Business travelers are taking to the roads and the skies again, but are corporate travel programs and policies keeping up with the way business travel happens now? With corporate travel and in-person meetings increasingly returning, businesses need to be thoughtful about how theyโre implementing โ or re-implementing โ their travel programs, especially when it comes to their ground transportation.
Thatโs the premise behind a first-ever ground transportation report โ โThe Corporate Travel Comeback: The Evolution of Ground Transportation and Other Trending Business Travel Topicsโ โ which is based on a quantitative survey of corporate travel managers across the U.S. and Canada. From Uber for Business, Uberโs enterprise arm, and the Global Business Travel Association, the worldโs largest association representing the pre-pandemic $1.4 trillion global business travel industry, the report uncovers pressing concerns and considerations from travel managers at some of the worldโs biggest companies.
โCorporate travel is on the rise. Uber saw airport rides represent 13% of Mobility Gross Bookings in Q1 2022, growing 166% from the past year,โ said Susan Anderson, Global Head of Uber for Business. โAs more and more companies shift to in-person and hybrid work flows, itโs important that businesses reimagine their travel programs and policies, so that theyโre tailored to this new era of business that weโre operating in. Our hope is that this reportโs findings can provide travel managers and others in the business travel space with the insights and data they need in order to roll out seamless and efficient travel programs that outpace the requirements of a changing world.โ
The report finds that travel managers emerging from the pandemic are laser-focused on a few key considerations when it comes to evolving business travel programs at their companies: traveler safety, policy compliance, and sustainability. Compared to two years ago, 75% of employers are more focused on traveler safety/well-being, 55% are more focused on sustainability/social responsibility, and 53% are more focused on travel policy compliance/enforcement.