Travel will continue to play an irreplaceable role in meeting critical business needs. However, travellers’ health and safety, and a new era of trip preparation and policies, will be front and centre as travel resumes, the SAP Concur Business Traveller Survey 2020, states.
The Survey captures the new normal of business travel by determining what measures are being considered as necessary by business travellers, both from themselves as well as from their employers.
“Emerging expectations around health and safety due to the current pandemic requires the travel industry to adapt, innovate, and transform to usher in a ‘new normal’,” said Mankiran Chowhan, Managing Director – Indian Subcontinent, SAP Concur. “Companies need to define and maintain a balance between essential travel, government regulation guidelines, as well as the travel appetite of their employees. Companies should also pay attention to what the employees need and invest in measures that include effective training and new-age intelligent tools. We believe that such support can complement employees’ feeling of excitement to resume travel, build up their confidence, and help them deliver on work commitments as they did prior to COVID-19.”
According to the Survey, 38 per cent of Indian business travellers now say they experience the most stress during the trip, rather than before (30%) or after the trip (32%). When the same study was conducted in August last year, 36 percent of Indian travellers cited the trip itself as the most stressful stage of travel.
With the pandemic dominating news headlines, more than 1 in 3 say their health and safety is their top priority while travelling for business (37%). This is more than three times the number of respondents who regard business needs (12%) as their top priority. The concern for personal health and safety is even more pronounced in China (57%), Malaysia (55%), and Taiwan (53%), where more than half the respondents ranked health and safety as their top priority this year.
Given such stress levels, it stands to reason that 88 percent of Indian business travellers feel concerned about resuming travel. They are especially worried getting sick themselves (57%) or infecting their family (46%). Additionally, the trip itself is likely to be anxiety-inducing: among those with concerns, 59 percent are concerned about staying in a hotel, 48 percent about being on a plane, and 32 percent about using public transportation.
When business travel resumes, all (100%) Indian business travellers will consider some measures from their company critical for safely returning to the road. These include mandatory personal health screenings for travelling employees (48%), real-time updates and alerts on potential travel risks (40%), and easier access to personal protective equipment (37%).
Organisations that are not proactively protecting employee well-being on business trips could risk consequences – 44 percent of Indian business travellers say they would ask to limit travel if their company does not implement the measures they want, 19 percent would look for a position that does not require travel, and 9 percent would consider a position at a different company.
Although 29 percent of Indian business travellers say they are worried about resuming travel once restrictions are lifted, even more travellers feel excited. This sentiment is particularly strong in India, where half of business travellers (50%) say they are excited about their next trip.