Business travel has become increasingly transactional. Employees book flights through impersonal platforms, hotels get selected based solely on price, and travel arrangements feel like box-ticking exercises rather than strategic decisions.
At Harridge Business Travel, we’ve watched this shift over the years, and we’ve seen firsthand how it affects both businesses and their people. The most successful organisations we work with recognise that personalisation isn’t a luxury, but rather what separates travel that supports your goals from travel that just happens to your team.
What Personalisation Actually Means in Corporate Travel
Beyond Seat Preferences
Personalisation extends far beyond remembering someone prefers aisle seats. It’s about understanding how your organisation operates, recognising individual travel patterns, and anticipating needs before they’re articulated.
We assign each client a dedicated travel consultant: a single named person who becomes your expert. They’ll be the one who knows that your sales director always needs accommodation within walking distance of client offices. They’ll understand your finance team prefers early morning flights to maximise working days, whilst your creative team values flexibility over rigid schedules.
This isn’t information stored in a database somewhere, but knowledge held by someone who picks up the phone when you call.
Knowledge That Transforms Service
This familiarity transforms the booking process, and the difference becomes particularly apparent during disruptions.
When flights cancel or meetings reschedule, your consultant knows your priorities. They can make decisions aligned with your actual needs, not generic policies applied universally regardless of context. At 11pm when everything’s falling apart, you’re not explaining your situation to a call centre. You’re talking to someone who already knows what matters.
That’s the model we’ve built our business around, and it’s why our clients stay with us year after year.
The Hidden Costs of Impersonal Travel Management
The Isolation Problem
Many companies gravitate towards self-booking tools promising cost savings. The logic seems sound: eliminate the middleman, reduce fees, empower employees.
We understand the appeal, but we also see the hidden costs that consistently dwarf any savings on booking fees.
Without personalised oversight, employees make decisions in isolation. One books refundable tickets “just in case” at double the price. Another chooses convenient but expensive hotels without realising a perfectly suitable alternative exists two streets away.
These aren’t negligent decisions. They’re rational responses to insufficient information and lack of expertise. Your employees are brilliant at their jobs, but they shouldn’t need to become travel experts too.
The Crisis Tax
The administrative burden multiplies when issues arise. We’ve heard countless stories from new clients about their previous experiences: senior staff spending hours managing travel crises, trying to navigate automated rebooking systems, losing sleep over logistics that should be someone else’s problem.
That’s productivity draining away, and this stress can begin affecting performance. And it’s expensive – far more expensive than working with specialists who handle these situations as part of streamlining company-wide travel processes.
When you work with us, those 11pm crises become our problem, not yours. Our 24/7 support means someone’s always available to sort things out whilst your team focuses on what they’re actually there to do.
How Personalisation Drives Genuine Cost Efficiency

Pattern Recognition Creates Savings
Here’s what surprises people: personalised travel management typically costs less than apparently cheaper alternatives.
Your dedicated consultant identifies opportunities that automated systems and individual employees simply can’t see. They recognise that your team regularly travels the same London-Edinburgh route and negotiate preferential rates; they notice seasonal patterns in your calendar and book strategically before prices spike.
They understand which apparently expensive options actually represent better value; direct flights saving productive hours, hotels positioned to eliminate taxi costs, flexible tickets that prevent expensive change fees.
Knowledge That Compounds
This knowledge accumulates over time. The longer your consultant manages your travel, the better they understand your organisation’s rhythms and requirements. They develop supplier relationships that benefit your company and spot inefficiencies that individual transactions would never reveal.
Perhaps your Manchester office consistently overpays for airport parking because employees don’t know about the long-term rates your London office uses. Maybe your European trips would benefit from rail travel that’s faster and cheaper than flying but requires advance booking expertise most employees lack.
One person coordinating all arrangements sees these patterns, and can implement solutions organisation-wide, delivering compounding savings over time.
The Employee Wellbeing Dimension
Reducing Travel Stress
Business travel creates stress even under ideal circumstances. Navigating unfamiliar airports, adjusting to different time zones, maintaining productivity whilst away from home – all these challenges affect every travelling employee.
We’ve built our service around reducing this burden. When your consultant handles arrangements, they’re thinking about your comfort and efficiency, not just ticking boxes.
You arrive at hotels that match your working style. Your connections have enough time that you’re not sprinting through terminals. Your accommodation is positioned so you can actually prepare for meetings rather than spending the evening in taxis.
Supporting Work-Life Balance
This matters particularly as travel patterns evolve. We’re seeing more clients embrace bleisure travel trends, whether that be extending business trips for personal time, bringing partners along, or building in recovery days.
Your consultant can facilitate these arrangements while maintaining cost control and policy compliance. They understand that supporting wellbeing isn’t contrary to business objectives -it’s essential to them.
Plus, when employees feel supported rather than processed, they travel more willingly and they perform better when they arrive at their destination. These outcomes have real value that’s difficult to capture in spreadsheets, but impossible to ignore in practice.
Technology Enabling Human Service
We’re not technology-averse – far from it. We use sophisticated booking platforms, expense tracking systems, reporting tools that give you complete visibility over travel spend and patterns.
But technology serves our consultants, rather than replacing them. The software handles data; your consultant handles decisions. The platform manages transactions; your consultant manages relationships. This combination delivers what neither approach achieves alone: efficiency with intelligence, scale with personalisation, data with understanding.
When you need reports analysing travel patterns, the technology generates them. When you need to interpret those patterns and implement changes, your consultant provides that expertise. When systems fail – because they inevitably do sometimes – your consultant ensures continuity.
Why Personalisation Matters More Than Ever
The business travel landscape grows more complex yearly. Sustainability concerns, duty of care requirements, remote work arrangements affecting travel patterns, fluctuating costs, evolving supplier landscapes – all of these challenges require expertise and judgment.
Impersonal systems simply can’t provide that. Neither can employees juggling travel arrangements alongside their actual responsibilities. What works is partnership with specialists like us who know your organisation, understand the industry, and genuinely care about supporting your objectives.
That’s what we offer at Harridge Business Travel: dedicated consultants, UK-based service, 24/7 support, and relationships built over time. Not because we think it’s a nice way to work – though it is – but because we’ve seen repeatedly that it delivers better outcomes for everyone involved.