Introducing the latest myCWT product and service enhancements
Building on our digital, omnichannel myCWT platform, our new products and services will simplify travel management for you and your employees – anytime, anywhere, anyhow.
Note: Featured services may not be available in your country at this time. Please reach out to your CWT representative for more details.
Hear from Chief Product Officer, Erica Antony as she shares the key product highlights of 2024, along with the key areas driving innovation.
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2040: Baseline, Boom or Bust
As we enter an era of rapid transformation and unprecedented challenges, it is essential for travel managers, meeting & event planners, and corporate decision-makers to look ahead and frame our current strategic thinking with a clear vision of the future. Business travel and meetings and events (M&E) are poised for significant change over the next decade and a half, driven by a complex interplay of sustainability goals, technological advancements, evolving work models, and geopolitical dynamics.
In this paper to mark the 10th anniversary of our Global Business Travel Forecast, we explore, for the first time, a long-term vision of the future and potential trajectories through three distinct scenarios, each offering insights into how these forces should affect policy-making, budgeting and priorities. By examining these scenarios, we can better understand the diverse possibilities that lie ahead and the strategic imperatives required to thrive in each potential future.
Based on trajectory data analysis and interviews with industry leaders, behaviorists and climate tech founders, this forward-looking approach enables us to anticipate changes, strengthen our strategies, and make informed decisions that align long-term objectives. It is through this lens of foresight and adaptability that we can build resilience, seize opportunities, and navigate the complexities of the future.
We invite you to reflect on the insights presented, and consider how your organization can prepare for the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead. Together we can ensure that travel and meetings remain catalysts for growth, scalability and sustainable practices.
- Scenario development is both an art and a science
- Megatrends Shaping the Future of Business Travel, Meetings and Events
- Sustainability goals the new crux of corporate policy
- Technology Revolutionizes Travel Management
- Modern work models spark new travel patterns
- Changing demographics open doors to new opportunities
- Three Scenarios: Base case, boom and bust
- Future-proofing strategies
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CWT GBTA Global business travel forecast 2025
When it comes to pricing, global business travel has finally reached an enduring, higher baseline. Prices will continue to rise in 2025, but only moderately, so expect a period of normalized growth.
However, this pricing environment, one of marginal gains and price regularity, is fragile. Global leisure travel has now realized a lot of its pent-up demand, while corporate travel has been resurgent, with 2024 edging at preCovid levels.
There are many factors at play, whether its volatile oil prices, labor costs and constraints, inflationary pressures, and geopolitical factors. As this elevated baseline edges upwards, albeit marginally, travel budgets will come under increased scrutiny, especially as travel patterns and attitudes change.
It’s why business travel can’t be viewed in a silo, and the true value to an organization must be fully realized. This forecast can help with those calculations.
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Capitalize on emerging technologies in corporate travel
Technological advancements are accelerating at an unprecedented pace. How will emerging innovations like Generative AI, blockchain, and self-sovereign identity (SSI) transform corporate travel?
BTN and CWT probed global CEOs, travel managers, industry consultants and tech experts on the promises, questions, and expectations these innovations raise and how they are set to reshape traveler experience, cost control and service delivery in corporate travel and events.
Download and discover
- The technologies that will have the greatest impact on corporate travel in the next 2-5 years
- How these emerging technologies are poised to control costs, enhance service and security, and boost efficiency
- The critical challenges, opportunities, risks and roadblocks each innovation raises
- What travel managers, buyers and experts anticipate from these innovations
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CWT appoints David Zimmer as Head of Channel Evolution
CWT, the B2B4E travel management platform, today announced the appointment of David Zimmer as Head of Channel Evolution. In this newly created role, he will ensure CWT continues to deliver industry-leading options for the way travelers want to interact with the company.
“David is the next piece in the Traveler Experience leadership team, and I am delighted to welcome him to the team,” said Niklas Andreen, CWT’s Executive VP and Chief Traveler Experience Officer. “David brings over 20 years’ international experience in growth and product innovation across multiple roles, and has a successful track record of developing strategy and translating it into operational execution and product innovation.”
Zimmer will report to Niklas Andreen and sit on the TX leadership team. He will be based in London.
Prior to joining CWT, Zimmer held various leadership positions in the travel industry, including most recently Global Head of Innovation & Data, Hospitality for Travelport. He is a former consultant in KPMG’s Strategy Group and holds an MBA from Cranfield School of Management, and a BSc and BA from Duke University.
