An SME Travel Buyer Asks:
"SME" and "multinational" no
longer are mutually exclusive terms. A global economy and today's technology mean
even a startup might be multinational. How can small and midsize enterprises navigate
global sourcing?
The ace in the hole, according to Partnership Travel Consulting
CEO Andy Menkes, is corralling your data. Travel buyers "have to prove an ability
to provide consolidated data globally because the airlines are going to need that
in order to consider any kind of point-of-sale discount," he said. Hotels want
to know global hotel spend because, he points out, it's not about where the trip
begins for them. Rather, "it matters where the country of consumption is for
the room nights." He adds, "If the SME is going to look to optimize their
TMC program, they want to go global with one TMC, and that TMC is going to need
to know the travel spend and number of transactions by country." He noted that
a consolidated global payment system is a boon in this search for data.
Dart Container travel services manager Cheryl Benjamin recommended
identifying your largest geographic area of spend. "If I choose this air supplier
as my preferred [in the U.S.], what is this going to do for me globally?" Also
think about what's coming up the pike. "When I'm ready to move toward the next
step in my program, are they equipped to be able to help us within Europe?"
As intimidating as this data quest might sound, what you present
to the suppliers doesn't have to be complicated. "It could be as simple as
Excel," Menkes said.
So the airline agreements are in place, how can you be sure your
travelers are accessing the best ones, especially on a global scale? Menkes reminds
us that online booking tools and TMCs are not silos. They both get their airfares
from the global distribution systems, so multinational TMCs are at an advantage
because they have access to multiple GDSs. "I would not endorse picking a TMC
who says, 'Hey, I use the exact same GDS in every market, whether it's APAC, Latam,
EMEA or otherwise,'" he said, "because a strong GDS in the U.S. is not
necessarily the right choice of GDS in APAC or even EMEA." Sykes director of
global finance and travel services Al Mazzola added, "A real good TMC will
have all four of the GDSs out there or the three major big ones."
But they don't need to play ball with SMEs, right? Don't be so
sure. An SME's annual volume may not compete with a larger player, Menkes said,
but by profit per transaction, "there's more money to be made on the smaller
accounts than on the bigger ones." Big accounts are high maintenance, requiring
a lot of resources from their TMCs. They also use their volume and their consultants
to negotiate low transaction fees, and on the hotel side, they return a fair amount
of hotel commissions to their larger clients via rebates. The point is, SMEs offer
TMCs their own kind of value, and TMCs recognize that.
Mazzola also said that SMEs that want access to TMCs' negotiated
supplier rates should consider not only multinational TMCs but also smaller ones
that have partners in other countries and have pooled their market share for supplier
negotiations.
Ultimately, though, TMCs are not the largest factor
in sourcing for a multinational program, according to Menkes. "Focus on optimizing
your supplier spend, not your TMC fees," he said. "Choosing the TMC that
charges the lowest transaction fee is not going to give the same savings as choosing
the TMC that can help you drive compliance to policy, that can give you some inherent
airline discounts … as well as bring better traveler experience, which includes
mobility." Breaking it down farther, he said, concentrate on hotel spend and
then air spend. "Typically, the best opportunity for an SME to save on travel
is going to be hotel."