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Easy Strategies to Pare Travel Costs
By
Christopher Elliott
reprinted with permission from the Microsoft Small Business
Center
Pinching
pennies is a time-honored tradition among many travelers. But
it's a practice that's now gaining increasing popularity among
an unlikely group: business travelers.
Road warriors long have had rich tastes in travel. Back in the
late 1990s, when the economy was white-hot, they routinely
bought expensive airline tickets and stayed in pricey hotels
while away on business.
But those lavish expenses paid by travelers have since dwindled
back toward the mainstream of travel. The average airfare paid
by a business traveler was $559 in early 2000 and dropped
further to $500 for the same period in 2003, according to Topaz
International, an airfare auditing firm in Portland, Ore.
Hotel rates paid likewise are on the decline. The average
per-night rate for a full-service hotel in an urban market was
$121.02 per night during the first quarter of 2000. Three years
later, the average price was $117.55 per night, according to the
Hospitality Research Group of PKF Consulting in Atlanta.
Is
corporate travel getting cheaper? Or are business travelers
becoming miserly?
The answer: Both — but especially the latter. When the economy
cooled off, road warriors and their employers became more
price-conscious. They refused to pay $2,000 walk-up fares that
could be booked for $200 if they agreed to stay over on a
Saturday night. This fundamental — and likely permanent — shift
in behavior has basically made professional travelers act a lot
more like vacationers.
In
a 2003 survey of corporate travel managers, the National
Business Travel Association found more than half the respondents
had implemented cost-cutting measures. Among the favorites:
buying cheaper, but more restrictive, airline tickets; booking
less expensive cars; and heading to the suburbs for downscale,
down-priced hotel rooms.
But you probably already knew that. What about other ways of
cutting costs? Here are three tips favored by the travel pros:
1.
Hone your fare-search tactics.
Almost anyone with a Web browser knows that if you click on
Expedia, Orbitz and Travelocity, you'll get a pretty good look
at a reasonably priced hotel, airline ticket or rental car. Many
travelers also hedge their travel purchases with sites such as
Priceline and Hotwire, which frequently outdo the big three. But
wait, there's more. Did you know about Sidestep, which culls low
fares from a variety of travel sites? How about SmarterLiving or
Travelzoo — Web sites that list super-discounted airfares that
you might not find anywhere else? Ever hear of
LastMinuteTravel.com or Site59, which offer distressed travel
inventory? The passengers who save big bucks have. Jean
Freeland, a Web site editor in Monroe, La., subscribes to "every
travel e-mail newsletter I can find" — particularly those
related to destinations she visits, because they often contain
unpublished deals. "I've saved money, especially when I've
looked for a hotel on the lower end of the price scale," she
says. Strategy:
Spend time on the Internet trawling for new fare-search
resources when you're not pressed to make a booking. Only a few
minutes of surfing — and bookmarking the results — can make a
huge difference the next time you're buying travel.
2.
Master the system.
When business travelers got cheap, so did the airlines, hotels
and car rental agencies serving them. Airlines, for example,
adopted policies like "no waivers, no favors," designed to keep
passengers from manipulating the system. So the truly savvy
business traveler got even smarter. The tools: back-to-back
tickets and their cousins, the hidden-city and open-jaw ticket.
Jessica Gordon, a director for an economic development company
in Bradley Beach, N.J., stays flexible so that when an airline
overbooks a flight, she can volunteer for a travel voucher. "I
always ask if a flight is overbooked," she says. Granted, as a
business traveler, you won't always have the time to wait around
for the next flight. But if you do, you could get a free ticket
for your time. If you know the system, you'll know that the
vouchers are there for the asking. Strategy: Befriend a travel
agent. A competent travel counselor not only will help you plan
the more complex trips that are too difficult to do online, but
he or she also will happily share all the tips on getting around
the system. After the airlines eliminated most travel-agency
commissions, it's the least they would do.
3.
Leverage your loyalty.
In a previous business-travel column, I offered seven reasons to
stop collecting frequent-flier miles. Some readers agreed with
me, but many others thought I'd lost my mind. Well, the good
news is, I'm still sane (at least that's what they tell me). But
as a few readers pointed out, loyalty programs are here to stay,
too. Although I believe my arguments remain valid, I also think
frequent-flier/stayer programs can offer benefits to business
travelers that shouldn't be overlooked. Take airport club
access, for example. Ticket agents inside these clubs can often
waive rules that front-line ticket agents won't. Frequent
traveler Brighid Wood concentrated her business on one hotel
chain, hoping that her loyalty would be rewarded. And it was:
She stayed in Hawaii for a week using her points. "I implemented
a similar plan for getting cheap airfare," Wood says. "My goal
was to keep everything focused. And it worked." Strategy: Single
yourself out for preferential treatment. Today's customer
databases are so sophisticated that a hotel clerk or ticket
agent can often tell how good a customer you are. But you
shouldn't hesitate to remind them, especially in an era when
customer service levels are hitting new lows. This also applies
to getting price breaks from a travel company.
Even if you're a leisure traveler, consider taking some of these
tips to heart. Plan ahead like a pro. Invest some time in
finding the right travel sites to book your trips. Learn the
system, and how to manipulate it. And turn yourself into an
important customer, even if it means collecting a few points.
That's how the experts do it.
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