CWT is a leading global partner in business travel, meetings, and events. Operating across six continents, we deliver sustainable, tailored solutions that help organizations connect, engage, and thrive in an evolving world. Our myCWT platform integrates advanced technology with human expertise to simplify travel and enhance traveler and attendee experiences. Extensive global coverage, seamless data integration, AI-driven analytics, and carbon-conscious travel tools enable businesses to optimize their travel and meetings programs while delivering measurable value.
With 150 years of industry experience and a deep commitment to partnership, CWT collaborates with clients to shape the future of business travel and events, making them more efficient, responsible, and impactful.
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Best laid plans: Meet senior meeting planner Meghan Likes
Meghan Likes, Senior Meeting Planner, at CWT Meetings & Events is one of seven industry pros that Minnesota Meetings + Events selected to honor in the magazine’s Hall of Fame.
Meghan understands the formidable set of skills required to be a meetings and events planner. Unbridled creativity, impeccable organization and the ability to charm and manage people are part of a good planner’s daily life. Here she shares her insight on finding a mentor, work-life balance and going with the flow.
On life at CWT
CWT has been on my radar since 2008. I was working for a nonprofit at the time and one of my board of directors was an amazing woman. She worked for CWT and I thought: ‘If they hired this wonderful, smart person, I want to be around more of those people.’”
My biggest challenge is just that there are not enough hours in the day to connect with everyone I want to connect with and do everything that I want to do. The account that I’m on, we’re working on between 75-100 meetings a year. Just to keep up with all of the connections and people is time-consuming.
On work-life balance
You need to understand your capacity and find a manager that supports you and recognizes the amount of work that goes into meetings and events. Once you find them, don’t let them go. My supervisors and bosses are fantastic women. They’ve been in the meetings and events industry for years so they totally understand the challenges and how to support me as an individual and as an employee.
I like to get outside and go for a big hike to either ramp myself up or wind myself down. It’s just peaceful and meditative and gets me in a clearer headspace.
On improvising
You can plan down to the last detail, but when you’re working with weather conditions or a hundred different humans or just the unpredictability of life, you need to have the skills to figure out a resolution to anything that pops up. I love going with the flow. Once you’re on-site, you just need to make things happen.
A longer version of this interview was published on meetings mags.
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Face Time – Would you rather have WiFi or chat to your neighbor?
Ponder this question: When you’re on a plane, do you prefer to have no access to the internet or have to sit next to a talkative stranger?
In an era where we spend most of our time glued to our screens and not having internet connection can make most of us break into a cold sweat, the answer seems obvious. But is it really? How many of us favor hours of conversation over online connectivity?
In a recent survey of 2,700 business travelers from the Americas, Europe, and Asia Pacific, we found that only 54% choose to have no internet access. Travelers from the Americas are the least willing to engage with fellow passengers (41%), followed by Europeans (44%), whereas travelers from Asia Pacific score 50% for each scenario.
However, the regional results don’t reflect local realities. If we split the results per nationality, we get a really interesting ranking of ‘outgoing’ cultures. Ready to see if the results reflect any stereotypes you might have?
When it comes to a preference for chatting to fellow passengers, Chinese travelers rank first (67%), followed by Argentinians (61%), Mexicans (55%); Indians (52%), Belgians, Dutch, and Germans (51%); French (47%), Spanish and Canadians (43%), Swedish (38%), Brits (35%), US travelers (34%), Italians (33%), Brazilians (32%), Singaporeans (30%), Japanese (27%), and Australians (26%).
And what about the gender split? There’s an old and rather misogynist saying: “A woman’s tongue wags like a lamb’s tail.” It couldn’t be more wrong. Despite the fact that science has found that girls find it easier to acquire language than boys the reality is that – in every region we surveyed – women travelers were less inclined to sit next to a talkative stranger than men. Could it be due to our mental load? Do we view our travel time as an opportunity for a bit of peace and quiet?
The age split also threw up surprises. There is a general perception that young people prefer to communicate on social media than talk to each other face-to-face. However, our research shows that in every region millennials were most inclined to sit next to a chatty, unknown travel companion. And it seems that the older we get, the grumpier we become. Boomers ranked last after Gen X travelers.
