Ottawa Citizen

Make time for a ‘bleisure’ trip

Sightseein­g days on a business jaunt add needed sanity and fun to work

- BETH J. HARPAZ

Jeanne Achille used to find business travel “really depressing” because she never got to sightsee in the places she was visiting.

“I literally would be in a meeting room in the hotel and then go to the airport,” she said.

But these days, Achille, CEO of The Devon Group, which does public relations and marketing for tech firms, is “quite intentiona­l” about flying in early for a business trip or staying over an extra day “to squeeze in a side trip, a spa visit, try out a top restaurant or similar activity.”

Her first “bleisure” (businessan­d-leisure) excursion was in London, where she tacked an extra day on a business trip so she could see the Victoria & Albert Museum.

Building in the extra time has made her “a happier person,” she says. And it doesn’t necessaril­y cost more. In some destinatio­ns, airlines and hotels charge more on weekdays because of higher demand from business travellers, so Achille’s early arrival in Vegas entailed a cheaper flight and a relatively inexpensiv­e hotel room.

Marian Thier expects clients to pay for an early arrival for business trips so she can be “rested and ready to work.” Thier decided to build in the extra time after being asked to “go from Sydney to Seoul” with no considerat­ion “that I might be tired, and I had a life.”

Thier, founding partner of the leadership developmen­t firm Listening Impact, based in Boulder, Colorado, says clients don’t complain about paying for extra hotel nights and other expenses because “both clients and I benefited. I felt more in control of my time and life, and the clients got me at my best.” The approach has helped Thier view “business travel as a gift, a way to see the world, rather than as a burden.”

Sashee Chandran, who owns a small artisanal tea company, Tea Drops, says adding time for sightseein­g to a business trip is “part of my philosophy of an integrated lifestyle” with “a great balance of work and life every day, even on weekends.” Chandran attends a lot of trade shows and likes to extend her stay afterward “because prior to the show I’m usually wrapped up with show preparatio­n.”

 ??  ?? Sashee Chandran, who owns a small tea company called Tea Drops, outside Shangri La, a historic home and museum that houses a collection of Islamic art in Honolulu. Chandran was in Hawaii for a trade show.
Sashee Chandran, who owns a small tea company called Tea Drops, outside Shangri La, a historic home and museum that houses a collection of Islamic art in Honolulu. Chandran was in Hawaii for a trade show.

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