Loading

Grow Smart Business


teaserInfographic
Close

Search Articles



Posts Tagged ‘small business travel’


Can a Business Trip Make You Healthier?

August 26th, 2011 ::

By Rieva Lesonsky

Are you a frequent business traveler (like I am)? If you’re also health-conscious (and what small business owner can afford not to be?) you’ll be happy to learn that today’s hotels are paying attention to business travelers’ needs and becoming healthier places to stay. Going beyond the now-standard in-hotel gym or offering oatmeal at breakfast, here are seven ways hotels are getting healthier as reported by MarketWatch.

  1. Group wellness: If you’re holding an offsite meeting for your team or an annual conference at a hotel, you can now take advantage of healthy options like light meals and exercise breaks during the event. (Forget the rubber chicken!) At some Hyatt resort properties, for instance, meeting groups can enjoy wellness activities like chair yoga or 15-minute neck massages during sessions.
  2. Breathing easy: Smoking rooms are fewer and far between (about 10 percent of all hotel rooms), which is good news for those of us bothered by smoke. But if it’s really crowded, you might get stuck in a smokers’ room anyway. To avoid that, visit FreshStay.com, which lists more than 5,000 hotels that are totally smoke-free.
  3. Get PURE: If a nonsmoking room’s not enough, go one step beyond nonsmoking with PURE rooms, designed for guests with allergies or asthma. These rooms use air purifiers, hypoallergenic mattress covers, and special cleaning treatments to ensure there are no allergens; they are offered by about 250 hotels in North America.
  4. It’s organic: Remember the days when a club sandwich was about as healthy as room service got? No more. A growing number of hotels are adding locally sourced and/or organic food to their room service and restaurant menus.
  5. In-room fitness: If you’ve ever tried to motivate yourself to get dressed in workout gear and head 30 flights down to the hotel gym at 5:30 in the morning, you’ll appreciate this increasingly popular amenity that lets you roll out of bed and work out in privacy. MarketWatch cites a 2010 American Hotel & Lodging Association survey that found about 21 percent of luxury hotels, 17 percent of upscale hotels, 15 percent of midprice hotels, 7 percent of economy and 4 percent of budget hotels have in-room exercise equipment. Hilton Garden Inns and Omni Hotels Resort are two that provide in-room fitness kits; many hotels also have on-demand exercise shows for viewing on the room TV.
  6. Get smart: Concierges have long provided guests with suggested running routes, etc., to work out on the road. Now you can forget trying to remember directions or carrying a paper map on your run. Concierge suggestions are going digital with smartphone apps that let travelers find routes or calculate their distance.
  7. Professional help: Some locations (often resorts) have personal trainers, nutritionists and wellness coaches on staff. Got some extra time between meetings? Book a session and instead of going back to your business feeling flabby, you can be better than ever.

Who knew going on a business trip could actually improve your health? These days, it just might.

Image by Flickr user Jennifer Woodard Maderazo (Creative Commons)

What Kind of Business Traveler Are You?

August 15th, 2011 ::

By Rieva Lesonsky

Where do you fit into the five types of business travelers uncovered in a recent Global Business Travel Association survey? The survey of about 800 businesspeople who travel at least 4 times annually on business found that business travelers fall into five categories:

1. The Veteran – These experienced travelers take an average of 12 trips per year with an average of four nights away from home per trip; 88 percent are age 35 or older. Their key goal when traveling is ensuring they aren’t hindered by a lack of equipment of connectivity; as a result, they’re always looking for new technology to make them more productive on the road. This group enjoys traveling, and a whopping 94 percent bring laptops on the road.

2. Road Weary – This group takes an average of 15 trips taken per year with an average of three nights away from home per trip; 74 percent are age 35 or older. Their most important goals on the road are feeling safe when on a trip (42 percent) and staying in touch with family (41 percent).  Perhaps due to safety concerns, the Road Weary travelers are the most likely of all traveler groups to bring a portable GPS device.

3. Wide-eyed and Anxious – These novice travelers tend to be younger (89 percent are under 55). They take an average of 11 trips taken per year with an average of four nights away from home per trip. They have less experience on the road than other groups, so while they enjoy travel, they get nervous navigating new destinations and following policies.

4. Passionate High-Tech – These enthusiastic travelers take an average of 13 trips per year with an average of four nights away from home per trip; 91 percent are under age 54. Passionate High-Tech travelers love to travel for work and look to technology to make them more productive help them keep in touch with friends and family. They tend to spend more per trip than other groups and are more likely to fly. This group embraces new technologies such as tablet devices (25 percent) while on the road.

5. New Recruits –These less experienced travelers take an average of 14 trips year with an average of six nights away from home per trip. They are the youngest group with (98 percent) under age 54. This group is eager to explore new destinations while on business and eager to travel more and share experiences. They tend to work in high-tech industries and travel internationally on business, and they often use social media to meet up with friends and colleagues on the road.

Whatever group you belong to, despite the fact that nearly half (46 percent) of those surveyed say they are dealing with tight travel budgets, 78 percent agreed that there is no substitute for being there in person.