Phonedave
Well-Known Member
It appears that the letter is saying that the current tone and rhetoric from Congress is starting to affect normal business travel.
Also, it is one thing for business to reduce cost by limiting travel, but it is another when purposeful travel is being axed because of fear of reprisals from the government looking to make an example.
The key statement is that large groups not directly affected by the bail out funds are cancelling trips because of reprisals from the government. That is not good.
Instead of looking for the bad or the extreme in the letter, perhaps it should be read for what it is: a concern that the current political climate is having unintented consquences on normal business operations.
Exactly,
We have a pretty tight budget around here right now as far as travel is concerend. There is something to be said for face-to-face meetings, but we now have to restrict them.
We used to be able to have the occassional "team meeting". Not some resort lavish thing, but once or twice a year my team, which is scattered across the country, would meet for a day or two on one location. It would be a company location (no renting conference rooms) and just a normal hotel stay. Most of the time it was in Tampa, because overall that is one of the cheapest places to fly into. We meet, go over plan, go over results, address issues, etc - it's a working meeting, and meeting in person helps to reinforce the team.
Well we cannot do that anymore. But we do still travel for things that HAvE to be face-to-face. I am looking at some new construction tech next month. It's hard to do that over the phone.
Part of the reason for the travel cuts is because of the bottom line, but part of it is also corporate image. So I fully understand where this letter is comming from.
And lots of companies do recognition travel. Maybe people who work in sales can get trips and other prizes for sales levels. I don't see anything wrong with that either.