So with that in mind, and regardless of your nationality, gender or age, I invite you to take the chance to have a good old chinwag with the person seated next to you on your next flight. You never know, it could help you land a deal, a job opportunity, or even meet the love of your life.
And if the conversation becomes insufferable, you can always get up and hide in the galley, pretend there is a project you need to work on, or claim air-sickness.
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CWT Energy, Resources & Marine appoints Robert Pietro as Senior Director, Global Program Management, Americas
CWT Energy, Resources & Marine (CWT ERM), the global leader in providing integrated travel and mobility services to companies in the oil & gas, renewable energies, mining and marine sectors and a unit of CWT, the B2B4E travel management platform, has further strengthened its client management team with the appointment of industry veteran Robert Pietro as its Senior Director of Global Program Management for the Americas.
Based in Houston, Pietro will lead CWT ERM’s client management teams across 22 countries in North America and Latin America.
“Robert comes to us with a wealth of travel industry experience with the oil and gas Industry,” said Tony Berry, Vice President, Global Program Management, CWT ERM. “His appointment serves to reinforce our position at the forefront of travel management services for corporations operating in this sector.”
Before joining CWT ERM, Pietro held leadership roles at Sabre Corporation, Continental Airlines and American Express Global Business Travel. He has extensive experience working in the Houston market, exceptional client relationship management skills and a noted ability to create, develop and expand long term partnerships through the consultative selling process. He holds an MBA from University of Houston and a Bachelor of Business Administration from University of Miami Business School.
CWT is a leading global partner in business travel, meetings, and events. Operating across six continents, we deliver sustainable, tailored solutions that help organizations connect, engage, and thrive in an evolving world. Our myCWT platform integrates advanced technology with human expertise to simplify travel and enhance traveler and attendee experiences. Extensive global coverage, seamless data integration, AI-driven analytics, and carbon-conscious travel tools enable businesses to optimize their travel and meetings programs while delivering measurable value.
With 150 years of industry experience and a deep commitment to partnership, CWT collaborates with clients to shape the future of business travel and events, making them more efficient, responsible, and impactful.
About CWT Energy, Resources & Marine
We provide specialist travel management solutions for many of the world’s leading companies in the oil & gas, mining, offshore, marine and alternative energies industries. With our rich heritage and experience, we help our clients find the right solutions for their complex travel needs, often in some of the least accessible places on earth. We are proud to be part of CWT – a global leader in travel, hotel booking and meetings & events. -
The Green Tide – Working towards a more sustainable maritime transport system
Today, our impact on the environment takes center stage in every major discussion and decision taken at a global level.
The debate has reached maritime transport. Over 90% of global trade is carried by ships across our water bodies. Our way of life and access to products and services would be forever changed without shipping, intercontinental trade, the transport of raw materials, and the import/export of affordable food and manufactured goods.
So, as seaborne trade continues to expand, how is the industry working towards a more sustainable future?
The International Maritime Organization (IMO) has put in place a January 1st 2020 deadline for the world maritime fleet to reduce sulfur emissions from bunker fuel from 3.5% presently down to 0.5%.
This leaves ship owners around the world with two options: use cleaner but more expensive marine gas oil, or install scrubbers to filter sulfur from dirtier oil.
There was initially a stalemate between owners and the IMO to see who would blink first. This led to speculation on prices of high sulfur fuel oil (HSFO), as many believed that owners would be forced to switch to low sulfur fuel oil (LSFO) pushing the price of HSFO down, in turn making the installation of scrubbers a viable option. A market leader in scrubber technology, the Finnish giant Wärtsilä, puts the cost of a single scrubber system between 3 and 12 US$ million per vessel.
Scrubbers are gaining in popularity as owners from various shipping sectors reveal investments in the technology, including most recently Hapag-Lloyd, DHT Holdings, Maran Tankers, Safe Bulkers, and Star Bulk.
However, shipping giant Maersk recently announced that it will not be solely investing in scrubbers as it does not see the technology as a long-term solution to cleaner vessels. Maersk will be using a combination of LNG fuel, low sulfur fuel oil, and scrubbers on its fleet.
The new compliant fuels are expected to push the container shipping industry’s fuel bill by US$15 billion, with Maersk Line alone having to pay US$2 billion more for fuel on an annual basis. Hence, diversifying and pursuing cost-efficient investments – including scrubbers – is a sound strategy given the fast-approaching deadline for the enforcement of the new rules.
