Larger corporations increasingly are integrating their
expense management systems with travel booking tools while smaller and midsize
companies still find it challenging to justify the cost of doing so, according
to the 10th annual Business Travel News
Expense Manager Survey.
Nearly half of all 164 respondents surveyed, 45 percent,
indicated they had integrated their expense systems with online booking, an
increase from the 34 percent reported in last year's survey. Another 6 percent
said their organizations planned this year to integrate their systems.
[Please click here to
view the digital edition of BTN's
2013 Expense Manager Survey, featuring all charted data, downloadable as a
pdf.]
"More companies are asking for T&E expense
integration," said Orbitz for Business vice president of products and
strategy development Anne Marie Razza. "Corporations are interested in the
data analytics possible as a result of having both a T&E system [and a
booking tool]. When they're integrated, [companies] get access to that data
faster than they would independently."
Beginning in this year's third quarter, Orbitz for Business
and expense management firm Coupa plan to offer booking integration, enabling
prepopulation of Coupa expense reports for mutual clients. ExpenseAnywhere,
ExpenseWire and IBM Global Expense Reporting Solutions already integrate with
Orbitz for Business.
The travel management company's clients already can apply
their corporate policies to the Orbitz for Business online booking interface,
thereby providing managers some level of proactive control over company
spending at the point of sale, rather than reactively managing spending in the expense
system after the money already has been spent.
But with an integrated system, Razza said managers are
better equipped to find discrepancies and identify violations by comparing what
is booked and what is actually expensed, and to more quickly take action. For
example, a traveler might reserve a policy-compliant economy-class rental car,
but violate policy at pick-up by upgrading to a midsize car. Normally, a
manager might not notice the difference until after an employee submits the
expense for reimbursement, if the manager catches the violation at all.
"The nice thing about having T&E integrated is that
the expense system can provide additional value by improved analytics,"
Razza said.
Coupa vice president of marketing Anthony Wessels said having
integrated systems provides the visibility needed not only to manage expenses,
but also to optimize spend by seeing savings opportunities.
"Now you're not just taking that $5 million [of spend]
and signing your signature on an Excel spreadsheet and issuing checks against
it," he said. "Now you're actually optimizing, looking at spend as a
whole, taking the spend power you have and saving the company money."
Additionally, automatic prepopulation of expense reports
made possible by such integration makes it easier and faster for employees to
complete and submit expense reports and for managers to process them. Such
streamlined processes generate more efficiencies and therefore savings, Wessels
added.
Persistent Challenges
While organizations may understand the value of integrating
systems, various obstacles can stymie implementation and adoption. According to
BTN's survey, the necessary budget
for booking and expense data integration was identified as a top challenge,
with 54 percent of respondents rating it as a 4 or 5 on an ascending 5-point
scale (in which 5 is considered the most challenging obstacle).
The second-most challenging factor, with 44 percent of
respondents indicating a 4 or 5, is obtaining management support.
"It's imperative to have that top-level executive
sponsorship," said John Tangredi, president of Insperity's Expense
Management division.
Sempra Energy has about 2,500 travelers and annually spends
about $9 million to $10 million in T&E. Nearly six years ago, the company
launched a pilot program with one of its business units to integrate booking
and expense through Concur. Sempra Energy travel services and charge card
administrator Jessica Davis said the system works "great," has proven
to be efficient and satisfies employees. The rest of the company uses Concur
for travel booking and SAP for expense reporting.
But despite the positive experience, Sempra Energy will not
roll out companywide a fully integrated system. Instead, the company will
consider upgrading the SAP expense system and at least integrate credit card
data.
"In such a large company it is really difficult to make
changes to internal processes, so things tend not to change to avoid ruffling
feathers," according to Davis. "The most important factor to a major
corporate change is getting executive buy-in and support. If the information
can come from the top down, it is much more effective. We would also have to
get with multiple departments to make sure all goes well—IT, human resources,
etc."
Concur vice president of global product management A.G.
Lambert said the key to having a successful integrated program is a project
team that includes representatives from both travel and expense departments,
especially when different departments within the organization handle associated
systems.
"If that's disconnected from what's happening with
travel, there may be internal organizational reasons why people don't put that
together," Lambert said.
SMBs Struggle
Given these and other challenges, implementing an integrated
T&E program may be more possible at larger companies that have the budget
and executive power to initiate change. Of all survey respondents who indicated
their organizations have integrated booking and expense systems, about 54
percent have $12 million or more in U.S.-booked air spending.
The proportion of respondents who said their organizations
had implemented an integrated solution decreased along with the size of travel
spend. Of organizations with annual U.S.-booked air volumes between $500,000
and $2 million, about 34 percent indicated they had an integrated solution,
while about 21 percent of respondents from organizations with less than
$500,000 of such volume said they had an integrated solution.
Philipp Schloter, president and CEO of expense management
company Abukai, said he has seen more booking and expense integration, most
typically for Fortune 100 companies. Often, companies opt into integration as
part of the latest system upgrade. Schloter said Abukai hasn't seen "a
single request" for booking and expense integration among its small- and
midsize clients.
