When organisations assess international travel risk, the focus is often placed on the destination.
Country risk ratings are reviewed.
Locations are assessed.
Accommodation and venues are considered.
This is all necessary.
But in practice, issues that impact safety and operations don’t always occur at the destination.
They occur in transit.
Travel between locations is often treated as a logistical detail rather than a risk environment in its own right.
Flights are booked.
Transfers are arranged.
Routes are planned.
And with that, a number of assumptions begin to form:
These assumptions are understandable. In many parts of the world, they are accurate.
In more complex environments, they are not.
The journey introduces multiple points where control can reduce and conditions can change.
For example:
These are common characteristics of operating in higher-risk or rapidly changing environments.
The challenge is that these risks are often dynamic, location-specific, and not always formally communicated.
Travel plans are typically built in advance.
Routes are agreed.
Timelines are set.
Logistics are confirmed.
However, in many regions, conditions can evolve quickly. When plans rely on static information, they can quickly lose relevance.
This is where organisations begin to experience delays, uncertainty, and increased exposure that only dynamic support and thinking can overcome.
Focusing solely on the destination can create a false sense of control.
An office may be secure.
A venue may be appropriate.
But if movement to and from those locations is not properly managed, risk remains.
This is particularly relevant for:
In these scenarios, the journey is not a secondary consideration. It is a primary risk factor.
More developed travel risk management approaches treat the journey as a series of decision points, rather than a fixed plan.
They:
This approach recognises that movement is not linear.
It is influenced by factors that can change throughout the day.
The ability to respond to those changes is what maintains control.
A key challenge in managing journey risk is the gap between planned conditions and current reality.
Public information sources and general updates provide useful context, but often lack the specificity required for operational decisions.
Effective journey management relies on:
Without this, organisations may continue to operate based on outdated assumptions.
A practical way to assess journey risk is to move beyond destination-focused planning and ask:
These questions help identify where assumptions may exist.
With increased global movement and activity in higher-risk regions, journey risk is becoming more relevant. In more complex environments, the journey often carries more variability than the destination itself.
International travel does not begin on arrival. It begins the moment the trip is considered, and before movement starts.
If your current approach focuses primarily on where people are going, and not the journey, it may be worth asking yourself whether you have the same level of clarity and control over how they get there.
Because in many cases, that is where risk is most likely to emerge.