Certainly, we are seeing a renewed focus on the health and sustainability of our planet. With end users and consumers becoming more environmentally aware, there is an urgent need for governments and trade organizations around the world to step up their efforts in the fight for a cleaner-greener planet.
With autonomous ships, wind and solar powered ships, and drones for delivery the change is certainly underway.
CWT Energy, Resources & Marine remains at the forefront, shaping our customers’ travel programs to achieve efficiency and sustainability in a challenging and changing environment.
We wish the global maritime sector fair winds as it steps into a new chapter of sustainable shipping.
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CWT M&E Appoints Petrina Goh as Singapore Director
CWT Meetings & Events (CWT M&E), the meeting & events division of CWT,the B2B4E travel management platform, has appointed Petrina Goh as its new Director for Singapore. She will be responsible for growing CWT M&E’s business in this key market, and creating highly participative, digital and data-driven M&E experiences for clients.
“The number of meetings, events and incentive trips managed by our team in Singapore has nearly doubled over the last five years,” said Sam Lay, Senior Director, Asia Pacific, CWT Meetings & Events. “It’s also one of the more advanced markets in the region, with companies looking beyond just savings to increase attendee engagement, better mitigate risks and maximize their ROI.”
“Petrina has contributed greatly to the growth of our business in Singapore, and changing the conversation around how our clients define success for their meetings and events. I’m confident that we’ll continue to scale greater heights under her leadership.”
Goh has over a decade of experience in the meeting & events and hospitality industries. She joined CWT M&E in 2015 as a Business Development Executive, and in 2017 was promoted to the role of Senior Business Development Manager.
CWT M&E established its operations in Singapore in 2005, marking its entry into Asia Pacific. It has since become one of the most important markets for CWT M&E’s business globally, both in terms of organizing meetings and events for clients based here, as well as for in-bound groups.
CWT is a leading global partner in business travel, meetings, and events. Operating across six continents, we deliver sustainable, tailored solutions that help organizations connect, engage, and thrive in an evolving world. Our myCWT platform integrates advanced technology with human expertise to simplify travel and enhance traveler and attendee experiences. Extensive global coverage, seamless data integration, AI-driven analytics, and carbon-conscious travel tools enable businesses to optimize their travel and meetings programs while delivering measurable value.
With 150 years of industry experience and a deep commitment to partnership, CWT collaborates with clients to shape the future of business travel and events, making them more efficient, responsible, and impactful.
CWT Meetings & Events
CWT Meetings & Events (M&E) is an award-winning global corporate events management service. Representing all industry sectors, CWT M&E delivers comprehensive live, virtual and hybrid event solutions for thousands of customers every year. Ranging from end to end productions of some of the world’s largest and complex global conferences, through to intimate national teambuilding experiences.
Follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter. -
River cruises, food trucks and massage stands – The “festivalization” of corporate meetings & events gains traction in Asia Pacific
In the sphere of meetings and events, the familiar, staid scenario of days in a ballroom or a conference facility is slowly dissolving, yielding to the growing trend of festivalization, an immersive experience that gives a business event a relaxed, consumer ambience. This can be anything from co-curations of sessions and innovative workshops to greater social media activity and more creative visual and venue design, injecting routine get-togethers with style and excitement.
But what is feeding this increasingly commonplace movement, what kind of requests does it involve, what are the challenges associated, and do the benefits really outweigh the costs?
Meeting & event planners get creative
“We’ve definitely seen an increase in clients wishing to create their own festival atmosphere when planning events,” says Michelle Sargent, Director CWT Meetings & Events, Australia/New Zealand. “This has been evident in many industries such as automotive, beauty, pharmaceutical and direct selling. Everyone wants to move away from the four walls of a conference room.” The reason being that a standard room, whether it’s in Bali or Sydney, could be anywhere – whereas in today’s world of hyper-connectivity, attendees want something more experiential. Don Lau, Assistant Vice President, Global Group and Event Sales, Shangri-La Hotels & Resorts, has also noticed this trend increasing over the past five years, especially for meetings and events with a lot of younger participants.
The demand for festivalization has definitely grown, as companies look for inspirational ideas that allow maximum exposure through their social media, and the seed for an event usually germinates in the planning stages.
