Redefining Corporate Travel and Hospitality Through Sustainability

As we start 2025, corporate travel and business events reactivate. There is a pressing need for the business event industry to adapt to a landscape evolving with digitalization, sustainable regulations, and changing societal values. Business events significantly contribute to the visitor economy, enhancing job creation, attracting talent and investment, and promoting cultural heritage among visitors and locals. They also play a crucial role in breaking seasonality, maintaining and developing local infrastructure, boosting innovation, and supporting local events suppliers’ growth, including hotels. Hotels face the challenge of meeting extensive data requirements specified in Requests for Proposals (RFPs). Associations such as GBTA[1] have standardized procedures to aid hotels in preparing data to improve their qualifications for RFPs.

A whitepaper developed by BEFuture (see[2])—a collaboration of industry stakeholders including NGOs, academic institutions, event organizers, and corporations, funded by the European Union—explores the future business model for business events. It underscores the necessity for the business travel community to prepare for socioeconomic and environmental challenges and opportunities[3]. The overarching aim is to leave a lasting, positive legacy on the local territories, encouraging innovation and enhancing well-being across the business events value chain and other associated sectors.

From this backdrop, the following three questions emerge:

  • What impact does the growing requirement for sustainability data in corporate RFPs have on the competitiveness of hotels lacking rigorous environmental and social policies?
  • Which sustainable practices or certifications are increasingly becoming essential for hotels to secure MICE and corporate travel contracts?
  • How are corporate clients assessing the sustainability efforts of venues during the RFP process, and which metrics are predominantly used?
  • What technologies are being used to gather data and communicate practices between corporate clients and hotels? Sources:

[1] GBTA Standards

[2] BEFuture Whitepaper

[3] Wee, H., Kamarulzaman, N.D. and Anas, M.S., 2022. MICE Industry Survival: A Systematic Literature Review

Sven Wiltink
Sven Wiltink

Global Senior Director Sustainability at Radisson Hotel Group

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Amy Wald
Amy Wald

Founder and President, Greenluxe Inc.

Natasha  Montesalvo
Natasha Montesalvo

Principal Consultant – Destination, Strategy and Insight at EarthCheck

Jonathon Day
Jonathon Day

Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director School of Hospitality and Tourism Management

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Melinda  Ratkai

Greg  Poirier
Greg Poirier

MBA, Global Director, Hospitality Certification Programs, Audubon International

What I am finding is that Prince Harry’s Sustainable Travel Philanthropy, Travalyst, is quickly becoming a leading and essential tool for global business travel. They have already achieved great success in empowering travelers at the critical point of making a flight booking decision in providing carbon footprint data and choices front and center to use while making that decision. As they continue to address other sectors, now focused on accomodations, that will further enable the business traveler valuable insight to the most sustainable hotels and resorts, again presenting relavent sustainability data present at the point of making a purchase.

Federico Vignati

Willy Legrand
Willy Legrand

Professor at IU International University of Applied Sciences Germany

Sustainability in Hospitality

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