Key summary 

  • Insurance policies may no longer cover war, civil unrest, or airspace closures.  
  • Outdated travel policies create confusion and delays when disruption hits 
  • Missing or incomplete traveller data makes crisis response slower and less effective 
  • Ground transport remains a major blind spot in most corporate travel programs 
  • Travellers booking outside your system during crises creates risk and eliminates visibility 

Your self-audit

Run through the below before you close your laptop to check your business continuity and crisis response strategies are where they need to be:

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Risk Assessments

Have you reviewed your insurance policy for war, civil unrest, airspace closure, and government advisory exclusions since February?
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Travel Policy

Does it address rerouting authority, trigger points, and spend approval during disruption?
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Traveller Profiles

Are passport details, emergency contacts, and medical information current?
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Ground Transport

Do you have visibility of how your travellers move between airports and hotels?
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OBT Controls

Can your online booking tool push real-time alerts and block high-risk routes?
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Crisis Communication

Are you using pre-approved templates and messaging guides so you're not starting from scratch in an emergency?
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Crisis Team Structure

Does your dedicated response team include cross-functional representation across HR, Legal, IT, Communications, and Operations?
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Testing and Review

Are you running regular tabletop exercises and full-scale drills? Are post-crisis reviews mandated after every significant disruption?

Strengthen your company's crisis response today

Frequently asked questions