Sargent notes that about 98% of her Australian clients demand at least one outdoor event, clarifying that it’s a cultural expectation. Unsurprisingly, some of the top destinations for festivalization are in Australia — Sydney, the Gold Coast, and Adelaide, helped by the expertise and knowledge of suppliers to stage these kind of events, temperate climates that make them available year-round, and affordable options that allow firms with limited budgets a range of choices. Other popular destinations include Bali, Fiji, and Phuket. “We’ve done several three-day conferences and conventions, and rather than the old-style, long tables in a room, we might have part of the exhibition on a golf course,” says Sargent. “It gets people out of the room. Sometimes we have pop-up food stalls or massage stands. It’s a chance for an exhibitor showcase to not be done in the old-fashioned way.” For Cyril Constantino, Manager, Supplier Management, Asia Pacific, CWT Meetings & Events, the request for festivalization is especially strong if a client returns to a destination already visited, a way for the firm to experience the place through a new lens.
While are these occasions are on the rise — Sargent sees about a 20% increase year-on-year in Asia-Pacific RFPs asking for them — are they just gimmicks, fun celebrations bleached of real work or tangible benefit to the company? There is certainly a strong case for them, as they create a memorable, experiential event, that highlights a company’s sense of creativity and joie de vivre, and helps to boost morale, and if done right, will be something that all participants will enjoy.
Hotels and tourism boards join the party
Hotels and tourism boards are also getting in on the game. Properties are taking simple measures such as revamping their furniture, adding more beanbags and couches instead of the typical conference chair and table, or preparing different settings and venues, indoors and outdoors. Many hotels are partnering with nearby venues to facilitate this, while some also offer their own offsite catering, comforting clients that might have concerns about the quality of F&B at such events.
Shangri-La Singapore, for example, has a number of nature-inspired meeting spaces, and also offers the use of its Tower Wing Grand Suite for various group functions. The hotel also provides offsite catering at Gardens By The Bay, the National Gallery and other heritage locations. Lau says requests he sees for festivalization “typically come from the luxury and retail sectors”. Examples of prior ones include chartering Singapore River Taxis to pick up a group post-meeting and take them on a trip to Marina Bay Area for an off-site dinner, organizing a dinner event with food trucks in the hotel’s open-air carpark, and using the hotel rooftop as a parking place for a helicopter and then catering a cocktail function there.
Some tourism boards offer rebates to clients when they include off-site activities, or throw in perks such as welcome dinners, airport transfers, and entertainment, especially if they know that the planner for the event is also pitching other destinations. “In Dubai we worked closely with the Dubai Business Events & Convention Bureau to create a bedouin setting in the desert, and used a five-star hotel for the catering and staff,” Sargent says.
Caitrin Moh, Senior MICE Manager for the Korea Tourism Organization, says the tourism office can help planners check on the feasibility of their meeting and event concepts, provide guidance on securing necessary government permits, and also connect them with relevant suppliers and attractions such as caterers, restaurants, premium shopping outlets and theme parks near their event venue.
Local regulations, budgets and other considerations
While the desire is very much apparent, the logistics of shaping a memorable event is not without challenges. The biggest concern is security and safety, and for any event there must be assurances and measures that everyone will get home safely, with infrastructure and lighting in place so that nobody is in danger. Council permissions, especially in Australia and New Zealand as Sargent attests, can be hard to come by, especially with considerations for noise restrictions, alcohol consumption, pyrotechnics, and curfews. This is why, she notes, that many of her clients choose to take the event elsewhere in the region.
Moh advises that varying business practices and cultural differences must be considered. For example, South Korea does not allow private events to be held at their historical sites such as the Gyeongbok Palace or Secret Garden (Biwon) in Changdak Palace. Other factors such as labor laws should also be taken into account. “South Korea has strict labor laws, so additional fees might need to be paid if suppliers are required to work beyond official business hours. Meeting and event organizers should clarify and agree on these details with their venue and suppliers before inking contracts.”
Budget is perhaps the factor that guides the type of event possible, informing what is and isn’t feasible, and Constantino reminds clients that they should be prepared to pay more for this kind of event versus the standard indoor arrangement. Within a hotel, different venues — a poolside gala dinner for instance — may charge extra for set-up of food stations, the delivery of power, the addition of entertainment, and these can squeeze the budget. “In RFPs, clients always mention their past history, what they’ve done before, what other agencies have proposed,” says Constantino. “They want something new, they want us to inspire them. They want money-can’t-buy experiences. And we can come up with something based on their budget.”
