CASE STUDY
How JTI streamlined approvals with automated notifications
Background
JTI had custom notifications set up in Concur Travel, but they were too long and confusing for line managers and travelers. The team didn’t want to add bureaucracy to their travel processes with a hard approval setup. Nichola Rimmer, Global Category Manager Travel & Events, and the team needed a way to email simple travel booking notifications.
Evolution and customization
As the features of the FCM Platform evolved, Nichola saw an opportunity to not only communicate a notification through email, but also in the Platform.
Using the Advise flow option in the FCM Platform, the flow is simple:
1. Traveler books trip after speaking to the line manager.
2. Line manager and traveler both receive a notification and email when a trip is booked. It contains information such as:
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A thumbs up or down emoji based on whether it’s booked in-policy
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Which airline was booked
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Itinerary information and total cost of trip
3. Both managers and travelers can click through to the FCM Platform to view the itineraries.
“We have Concur Travel active in countries with a large number of travelers, but we had a communications gap with everything that’s purely offline or other booking tools. FCM Platform has allowed us to reach everybody with the same simple process,” said Nichola.
Adding value
“It’s a big win for now to be able to send these notifications to travelers in countries where we previously had nothing,” said Nichola.
Line managers are more empowered now that they know what’s going on, can facilitate any support from a security perspective, and can easily see what trips violate policy.
Initially, there were air and hotel notifications, but the team decided to remove hotel notifications after spotting that most notifications had thumbs up. This allowed the focus to be on air travel, where more opportunities exist to save money.
A change in behavior
Nichola and the team have received no complaints about the number of emails received, but they are starting to see changes.
“I think this is driven by increased awareness. Travelers see that their line manager is copied on these messages, and they know it’s something to pay attention to. These notifications also provide comfort to our senior management that there is some accountability and people are thinking differently before they travel,” said Nichola.
Over time, the notifications may cause managers to reconsider trips altogether.