10 ways to regain some control of your business travel expenses

When you own your business and pay all the bills, business travel takes on new meaning. Unlike corporate travelers who are backed by expense accounts and expect upgrades and perks, you are clearly fixated on the bottom line.

The good news is that even in these times of rising travel prices there are plenty of opportunities to trim costs and save money. Here are 10 tips for getting a handle on your travel budget.

  1. Create and distribute a travel policy. The policy should provide your employees with clear guidelines about the types and amounts of allowable expenses. It should also include consequences for violating it.
  2. Search the Web for bargains. Popular travel sites such as Expedia, Orbitz, Travelocity, LastMinuteTravel.com, Priceline and Hotwire make it easier for you to find reasonably priced hotels, airline tickets and rental cars.
  3. Volunteer to get bumped. If your flight is overbooked and the airline asks for volunteers to take a later flight, step forward. Most airlines offer generous travel vouchers that can save you big bucks on your next trip. As a business traveler, you may not have flexible travel plans, but if you do, you could get a free ticket for your time.
  4. Join your preferred airline’s frequent-flier program. Free trips, airport club access and hotel discounts are among the perks you’ll receive for booking flights on the same airline.
  5. Establish a uniform reporting system. Get all of your employees to use standardized forms for reporting expenses. This helps ensure that every report is accurate and can be easily reviewed by you and your accountant.
  6. Meet virtually. Virtual meetings can reduce your travel costs, boost productivity and even increase morale. Virtual meeting options include videoconferencing, Web conferencing, teleconferencing and online collaboration.
  7. Negotiate lower travel and lodging prices. In the past, small businesses didn’t have the power to negotiate lower prices. But travel-related businesses have begun offering special discounts to small and midsize businesses.
  8. Use a single corporate credit card for all travel and entertainment expenses. This simplifies the bookkeeping process and may even earn you airline miles if you use the right card.
  9. Take advantage of convention discounts. Convention organizers often work with local hotels to offer discounted rates to attendees. If you are traveling to a convention, find out if the meeting planners have secured travel discounts for attendees. Companies with whom you do business may also get a discounted rate at local hotels.
  10. Take advantage of tax deductions. Business travel costs can be deducted as a business expense. If your travel is all business, you can deduct all the travel-related expenses; if your travel is part business and part pleasure, you can deduct the portion that was business-related.

What to pack

Noise-canceling headphones. Bose’s QuietComfort headphone is one of the most popular.

USB flash memory drive. Determine your document storage capacity needs before purchasing one; prices will vary greatly depending on this.

Wireless mouse. Find one with four-way scrolling so you can scroll side to side as well as up and down.

IGo universal charger. Be sure to get an iGo with two cords, one for regular wall outlets and one for power-ready airline seats.

Travel pillow. Choose one that has memory foam or is inflatable to maximize carry-on baggage space.

Laptop carrying case. An ideal laptop case has some kind of air protection system or protective sleeve that will guard the laptop against bumps or accidental drops.

Know where you’re going

Before your business trip, go to Yahoo Local Maps or CitySearch for maps and driving instructions. Tuck them in your briefcase for a fast getaway. Also, since driving in an unfamiliar city can be complicated, a cell phone headset will keep your hands free while you check in with the office.

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