Program Growth, download the eBook.

1. 2022 SAP ÂÜÀòÊÓƵ Global Business Travel Managers Survey