Sunday, October 28, 2012

ExpaAdvisor.com offers coupons and coupon codes used by Expedia websites in 22 countries as part of




San Francisco, CA- An aviation consultant's survey of frequent factory tours in california business travelers reveals a continuing squeeze on corporate travel budgets. While trips remain on the rise, travel budgets are not rising as fast. As a result, executives who flew on premium air tickets are increasingly finding themselves handed economy-class ones.
The Ascend aviation consultancy, which surveys business travelers in North America and Europe on travel plans and trends each year, in its 2012 survey found travelers foresee a 1.5% rise in business trips, compared with a 1% anticipated increase in corporate travel budgets. Since fares are seen as likely to keep rising into next year, further tightening of corporate travel budgets is seen to also be in the cards.
For longer air trips, the survey found 61% of executives factory tours in california are traveling on business or first-class tickets, with the rest relegated factory tours in california to economy or premium economy-class seats. Even within the economy classes, the trend is towards the cheaper seats. This year, 25% of the surveyed business travelers are flying in economy, compared with 20% in last year's survey. Premium economy-class travelers dropped to 14% this year, down from 19% last year. That's also in line with figures from the International Air Transport factory tours in california Association, which found a 3.5% drop in premium-class travel tickets in Europe, measured on a year-to-year basis, through this July.
According factory tours in california to Peter Morris, the chief economist for Ascend, the squeeze on business travelers offers both an opportunity and a challenge for lower-priced carriers. As corporate travel departments try to meet their needs at a time of escalating costs, lower-priced carriers may be getting a second look from firms which once spurned them. For instance, easyJet, the second-largest budget carrier in Europe, says business travelers now make up 18% of its passengers, and it expects their share to keep on rising. The company has recently signed an increasing number of corporate deals, including one in London with the Houses of Parliament.
At the same time, however, just having low prices factory tours in california may not be enough factory tours in california to bring a major shift in business to the lower-priced carriers. To pick up the business, the budget carriers will have to be able to compete on such key non-price factors as airports used, services provided factory tours in california and the variety and flexibility of their offerings. They will also have to deal with any earlier-negotiated deals their generally higher-priced rivals may have in place more offering factory tours in california competitive rates for business travelers.
In other survey results, 44% of the frequent business factory tours in california travelers identified airport check-in procedures as the most improved feature, pointing to such improvements as online factory tours in california check-ins. The areas where they saw the biggest changes for the worse were lines and delays caused by airport security procedures – also the biggest complaint in last year's survey and in-flight service. Not surprisingly, service was thought to have deteriorated more in economy classes than in premium ones. And 79% of those surveyed predicted global consolidation in the airline industry will mean reduced choice and higher prices.
ExpaAdvisor.com offers coupons and coupon codes used by Expedia websites in 22 countries as part of the company's Rewards program can mean real savings in booking air tickets, vacation packages, hotels and rental cars. And there's no better place than the Expadvisor website to learn about and find coupons and codes to slash travel and vacation costs.

No comments:

Post a Comment