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Travel
Bans Must Not Deter Business as Usual
Industry
Experts Urge America's Business Leaders to Find Technology
Solutions
to Circumvent Corporate Travel Restrictions
by Alex Zavistovich
When
President Bush vowed to the
American
public on the evening of September 11 that America's economy
would
be open for business the next day, it was a gesture that the
country
would not be brought to a standstill by terrorism.
At
the same time, press reports show a trend among companies, including
Intel
and Sun Microsystems, as well as many other large corporations, to
suspend
air travel indefinitely for the safety of their employees.
Despite
this increasing trend toward banning corporate travel, industry
observers
are urging America to heed the President and begin returning
to
"business as usual."
Geoff
Bobroff, president of Bobroff Consulting, stressed the need for
the
American economy
to quickly get back on track. Bobroff is a
prominent
consultant to the financial services industry.
"It
is likely that U.S. markets may decline as much as five or ten
percent
from our current levels as a result of the attack on America,"
Bobroff
estimated. "The rebuilding of business needs to take place right
away.
We can't let the economy stop; too much depends on it." |
For
organizations with global communications needs, it
makes
tremendous sense to use
teleconferencing and any other
technological
tools at their disposal to quickly return to business as
usual."
|
Bobroff
acknowledged, however, that with corporate bans on business
travel
and heightened security measures, "American air travel will
become
much more complicated. Businesses will need to look for
alternatives.
For organizations with global communications needs, it
makes
tremendous sense to use teleconferencing and any other
technological
tools at their disposal to quickly return to business as
usual."
Andrew
W. Davis is managing partner at Brookline, Massachusetts-based
Wainhouse
Research, a market research consultancy specializing in
conferencing
technologies and applications. Davis spoke plainly about
the
need to put American business back on track.
"If
we don't return to business as usual as quickly as possible, the
terrorists
will have won," Davis said. "American power is derived from
economic
strength more than anything else, and we can't maintain
economic
strength if we crawl into a business activity hole with our
heads
down. With technology, we have
credible, viable, effective
alternatives
to travel, alternatives that can enable us to go about
rebuilding
America and American business." Davis,
like Bobroff, cited
advances
in teleconferencing as a practical way to circumvent corporate
travel
bans.
In
the hours immediately following the tragedy, Ken Hayward, CEO of
V-SPAN,
saw a 30 to
50 percent increase in demand for teleconferencing
solutions.
V-SPAN is a King of Prussia, Pennsylvania-based provider of
video-,
audio- and Webconferencing services, as well as streaming media
delivery.
"American
businesspeople have shown remarkable resiliency," Hayward
says.
"Almost immediately, they began to use a host of conferencing
solutions
to reach out to their employees domestically and
internationally.
Throughout this tragedy, they have done their best to
not
lose a step."
Hayward,
who saw similar use of technology as far back as the Gulf
crisis
in 1991, predicts that demands for teleconferencing and similar
solutions
to connect worldwide corporate offices may spike as much as
100
percent over previous levels in the near term.
The
experts remain confident about the future of the American economy,
as
business as
usual returns. "Because of the vibrant nature of the U.S.
economy
in general, I'm convinced that this tragic stimulus will lead to
more
robust growth in coming years than might have otherwise been
possible,"
said Bobroff.
"The
American spirit will prevail," said Davis. "No limit on travel
will
deter
American business from rising above this tragedy."
Added
Hayward, "We are seeing a moving unity among Americans. We are all
committed
to business as usual. We are all up to the challenge."
Alex
Zavistovich, is a freelance technology writer based in Silver Spring, MD. To
find out more about how V-SPAN enables it's customers to conduct effective
electronic meetings, events, and training visit
www.vspan.com
or call
888-44-VSPAN ExpertMagazine.com 2001
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