No Result
View All Result
Benefits Expert
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Alerts
  • Events
  • Contact
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • PROFILE
  • PENSIONS
  • GLOBAL REWARDS
  • FINANCIAL BENEFITS
  • HEALTH & WELLBEING
  • DIVERSITY & INCLUSION
  • PODCAST
No Result
View All Result
Benefits Expert
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • PROFILE
  • PENSIONS
  • GLOBAL REWARDS
  • FINANCIAL BENEFITS
  • HEALTH & WELLBEING
  • DIVERSITY & INCLUSION
  • PODCAST

Poorly managed work travel fuels field-worker resignations

by Benefits Expert
29/07/2025
Field worker, mobile work, work travel, engineer.pn
Share on LinkedInShare on Twitter

Employers with mobile or field workers, such as non office based engineers, site workers, contractors, and technicians, could be at risk of losing talent as research revealed that poorly managed travel is driving financial stress and resignations. 

Research with 1,405 frequent work travellers across sectors including finance, construction and hospitality, and 105 corporate travel bookers and buyers, found that 60 percent of mobile employees have left or considered leaving a job over poor work travel management.

In addition to this, 80 percent of employees said they regularly cover work travel costs using personal money or credit cards for expenses like hotels and transport, according to workforce travel platform Roomex, which commissioned the survey.

Among those who pay for work travel expenses up front, 34.5 percent have to wait for more than a week to be reimbursed and 8 percent are left out of pocket for more than a month. Researchers found that many of these workers spend as much as £50 a day on items they can’t reclaim, such as meals or transport to remote sites.

Researchers emphasised that this issue is not about an occasional corporate trip as the employees involved are core, field-based employees, whose weekly travel is essential to operations but “rarely factored into retention or wellbeing strategies”.

The findings are outlined in a report from the platform provider called ‘Reinventing the Journey: The Voice of the Field Worker’. It warned that the week-in, week-out journeys, often made at short notice and with little support, mean that people spend long periods away from home in budget hotels far from amenities.

Nearly half of workers (48 percent) said travel arrangements caused them significant stress, while 44 percent report poor work-life balance driven by fatigue, long-distance travel, and irregular schedules. 

The hit on talent retention is particularly acute in construction as 59 percent have considered quitting due to poor work travel arrangements. This is followed by 55.5 percent in the food and drink industry, and 53.5 percent of mobile employees in financial services. Researchers said the issue of inadequate and/or disorganised work travel needs to be tackled as employers are already dealing with talent gaps.

From the travel bookers side, the issues seem preventable with better management. Almost six in ten (58 percent) corporate travel bookers surveyed said that last-minute bookings were their biggest challenge. Late bookings drive up costs and reduce availability. 

RELATED POSTS

The Benefits Expert Guide to Protecting Your Workforce, September 2025

The Benefits Expert Guide to Protecting Your Workforce, September 2025

Blood pressure check, preventative health, screening, optimism bias

‘Optimism bias’ masks health risks as employers urged to champion check ups

More than 70 percent of travel bookers said that unapproved expenses and non-compliant bookings were common issues they see. And nearly a third (30 percent) highlighted that a lack of visibility over what is spent makes it difficult to control budgets. Researchers said that such inefficiencies create additional work for finance teams and leave companies with limited control over travel costs.

Garry Moroney, CEO of Roomex, said: “Workforce travel sounds glamorous. It often isn’t. Most of the time, it means putting family, health, and your personal life on hold for the job. While there’s a small minority who get to enjoy glamorous trips, for many, it is tough and isolating work.

“Businesses have spent years making office life better and improving office perks, but the field workforce is often overlooked. Mobile workers – those who travel at short notice, work irregular hours and sleep far from home – are rarely given the same consideration as their counterparts in the office. And yet, they are critical to the success of many of our nation’s most important sectors. Recruiting and retaining these people is vital, and it’s time we stepped up to support those doing the hard miles.”

The report urged employers to rethink their approach to workforce travel. For example, pre-paying for hotels and implementing clear work travel policies can make a difference. In addition, investing in tools that centralise booking and expense management can reduce stress for employees and costs for employers. The platform provider said this is because centralised travel management helps businesses to reduce out-of-pocket expenses for staff, gain better visibility of costs, and secure consistent accommodation.

Next Post
Call centre workers, phones, customer services, employment, office

Call centre staff broadly engaged but still plan to quit to protect wellbeing

Financial health, wealth, wellbeing, education, money coaching, financial champions

Money talks: how financial wellbeing has become an employer imperative

SUMMIT

BENEFITS UNBOXED PODCAST

Benefits Unboxed
Benefits Unboxed

The podcast from Benefits Expert, the title for HR, reward and benefits professionals.

Seasoned professionals examine the challenges and innovations in today’s employee benefits, reward and HR sector. Every episode, they will unbox a key issue and unpack what it really means for employers and how they can tackle it.

The regulars are Claire Churchard, editor of Benefits Expert; Carole Goldsmith, HR director at the Royal Horticultural Society, and Steve Herbert, consultant and rewards & benefits veteran.

Benefits Unboxed – Hybrid work: reality versus rhetoric
byBenefits Expert from Definite Article Media

Return-to-office mandates are a topic that’s generating plenty of heat in the media, but how closely do the headlines match workplace reality? 

In this episode, one of a three-part series of 10-minute podcasts, hosts Claire Churchard and Steve Herbert discuss data that shows remote or home working is on the rise.

We look at what this means for HR, from balancing employee flexibility with business needs, to ensuring benefits packages remain fair and accessible. We discuss the pinch points, and the opportunities, in building the new normal of work.

Benefits Unboxed – Hybrid work: reality versus rhetoric
Benefits Unboxed – Hybrid work: reality versus rhetoric
31/08/2025
Benefits Expert from Definite Article Media
Search Results placeholder

GUIDE TO WORKPLACE PENSIONS



REQUEST A FREE COPY

OPINION

Steve Herbert, consultant, ambassador, reward, benefits, HR strategy

Steve Herbert: The art of the deal?

Lorna Ferrie, legal and compliance director, Mauve Group

Lorna Ferrie: hybrid is not a loophole, remote teams can’t ignore the pay transparency push

Holly Coe, Innecto Reward Consulting

Holly Coe: friendship is an overlooked superpower when tackling workplace absenteeism

Vitality. Pippa Andrews

Pippa Andrews: how to make exercise more enjoyable for women

SUBSCRIBE

Benefits Expert

© 2024 Definite Article Limited. Design by 71 Media Limited.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

Follow Benefits Expert

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • In depth
  • Profile
  • Pensions
  • Global rewards
  • Financial benefits
  • Health & wellbeing
  • Diversity & Inclusion