2022 U.S.-Booked Air Volume: $50M
2022 T&E: $615M
Primary Air Suppliers: American, Delta, United
Primary Hotel Suppliers: Hilton, IHG, Marriott
Primary Car Rental Suppliers: Avis, Enterprise, National
Global Online Booking Tool: GetThere
Global Payment Supplier: American Express
Global Expense Supplier: Internal
Global Risk Mgmt. Supplier: ISOS
Consolidated Global TMC: CWT
Global professional services firm Accenture had fiscal year 2022 U.S.-booked air volume of $50 million, up from $6 million in fiscal year 2021, and it projects that air spend to increase to $100 million in fiscal year 2023.
In 2022, Accenture's gross U.S.-booked hotel volume was $36 million on U.S. annual rate nights of about 170,000. The hotel program is built using negotiated rates, and bookings are managed with a rate cap. Hotel room rates for 2023 are anticipated to
increase 3 percent to 5 percent. The company uses rate shopping tools and rate audits to manage its hotel program.
Top priorities this year for the company include improving the traveler experience through digital transformation, a commitment to sustainability goals by emphasis on carbon budgets, and data-led insights to support the company's business needs.
Accenture employees have access to an aviation carbon calculator, which highlights actual emission differences between flights to inform decisions at the time of booking. When travel is necessary, the company promotes more carbon-efficient alternatives,
such as high-speed rail in certain geographies. Accenture also has implemented an internal carbon price on air travel to encourage climate-smart travel decisions.
For fiscal year 2022, which ended Aug. 31, 2022, Accenture reported $61.6 billion in revenue, up 22 percent from $50.5 billion reported in 2021. About 47 percent of revenue came from North America, followed by 33 percent from Europe. The company reported
more than 721,000 employees as of Aug. 31, 2022, up 15.5 percent from the 624,000 reported the year before.