Establishing a travel policy
Having a well-established travel policy is important to keeping your capacity for business travel sustainable.
Organizations should be the initial focus. The travel policy must be:
- Clear and easy to understand.
- Well communicated to everyone who may be sent on business trips.
- Kept together in one location and easily accessible by everyone.
- Easy to work with, with a low number of steps for employees to organize their travel.
Along with the travel policy, important information and documents for business travelers must also be kept well-organized. Keep all traveler information in one place, so when they need to fly, or rent a car, or book a hotel, it’s as quick and easy as possible.
This is especially important if business travel is managed by a single person, whose job also requires them to be responsible for other tasks. If they’re away for a few days, you want to make it easy for someone to step into their role temporarily and still find all the relevant information.
Employees should also know the exact process for requesting permission for these trips. Be it through a messaging program like Slack, an email, an online form submission, or something non-digital - however the communication is made, employees should be made aware of it and encouraged to adhere to it.
There should also be clear policies for what to do in the event something negative happens, either during or after the trip, like:
- Missed flights.
- No available hotel room.
- Client/lead canceling the meeting close to the trip.
- Lost receipts and incomplete expense claims.
- Extreme situations which require rapid repatriation.
For a more in-depth guide, read out article on why and
how to write an expense policy for a small business
.