"In smaller corporations, we've seen it go the opposite
way," Schloter said. "They're saying, 'Book what you want ... and we'll
expense it. We're just not going to bother with it.' "
Schloter said one reason companies choose not to integrate
is based on who within an organization is tasked with overseeing such systems
and processes. If it's IT, for example, the organization is more likely to
adopt new tools.
Another reason relates to an organization's clout with
travel suppliers. "The process to negotiate preferred rates with hotels,
airlines and other travel suppliers can take a long time, and if [the company]
doesn't have a lot of spend, it won't get the discount anyway," said
Concur's Lambert. "Smaller companies are not seeing the savings of
managing travel with expense, or are finding it too difficult, so they're not
getting as much value out of the managed travel program in general."
Insperity's Tangredi also noted the trend toward smaller
corporate airline discounts, as airlines have become more selective in deciding
which clients get discount programs.
"That's the driver," he said. "Without the
ability to leverage significant discounts, companies have begun to allow
travelers the flexibility to find the best deal. This means going to multiple
[booking] sites." That, of course, complicates attempts to integrate an
expense system with bookings.
Tangredi added that some smaller companies may be moving
away from reliance on travel management companies in order to avoid TMC fees.
In some cases, they "are starting to see there's not much value in it,"
he said.
Verian senior product manager Ganesh Sundaresan said the
expense system provider recognizes the value of booking-expense integration,
but not many customers ask for it. Because of the low demand, Verian currently
offers only some level of itinerary integration with Tripit—something used by
all of four customers.
The Holy Grail
Howard Jaffe, procurement director of mobile marketing
company Velti, said he's "desperate" for the "Holy Grail"
of an integrated and global expense management solution, but with only 1,000
employees he finds it difficult to find a suitable option. Velti uses Coupa for
expense management and an undisclosed company for booking travel. Employees
currently must put a hold on travel bookings until they get an approval number
to plug into the booking tool.
"Employees are going back and forth between the two
tools," Jaffe said. "That's complicated, so they'll do anything to
get around it, even plug in fake numbers [to get approval]. It's good people
trying to get their job done."
Velti's search for a global solution is complicated because
it would require multiple contracts with different providers in multiple
countries, even if it were to hire one TMC, Jaffe said. Negotiating multiple
contracts requires consultants, lawyers, time and money—for which many
companies like Velti simply don't have the budget.
"It's the amount of travel you're doing that justifies
getting the agreements in place," Jaffe explained. "But what if you're
a company with less than 1,000 people and only have a few people in
procurement? That's expensive. And the reason you're trying to do this is to
get a good process in place, but one that saves money."
Concur's Lambert said companies can buy their travel booking
solution two different ways. The first is to buy the solution directly from
Concur and have a separate TMC contract, a solution favored by some large
multinational companies, he said. Or, more commonly, a company will access the
Concur booking tool as part of its contract with a TMC.
Lambert added that Concur is rethinking the definition of
T&E in the context of its Open Booking project, so that regardless of how
or where travelers make bookings, organizations still can capture data to
determine what is booked versus actual spend, and to have a global view of
T&E.
Tango Card founder and CEO David Leeds said the rewards and
gift card software company, which started about four years ago, is "biting
the bullet" and integrating travel and booking through Concur. The company
has about 25 people and spends about $100,000 a year on travel.
"For us, even though we're small, the primary reason
for doing it was to make sure we have a clear policy around how much people are
spending and everyone knows what the policy is," Leeds said. "We
think we're saving about $5,000 a year total."
Insperity's Tangredi said that while there is value to
integrate expense and booking systems, the general mindset about expense
reporting must change. Rather than collecting information after the money is
spent, it should be about "reviewing, re-educating and retrying."
"The trend is trying to help customers do a better job
of trying to control the spending up front, which is first about planning where
you're going to spend money, how and why, and then protecting that money by
having checks and balances before and when money is spent," Tangredi said.
"But it will take a mind shift for companies to think about controlling
expenses and not just reporting after the fact."
Embracing Mobile
Similarly, organizations may decide to evolve their views on
mobile technology and begin embracing it more rapidly to keep up with traveler
preferences and behaviors. According to BTN's
survey, 24 percent of respondent organizations found mobile capabilities most
important for the company (indicating 5 on an ascending 5-point scale),
compared with the 43 percent of respondents who indicated it is of the highest
importance for travelers.
Sempra Energy's Davis suggested the lack of mobile expense
management adoption primarily is due to associated security concerns, including
potential breaches or leaking of personal information. Some organizations that
issue mobile phones to travelers block or disallow certain apps from being used
on those devices, possibly including Concur's apps (which also include TripIt).
"I believe this is working against progress since these
tools can be very helpful," Davis said. "If the employee would like
to use the technology badly enough, they will find a way. [Mobile] is the
inevitable direction of where we are heading in the future of T&E."
This report
originally was published in the July 8, 2013, edition of Business Travel News.