How to Organise Airport Transfers for Your Executive Team
Managing airport transfers for senior executives is one of those tasks that looks simple until something goes wrong. A missed pickup at CDG Terminal 2E at 6am sets the tone for the rest of the day. Our guide on private chauffeur airport transfers details how to avoid this. Getting the logistics right consistently requires a clear process, the right transport partner and a few operational habits that eliminate the common failure points.
Define the Standard Before You Need It
The first step is establishing what your organisation considers an acceptable standard for executive transport — this is where a corporate VTC account provides a clear framework. This sounds obvious; in practice, many companies have never written it down, which means every EA or travel manager makes different decisions and quality is inconsistent.
Request a quote for your executive transfers. A basic executive transport standard should specify:
| Element | What to define |
|---|---|
| Vehicle category | Saloon (E-Class equivalent) for 1–3 passengers; van for groups |
| Booking lead time | Minimum notice required for standard and urgent requests |
| Driver language | English required for international travellers |
| Wait time included | How long before cancellation fees apply |
| Invoice requirements | VAT, cost centre coding, monthly vs per-journey |
| Name board policy | Always displayed for arrivals, or on request |
Once these parameters are documented, whoever manages travel can book consistently and your VTC partner can allocate appropriately.
The Flight Tracking Question
Any professional VTC operator worth using will monitor flight arrivals automatically. The practical implication is that your EA does not need to watch the arrivals board and call the driver to say a flight has landed early. The driver already knows.
What you should verify before signing with a provider:
- Is flight tracking automatic or does someone need to trigger it manually?
- Does the driver receive an updated pick-up time, or is that managed centrally?
- What happens when a flight is diverted to another terminal?
- Is there a proactive notification to the client in case of extended delays?
These are operational details that distinguish a professional service from an app that simply passes the booking to a third-party driver.
Vehicle Matching by Group Size
Getting vehicle selection right matters both for comfort and for cost. An executive travelling alone in a seven-seat van is wasteful; four executives squeezed into a standard saloon with luggage for a four-day trip is uncomfortable.
| Tamaño del grupo | Recommended vehicle | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1–3 passengers, standard | Mercedes E-Class | Adequate boot for 2–3 cases |
| 1–3 passengers, VIP | BMW Serie 7 | Prestige occasions, C-level |
| 4–6 passengers | Mercedes V-Class | Individual seats, good luggage capacity |
| 6–7 passengers | Mercedes Viano / V-Class XL | Full group, large luggage |
For teams departing at different times or from different locations, consider whether coordinating a single larger vehicle makes more sense than booking multiple saloons — the cost difference is often marginal and the coordination overhead is lower.
Handling Multiple Simultaneous Arrivals
When several members of a delegation land on different flights within a short window, the logistics become more complex. Two approaches work well in practice:
Single vehicle with staggered collection: the driver waits at the airport, collects the first passenger and waits in the vehicle for the second. Works when flights are 30–45 minutes apart and passengers are comfortable with a short wait in a parked vehicle.
Separate vehicles per flight: simpler operationally, higher cost. Appropriate for C-level executives who should not be waiting in a car for a colleague’s delayed flight.
A professional VTC company will help you model both options and advise on the most sensible approach for your specific configuration.
Briefing the Driver
For high-profile arrivals, a driver briefing is not overkill — it is good practice. The briefing should cover:
- The passenger’s name and role (so the driver can address them appropriately)
- Any known preferences (silence, specific temperature, language)
- Luggage details if substantial
- Drop-off address and any intermediate stops
- Whether the passenger should be called or allowed to find the driver independently
Most of this can be captured in the booking notes field and transmitted to the driver before departure. The more relevant context the driver has, the less friction there is on arrival.
Corporate Account Management
For teams with regular travel, managing airport transfers on an ad-hoc basis — different cards, different apps, different drivers — is inefficient and difficult to reconcile at month end. A corporate account with a single VTC provider consolidates this into a single monthly invoice, recoverable VAT and a reporting structure that your finance team can actually use.
The account manager becomes an extension of your travel function: they know your standards, your usual routes, your preferred vehicles and your key travellers. This context reduces booking time and error rate considerably compared to booking from scratch each time.
→ [Request your free quote](/en/quote/) — response within 2 business hours.