When to do a travel risk assessment and when not to
If you choose to perform a travel risk assessment, it should be done before any travel starts. Ideally, around five weeks in advance to give enough time to assess complicated trips and , if needs be, medical history. The longer the trip, the longer the risk assessment will take to perform.
In many cases, a risk assessment won’t be necessary if your traveller/s frequently visit the same location. Providing there are no major changes to tasks they will be completing, where they will be staying, how they will be travelling, or environmental changes such as political or health, then any previous risk assessment will still be relevant.
This will largely depend on where your traveller will be going and the nature of the work. Generally speaking, risk assessments are not required for hops between cities or business hubs. However, if the trip will be longer than a week, it may be necessary to brief the employee on some info about their destination.
What should a travel risk assessment include?
The risk that will be assessed is generally divided into two main categories: the individual and the external environment.
How to implement the risk assessment
There are a few general principles to follow to make sure you implement an effective risk assessment as part of the overall risk management strategy.
1. Identify environmental threats
From searching travel data online, checking recent new stories and calling local embassies, there are multiple methods to research the environmental risks.
2. Consider the individuals’ risks
Gather important information by asking employees to complete a risk assessment form or questionnaire prior to travel.
3. Evaluate the risks and decide on mitigation measures
The company travel policy can help here: if you add the safety restrictions to your policy, employees simply cannot book options that are deemed high risk.
4. Communication and training
Talk through the risks with your employees so they understand and can ask any questions they may have. Teach your travelling team how to respond to a wide range of scenarios and make it clear who they can contact if they need help. This is an essential step.
5. Review and update when necessary
Identify what procedures worked and which could be improved. Could any incidents have been prevented? Refresh your research each time you send an employee on a business trip to be aware of new risks in that location.