Friday, October 18, 2024

The beauty of diversity

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Every workforce has a diverse community and in recent years DEI has rightly become a business priority. An increasing number of companies now detail initiatives linked to diversity, equity and inclusion in annual reports alongside revenue, profit margins and sustainability efforts.

But as DEI becomes further ingrained into corporate culture, has it also made its way into corporate travel programmes? And are suppliers doing enough to ensure they are truly inclusive and accessible?

“People want to know that employers care about them, not just in a transactional way but in a relationship way,” says Yvette Bryant, senior vice president of diversity, equity and inclusion at BCD Travel. “That means seeing me completely and seeing to my needs when I’m out on the road.”

In order to achieve this, Bryant says “most organisations are probably doing some level of engagement with their employees, so if the travel buyer isn’t working with HR teams today, they can start to include some very specific DE&I and wellbeing questions”.

Flight Centre Travel Group’s diversity, equity and inclusion manager for the Americas, Emese Graham, says the first step in building an inclusive travel programme is collaborating with people who have “lived experience” with equity barriers.

“It’s important to centre the people who have first-hand knowledge of what an equity barrier is and placing that knowledge and that experience at the forefront,” she says, advising that employee resource groups and establishing strong communication channels with travellers at every stage of travel can help to ensure all needs are considered.

“Addressing barriers is never going to be a one-size-fits-all solution because creating access for one traveller might create a barrier for another… Flexibility is the key,” she adds.

A recent Business Travel Show Europe poll revealed that most corporate travel programmes make provisions for individuals who are ‘marginalised’ on the basis of faith, race or religion (53 per cent). The research, which surveyed 376 travel and procurement managers based in Europe, revealed that some companies are also providing special consideration for solo female travellers (49 per cent), older people (47 per cent), travellers with accessibility requirements (47 per cent) and neurodiverse people (40 per cent).

According to the research, 46 per cent of companies also cater to the specific needs of LGBTQ+ travellers, up from 26 per cent in 2022, while a further 22 per cent plan to do so. Protections for the travelling LGBTQ+ workforce, particularly trans and non-binary individuals, have recently come into sharp focus following a rise of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation across the US.

It’s really important that travel managers and travel security managers assume that they have LGBTQ+ travellers and thus do research proactively

According to LGBTQ advocacy group Human Rights Campaign, more than 500 anti LGBTQ+ bills have been introduced to the state legislator this year and, as of July, 70 bills have been enacted into law. As a result, Canada in August issued a new travel advisory warning LGBTQ+ citizens of “certain barriers and risks” when travelling to the US.

“It’s really important that travel managers and travel security managers assume that they have LGBTQ+ travellers and thus do research proactively,” said International SOS security manager Mackenzie Grahek during a recent podcast by the Global Business Travel Association’s (GBTA) Risk Committee.

“Travel managers should know the risks to all [traveller] profiles wherever they plan on sending their staff and arm employees with that research,” she advised, adding that travel risks are “significantly higher” for trans individuals and that prior to any trip, travel managers and employees should proactively identify a safe healthcare provider – where their gender or sexual identity will be respected – in case of emergency.

To mark this year’s Pride Month in June, International SOS rolled out a “refreshed” version of its LGBTQ+ module, which has been designed with advice from LGBTQ+ rights charity Stonewall UK and features practical ways for organisations to promote safety for their LGBTQ+ travellers.

Despite recent backward steps, the US State Department last April introduced a third gender-neutral option on its passports, joining some 15 other countries including Denmark, Germany, Iceland, Malta and the Netherlands, which include the ‘X’ gender option.

Following this, American Express Global Business Travel updated its Neo online booking tool to allow travellers to create non-binary profiles and in May 2023 Dutch carrier KLM introduced neutral forms of address in its booking channels in the Netherlands, UK, Germany and the US.

TRAVELLER SAFETY IN RFPs

Major hotel groups like IHG, Marriott and Accor have made commitments to create diverse and inclusive workplaces as well as offer “inclusive hospitality” to guests. Recent DEI reports chart gender and racial diversity among leadership and the wider workforce, initiatives to ensure hotels are accessible for disabled travellers, and campaigns linked to LGBTQ+ committees.

Nevertheless, Carolyn Pearson, CEO at Maiden Voyage, a consultancy which advises on wellbeing and safety for diverse business travellers, says that many suppliers “still get the basics wrong”. She also highlighted that most “incidents” reported by solo female travellers occur in hotels because “it’s where travellers have a false sense of security”.

Pearson advises travel managers to “make demands of suppliers” in order to align travel procurement policies with corporate DEI policies ­­– and said the hotel RFP is where buyers “have a lot of pulling power”.

Research from She Travel Club, an organisation that certifies hotels for female business travellers, has found that 70 per cent of female corporate travellers believe their employer should “take their safety more into account” when booking hotels.

Earlier this year, French travel management association AFTM announced a partnership with She Travel Club to jointly encourage hotel reservation platforms and travel management companies to “better take into account” the concerns of female business travellers when accommodation is being booked.

Corporate accommodation platform HRS also recently integrated data from safety and security assessment provider GeoSure into its procurement service, which provides “constantly updated” neighbourhood safety scores for more than 65,000 cities around the world, including scores specific to safety for women and diversity ratings for LGBTQ+ travellers.

HRS vice president of procurement consulting, Alexandra Saenz, told BTN Europe that while larger multinational clients are increasingly focused on safety for female solo travellers, savings still outweigh “overall security concerns” in hotel RFPs.

She says that around 60 per cent of HRS clients have the “savings first, security second scenario” as they consider hotel offers for 2024.

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