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The Effect of Corporate Influence in the Short Haul Business Travel Market
Attribution
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Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
The importance of corporate involvement in the decision making process for business related air travel is being increasingly recognised in the literature. Business travellers consume air services (i.e. they take airline flights), however; they may not be the principal decision-maker in the purchase. Also it is the organization that employs the traveller that incurs die cost for air travel. Consequently this research addresses the relationship between the traveller and the employing organisation in the purchase of air travel. In this paper traveller opinions on their corporate travel policy are evaluated using a Likert summated rating scale. The benefits sought, by the traveller, from the air service are also investigated and these benefits are used to segment the short haul business air travel market in the EU. Changes in the market for short haul business travel since the full liberalisation of the aviation market in-the EU are evaluated by comparing the data to an earlier study of similar travellers in 1992.
Author
- Mason, Keith J. Cranfield Univ.
Citation: Mason, Keith J. (2019). The Effect of Corporate Influence in the Short Haul Business Travel Market. Headquarters. NASA NTRS ID 19990111545. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19990111545 ↗