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New Research Explores Link Between Business Travel and Profit
Thursday, September 03, 2009 2:51 PM


(Source: Business Wire)trackingResearch conducted by IHS Global Insight and previewed during the National Business Travel Association (NBTA) International Convention & Exposition held last week in San Diego explores the link between changes in business travel and sales and profits. The research, commissioned by NBTA and American Express Business Travel, used data spanning ten years from 1998 to 2008 and across 15 industries and 9,500 U.S. companies.

IHS Global Insight Principal Christopher Pike offered, "For most companies and industries, the pressure to cut business travel is actually counter to the goals of maximizing revenues and profits. Although the findings do vary by industry, in looking at the past 10 years, the study indicates an incremental one percent increase or decrease in travel spend yielded in aggregate a corresponding 1.7 percent increase or decrease in sales."

NBTA Chair and Past President, Kevin Maguire, CCTE, GLP, said, "Having the ability to demonstrate the return on travel investment has increasingly become a focus and a key deliverable of our members to their organizations. We thought it was important to invest in this ground-breaking research to get past the pro-business travel and anti-business travel rhetoric and test the correlation between business travel and sales and profits. This study is a first step in better understanding the value of business travel to corporate top and bottom line performance and offers an important benchmark for companies across a wide industry spectrum."

American Express Business Travel Vice President and General Manager Hervé Sedky added, "Companies often view business travel as a non-essential area of spend, found at the front of the line when spending cuts are being considered. We supported this research to begin to apply the critical ROI business discipline to travel that business leaders need to guide decision making around all expenditures and tie them to business outcomes. Companies not only have to understand the optimal mix of travel for their industries and companies, but they need to know how to best use those dollars by investing in smart travel programs during the downturn so they are in a better position when the economic recovery takes hold."

Kenneth McGill, NBTA Research Consultant, said, "When looking at the 10 years of data and isolating only the influence of business travel, the research suggests that business travel is being underutilized in the U.S., although it does vary by industry. Using 2008 results as a starting point, the study shows that economy-wide corporate profits would be maximized at a point where business travel spending is increased by 5.3 percent or about $14 billion.



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