→ Understanding Sales Travel
→ Why is Sales Travel Important?
→ How Does Sales Travel Drive Business Growth?
→ Sales Travel Costs vs Benefit Analysis
→ How Should You Measure the ROI of Sales Travel?
→ 3 Sales Travel KPIs Your Business Can Track
→ 5 Ways to Optimise Sales Travel
→ From the Founder: “Why Travel Rarely Disappoints”
→ Sales Travel as a Strategic Business Tool
Travel expenses are viewed as necessary but painful expenditures with vague returns.
The financial cost alone is enough to deter business owners from investing in business-related travel. And if past trips didn’t pan out like you thought they would, or your profit margin is inching lower than management would like, it’s often a recipe for investment uncertainty.
But what if you could turn these trips into your most potent tool for growth?
This article unravels the often-overlooked benefits of sales travel for business growth, highlighting common pitfalls and providing a fresh perspective on how to turn every trip into a strategic investment.
Sales travel refers to business-related travel undertaken to meet existing clients or potential buyers face-to-face.
Importantly, any travel for business purposes – especially sales-related – needs to be strategic. This means maximising appointments on the road and efficient itinerary planning.
Why is Sales Travel Important?
Sales travel allows your people to engage directly with the people who make the decisions. Speaking with clients, in person, facilitates negotiation, trust-building and faster decision-making. Overall, it allows you to maintain visibility and influence with the people who buy from you, ensuring your business stays top of mind.
Ultimately, the value of business travel lies in its ability secure important sales and close big deals.
How Does Sales Travel Drive Business Growth?
Unlike traditional expenditures, travelling to meet clients directly impacts business growth by fostering stronger, more personal connections that are crucial for closing large deals.
Travelling to meet clients does incur costs – flights, accommodations, time away from the office. But these expenses should be viewed through the lens of potential gains. If a $2,000 trip could lead to a $50,000 deal, the return clearly justifies the investment.
But this doesn’t mean all businesses should blindly increase their travel budgets. The key is in the precision of planning – who you meet, the potential deal size, and the strategic importance of the interaction.
If your planning is on point, benefits include the potential for high-value deals, stronger relationships, a deeper understanding of your market, and more effective market penetration.
The returns from business travel hinges not only on the direct costs involved but also on the indirect benefits such as client retention, contract renewals, and enhanced market presence.
Consider the following metrics when it comes to measuring how effective any sales travel is:
Continually evaluate the effectiveness of trips and adapt strategies to ensure the highest ROI.
To leverage sales travel for maximum impact, follow these tips.
Know what success looks like. Before booking any travel, define the specific goals for the trip and the expected outcomes to measure its success.
Target the decision-makers. Ensure all meetings are set with those who will be making the purchasing decision.
Plan effectively. Ensure the itinerary maximises time with clients, and minimises downtime and travel time.
Track relevant outcomes. Track both direct and indirect outcomes of each trip, such as as deals closed, relationships nurtured, and opportunities identified.
Follow up strategically. Develop a robust follow-up strategy to capitalise on the progress made during face-to-face meetings.
→ Related: 5 Proven Strategies to Improve Sales Travel ROI
“In business, we’re always looking at proactive ways to grow our revenue base and grow our profitability.
Quite often, that leads to investments, whether that’s in salespeople, marketing expenses, advertising, staff training, or so on.
But can I tell you a business expense that very rarely disappoints?
Travel.
Specifically, getting in front of people who already buy your product.
Getting in front of those people – regardless of where they are – very rarely disappoints as an investment.
The first assumption we’re going to make is we are getting in front of the right people.
You’re not just getting in front of random people. You’re not getting in front of people who aren’t making decisions. You are going to locations or you are getting in front of people who are going to make a buying decision, whether positively or negatively, to buy your product or service.
Frequently we hear people say, “But it’s expensive to get in front of people!” Because, quite often, the clients we deal with – you’ve got to fly somewhere; you’ve got to take a lot of time out. People have busy calendars; as in, the people in your business have busy calendars, and don’t have time to get in front of them.
The reality is, travel is probably one of the most important – if not the most important – thing they can do with their time.
Let me give you a real-life example of someone we work with.
They worked out, over the course of a full financial year, all the appointments that they had with either prospective clients or existing clients. They backtracked a calculation that worked out every appointment, on average, was worth around about $50,000 worth of new revenue to the business.
As I said a moment ago, a key element is to ensure you’re getting in front of the right people. This business was clearly getting in front of the right people.
But do you know what working out the $50,000 per appointment meant?
It meant that people in the office who didn’t have those sales roles were like, “Why are you in the office? Why are you here?” Because if they weren’t in the office, they knew that they were going to be statistically earning $50,000 for the business per meeting.
(I should have mentioned this earlier, but when I say $50,000 per appointment, this is a business that deals in quite heavy asset sales. So an average transaction for them is somewhere between $300,000 and $400,000. So to give you some perspective, each appointment was worth around 20% of the value of an average sale.
In their case, it was worth it to go and spend a couple of thousand dollars to get in front of somebody. And a couple of thousand dollars could include flights, it could include car, it can include time of the individual to get there, and the time they spend as well.
If I’m selling a smaller dollar value transaction item or service, then naturally my cost needs to be lower than that.
But do the statistics, do the analysis, and very rarely does travel ever disappoint.
If you’ve got a business and your budget is over on your travel expenditure, that is generally a good sign – so long as you’re intelligent around the people you’re getting in front of, and how you’re going about that process.
To give you a counter example of the $50,000 appointment business, someone who we used to work with – and they got bought out by private equity – I was talking to somebody in their finance team who we worked with at that time. When I asked her how business was going she replied, “You know what? We weren’t getting in front of our clients. People were going to site and visiting our clients when we weren’t. They took advantage of our opportunities, and they pulled the rug from under our feet.” And they were finding it hard to build that traction back up.
So if you’re getting in front of the right people, it isn’t just that you are selling the product. You’re staying top of mind for those individuals who are making the buying decisions, or influencing greatly those buying decisions.
If your business is investing in travel and not making it work, there are two common explanations.
First, it’s highly likely you’re not getting in front of the right people.
Second, your salespeople – who I’m assuming are the ones going out to site and visiting prospective clients or existing clients – are not putting enough planning in place around what they want to do with the visit.
To optimise your sales travel, here’s two things I recommend.
First, jam-pack that day. If you have to fly somewhere, get as many appointments as you can.
Second, if you’re on the road, plan out those times so that you’re as effective and as efficient as possible on that journey, and with the expenditure you’re making on the day or days that you’re away.”
Investing in travel to meet clients isn’t just about maintaining relationships; it’s a strategic move that places your business directly in front of the people who matter the most — the decision-makers. This practice keeps your business top-of-mind, helps close significant deals, and ensures that your company doesn’t just remain a name in an email, but a significant presence influencing substantial business decisions.
In summary, while video conferencing tools like Zoom are convenient and essential, they can’t wholly replace the personal touch that face-to-face meetings provide. As you plan your next business strategy session, consider the powerful impact that strategically planned travel could have on your business’s growth trajectory.
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