It is also critical that the planner understands the demographic that will attend the event, so charging an active 25-year-old planner to fashion an event for a sedate group in its 60s might not be the ideal match. To counter this, Sargent recommends using a committee, a small and reliable team that brings diverse opinions and ideas to the proposal and works closely with the appointed events company.
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Shanghai rising: Discover Asia’s meetings and events hotspot
Flying into Shanghai, you’re hit with an aerial view of the sheer variety of what the Chinese city has to offer with its bright lights, buzzing atmosphere, futuristic buildings, and international flavor that exists in this global hub. Here you can find a taste of the old, mixed with modern flair along the Huangpu River. This fast-paced business city has so much to offer, from business-leisure travel right through to the most desirable restaurants and old establishments. You have the full package for the perfect meeting or event destination.
The Bund and beyond
Shanghai is home to some of the most spectacular event spaces. The Bund, the city’s waterfront area has 52 buildings of various architectural styles, including one of the richest collections of Art Deco architecture in the world, complete with a stunning view of the Pudong skyline.
There are several world-class hotels along this strip like the five-star Fairmont Peace Hotel, providing art-deco event spaces. Hosting an event fit for royalty? Shanghai has the perfect venue for it, the Marble Hall of the Children’s Palace, formerly the home of the Kadoorie family. The site is ideal for lunch or dinner events, or largescale meetings. The beautiful marbled terrace and expansive gardens make it suitable for post-event socials.
A new take on team building
Teambuilding in a new destination is about embracing the culture and trying new activities. Gather your colleagues together and have a go at bubble football. Put on a giant bubble suit and play football while you try to take out your colleagues at the same time. The aim of the game is to topple over two of your opponents before you are allowed to score a goal, and the first one to score three wins.
Take a tour with a local photographer and explore the traditional Shanghai lane houses that combines Western and Chinese elements of a bygone era. There is an opportunity to step into a 1920’s Shi Ku Men-style house, as well as meet the residents who have fascinating stories to share.
Time to experiment
Shanghai being a financial center with creativity and innovation in endless supply, you can bring any experiential event alive here. The city lives and breathes influence, primarily through digital platforms. Some of the biggest luxury brands have taken to pushing their creative marketing events to Shanghai as it is supported by art, culture, and technology. There is a vast market for consumer-lead events that create a broad buzz in the online community,
“Attendee engagement is an all-time high,” says Jenny Pu, Sales and Account Manager for CWT Meetings and Events Shanghai, “The events we host are interactive and require attendee input which can change how the event is run. And we can’t forget the culinary scene here in Shanghai which will blow your mind with the various textures and flavors.”
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Aisle be damned – How to nab your favorite plane seat
If you’ve sat in the middle seat on a long-haul flight between a toddler and a basketball player with his kneecap lodged under your laptop, you know what torture feels like. Nobody prefers the middle seat. That we can agree on.
But if you’re an aisle seat person you’ll be surprised that two-thirds of business travelers prefer window seats over aisle seats. That rises to 71% in Asia Pacific, and falls to 59% in the Americas, with the Europeans in the middle at 65% window over aisle.
Passengers who prefer the aisle seat say it’s better because they can walk up and down the aisle when they please, access their overhead luggage and don’t require the clambering skills of a tightrope walker and charm of a diplomat to get to the bathroom. They’re the first off the plane and have a meerkat’s view of when meals will arrive.
Window proponents like control of the window shade, a fuselage on which to rest their sleeping head and ample opportunity to fill their Instagram feed with obligatory shots of the plane wing in the clouds.
Whatever your preference, here are four tips to getting your desired seat.
- Loyalty matters – Depending on the airline, a loyalty card may entitle economy fliers to a better seat. Your card may work on another airline if it has a codeshare agreement with your carrier.
- Check-in at the airport – Check if window seats have opened up as a result of cancellations. If you use a self-service kiosk, you can often review your seat selection and change to a different seat.
- Pay for it – Most airlines allow you to choose your own seat when you book a trip online, sometimes at a marginal extra cost. Click on a button saying something like “pick my seats.” If you have connecting flights, click on “next flight” so you can choose a seat on that plane as well.
