For Immediate Release
9 February 2009
Alexandria, Va --
The collapse of the global economy has had a profound impact on the business travel industry, placing a new emphasis on corporate travel department ob
One significant change is a dramatic increase in the number of business travel managers reporting they will spent less on travel in 2009 than last year. Last year’s ACTE 2009 Business Travel Spend Survey, taken in September, indicated that 33 percent of travel managers would spend less on business travel in 2009, 31 percent would spent the same, and 36 percent would spend more. The current poll indicates that 71 percent of respondents will spend less on travel in 2009, with 21 percent claiming they will spend the same, leaving only 8 percent claiming they will spend more.
“There are a number of reasons for this change,” said ACTE Executive Director Susan Gurley. “The continued drop in U.S. consumer confidence has a profoundly negative effect on demand, which causes increases in layoffs and joblessness. Lack of demand causes a slump in manufacturing, which in turn creates a slowdown in global commerce. This has a massive trickledown effect on business travel. Among the hundreds of thousands of layoffs reported in the U.S. alone, there are literally thousands of business travellers now removed from business travel circulation.”
The ACTE 2009 Business Travel Spend Survey illustrates that the hardest hit area of business travel is internal meetings. ACTE research shows that member companies are targeting non-revenue producing (non-strategic) internal meetings as these can constitute up to 40 percent of a travel budget. The growing popularity of electronic business travel alternatives is enabling companies to reclaim as much as $10 million (USD) from their travel budgets, without compromising their travel ob
Sixty-one percent of the survey’s respondent travel managers indicated they have approached their vendors to renegotiate contracts in mid-term. Eighty-three percent have focused on their hotel vendors as the most likely source of savings. Forty-six percent are approaching the airlines, and 31 percent are looking at reducing their car hire spends (rental car). Sixty-seven percent of ACTE members report that the hotel industry has been the most proactive in responding to the current crisis.
Though CSR is running in last place as a priority, compared with the economy and cost cutting ob
This latest ACTE survey revealed that travel managers have set savings goals ranging from 10 percent to 20 percent, depending on the market sector and their volume.
ABOUT ACTE:
The Association of Corporate Travel Executives (ACTE) represents the global business travel industry through its international advocacy efforts, executive level educational programs, and independent industry research. ACTE's membership consists of senior travel industry executives from 82 countries representing the €463 billion business travel industry. With the support of sponsors from every major segment of the business travel industry, ACTE develops and delivers educational programs in key business centers throughout the world. ACTE has representation in Africa, Asia-Pacific, Canada, Europe, Latin America, Middle East and the United States. For more information on ACTE, please go to www.acte.org.
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For more information, contact:
Jack Riepe
Communications Director
Association of Corporate Travel Executives (ACTE)
t: 610-719-8396
e: [email protected]