- Ask for it – If you haven’t secured your desired seat before going through security, get to the boarding gate early and ask the gate agent if there’s any way to switch.
Look for people traveling alone on the plane if you have not been able to score your desired seat. Ask someone if they’re willing to swap. It doesn’t hurt to ask.
And finally – for those with a taste for risk– if there’s an empty row in the middle of a plane that isn’t full, sit in the middle seat. You could well end up with the entire row to yourself. Or you could end up between a toddler and a basketball player. You win some, you lose some.
- Loyalty matters – Depending on the airline, a loyalty card may entitle economy fliers to a better seat. Your card may work on another airline if it has a codeshare agreement with your carrier.
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CWT research: two-thirds of travelers pick window over aisle; 52% prefer missed flight over lost luggage
Research by CWT, the B2B4E travel management platform, shows that two-thirds of business travelers prefer window seats over aisle seats. That rises to 71% in Asia Pacific, and falls to 59% in the Americas, with the Europeans in the middle at 65% window over aisle.
Globally, a narrow majority of business travelers would prefer to miss their flight rather than be separated from their luggage – with travelers from the Americas showing the strongest preference at 54%, European travelers at 52%, and travelers from Asia Pacific split down the middle.
When it comes to ground transportation, 54% of travelers still prefer traditional taxis over ridesharing services like Lyft or Uber. But there are strong regional differences. In Europe, a full 69% Europeans prefer taxis – almost exactly the reverse of American travelers, 63% of whom prefer rideshare services. Asia Pacific travelers are more evenly split, with 56% preferring taxis.
“These findings provide fascinating and sometimes counter-intuitive insights into how global business travelers approach their journeys,” said Niklas Andreen, Executive VP and Chief Traveler Experience Officer at CWT. “We see significant differences between regions – for example, in Asia, people are more likely to want a window seat, whereas in markets like the US, the view is less of a draw.”
CWT’s research also shows that travelers are generally happy to share their travel preferences with both apps and travel industry staff – globally nine out of ten (89%) of travelers are “extremely or “somewhat” willing to do so. That applies equally to business travel and leisure travel, suggesting that travelers make little distinction between the two, at least when it comes to sharing information on their personal preferences.
The data show that, overall, European travelers are least willing to share data: 14% of Europeans are “not willing” to share their preferences either with apps or people while traveling for business. That rises to 17% when traveling for leisure. Travelers from the Americas or Asia Pacific are much less likely to refuse to share their preferences, especially when traveling for leisure.
CWT is a leading global partner in business travel, meetings, and events. Operating across six continents, we deliver sustainable, tailored solutions that help organizations connect, engage, and thrive in an evolving world. Our myCWT platform integrates advanced technology with human expertise to simplify travel and enhance traveler and attendee experiences. Extensive global coverage, seamless data integration, AI-driven analytics, and carbon-conscious travel tools enable businesses to optimize their travel and meetings programs while delivering measurable value.
With 150 years of industry experience and a deep commitment to partnership, CWT collaborates with clients to shape the future of business travel and events, making them more efficient, responsible, and impactful.
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Secret Agent – Here’s how to take the stress out of booking a headline act
One of the most critical elements for an event is choosing the right keynote speaker or headline talent. Whether it’s an entertainer, industry expert or author, selecting the right talent is a ‘make or break’ process. Here are five things to consider to ensure success.
- Use an accredited and trusted advisor – Hire an agency with demonstrated experience in the events space – like CWT M&E Event Strategy & Design – to do your talent buying for you.
Working with a contact that artist agents know and trust gives you buying power, an opportunity to negotiate and an easier contracting process. A reputable agency can guide you in selecting the artist and they’ll know which artists are more successful at working corporate events. - Consider budget, topic, and genre – Tick the boxes of these talent scouting essentials and you’ll hit the nail on the head. Have a budget in mind or at least a range. Artist fees vary considerably and can be anywhere from $10,000.00 to upwards of $200,000.00 or more. It’s imperative that your agency or talent buyer knows your parameters to recommend the right talent for your needs.
Prepare speaking topics and/ or a musical genre. Communicate your group demographic or psychographic, and your topic, goals, and objectives with your agency or talent buyer so they can identify the perfect talent for your event.
Are you looking for a motivational speaker? Are you interested in certain subject matter, or industry-specific topics like energy and renewables; a futurist/forecaster, or a specialist in building high-performance teams? Would a rock band, country band or singer-songwriter be best for your audience? It’s crucial to contribute to the creative direction.
We learned that having a motivational speaker at the end of a conference boosts audience engagement. It’s common for them to open a conference, but consider one to close the event. Ending with a motivational talk leads to higher audience satisfaction after a long day at a conference. - Pay attention to your contracts and rider – Until your contract is signed and you have paid your deposit, don’t consider your talent booked. Riders are negotiable, but only to a point. There are two types of riders; the production rider and the technical rider. They sometimes come as one document embedded into the overall artist contract, but often they come as separate documents. The production rider will cover the artist’s ground, air, catering, hotel, and personal needs. The technical rider will cover all of their technical requirements. Both riders and the elements within them can be negotiated.
A reputable agency will discuss what is important and negotiate on your behalf. Items that incur additional expenses include travel – often first-class air for your talent and potentially their manager – per diems, meals, ground transfers, hotel suites and technical requirements. Your agency or talent buyer will negotiate these expenses and details on your behalf, but it is always best to anticipate them and budget up front. - Include meet-and-greets – If executive meet-and-greets, photo signings or anything outside of the performance scope is required, they need to be written into the contract with details, timelines and numbers of people clearly defined in advance. Once an offer is accepted and the contract signed it is very difficult to get things added or approved after the fact.
- Insure your artist – It’s common for headliners to request $5 million dollar insurance policies and to be listed as additionally insured. This is non-negotiable. Make sure you speak with your insurance agent or legal team to get the artist listed as additionally insured and give yourself at least two weeks turnaround time.
The main thing to bear in mind when booking an artist is the trust, reputation, and knowledge an experienced buyer brings. Many agencies can look up an artist agent’s number online and contact them, or say that they can contact the speaker or artist on your behalf. But if they are unknown to the agent or artist, they may not be taken seriously.
Agents are highly protective of their celebrity speakers and headliners for obvious reasons, and putting their artist in the hands of someone they know and trust makes contracting a much easier and much more successful process.
- Use an accredited and trusted advisor – Hire an agency with demonstrated experience in the events space – like CWT M&E Event Strategy & Design – to do your talent buying for you.
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RoomIt by CWT appoints Geoffrey Waldmiller VP of Revenue Optimization
RoomIt by CWT, the hotel distribution division of CWT, the B2B4E travel management platform, has appointed Geoffrey Waldmiller as Vice President of Revenue Optimization.
Waldmiller will be responsible for improving the traveler experience through the use of data science and technology. He will help to streamline the shopping process for CWT’s travelers and improve conversion at the point of sale, and he will provide leadership to the RoomIt loyalty and advertising teams.
“Geoff brings a strong portfolio of expertise to RoomIt, with deep roots in both business travel and leisure,” says Scott Hyden, SVP and Chief Experience Officer at RoomIt. “He brings an unparalleled approach to improving the traveler experience and thrives on the challenges the industry presents.”
Before RoomIt, Waldmiller served as Chief Revenue Officer for Schulte Hospitality Group, where he led revenue management, sales, eCommerce, marketing, and analytics for 151 franchised and independent hotels. He previously held several executive roles with MGM Resorts International, also focused on revenue optimization and eCommerce.
With a Bachelor of Science in Industrial and Systems Engineering from Virginia Tech and an MBA in Marketing and Decision sciences from Indiana University, Waldmiller has a knack for developing techniques to assess complex information and generate consumer-oriented strategies. His strong critical thinking and problem-solving skills drive results on high-impact projects. Waldmiller will be based in Chicago.
CWT is a leading global partner in business travel, meetings, and events. Operating across six continents, we deliver sustainable, tailored solutions that help organizations connect, engage, and thrive in an evolving world. Our myCWT platform integrates advanced technology with human expertise to simplify travel and enhance traveler and attendee experiences. Extensive global coverage, seamless data integration, AI-driven analytics, and carbon-conscious travel tools enable businesses to optimize their travel and meetings programs while delivering measurable value.
With 150 years of industry experience and a deep commitment to partnership, CWT collaborates with clients to shape the future of business travel and events, making them more efficient, responsible, and impactful.