Services

Why changing mobility providers feels harder than it should

Most organisations do not change mobility providers because service is perfect.

Most organisations do not change mobility providers because service is perfect.

Across global mobility, there are organisations experiencing inconsistent service, frustrated stakeholders and growing pressure to improve employee experience. Yet many remain with the same relocation management company for years. The reason is rarely satisfaction. More often, it is uncertainty around what comes next.

Why changing mobility providers feels harder than it should

The paradox of provider loyalty

Global mobility is built around movement, adaptation and change. Yet when it comes to provider relationships, the industry often behaves very differently.

Many mobility leaders can quickly identify areas where service could improve. Employee feedback may be inconsistent. Internal stakeholders may be questioning programme effectiveness. Service delivery may vary significantly by region. Innovation may have stalled. Reporting may no longer support decision-making in the way it once did.

Yet despite recognising these challenges, organisations often remain with the same relocation management company for many years.

The reason is simple. The perceived risk of change frequently outweighs the visible frustrations of staying exactly where they are.

Why organisations stay when they know improvement is needed

Most organisations do not change mobility providers because service is perfect. They stay because changing providers feels difficult, disruptive and potentially risky.

In reality, many programmes continue operating in a state of accepted compromise. Service issues become familiar. Additional internal effort becomes routine. Stakeholders adapt their expectations. Over time, what would once have triggered a review becomes normalised.

That creates an interesting paradox. The longer an organisation remains with a provider, the more comfortable the relationship can feel, even when the programme itself is no longer performing at the level the business requires.

The hidden cost of standing still

When organisations evaluate supplier performance, they often focus on contractual delivery, service metrics and escalation volumes. However, the true cost of an underperforming mobility programme is often felt elsewhere.

Employee experience often feels the impact first

Employees rarely see governance structures, procurement processes or supplier scorecards. They experience mobility through communication, responsiveness, consistency and support.

When service begins to decline, employee experience often declines alongside it. Delayed responses, fragmented communication and inconsistent delivery can affect not only the relocation itself, but how employees perceive their employer during a significant career and life transition.

For organisations competing for global talent, that experience matters.

Internal teams absorb the operational burden

One of the most common signs of programme strain is when internal mobility teams begin compensating for supplier shortcomings.

Additional stakeholder management, increased escalations, manual workarounds and greater oversight requirements gradually become accepted as normal operating practice. The challenge is that these hidden inefficiencies rarely appear on supplier scorecards, yet they consume significant time and resource.

As organisations continue to ask mobility teams to do more with less, these operational costs become increasingly difficult to ignore.

Why change feels more risky than it often is

If organisations recognise service challenges, why do so few make a change?

The answer is usually fear of disruption.

Concerns around implementation, employee impact, stakeholder resistance and programme continuity are entirely understandable, particularly when mobility programmes support business-critical talent. However, many of the concerns organisations have about changing providers are based on assumptions rather than reality.

Modern provider transitions are typically designed to minimise disruption. Most established relocation management companies have dedicated implementation teams, structured governance frameworks and proven methodologies designed to protect both employees and programme continuity throughout the transition process.

Good transitions are rarely dramatic

The most successful provider transitions are often the least visible.

Effective planning, stakeholder engagement, communication and knowledge transfer allow organisations to move between providers with far less disruption than many expect.

Mobility programmes evolve continuously. Policies change. Technologies change. Business priorities change. Supplier transitions are simply another form of programme evolution when managed effectively.

The bigger question is often not whether an organisation can successfully change provider. It is whether the benefits of remaining with the current provider still outweigh the opportunity cost of exploring something better.

The question mobility leaders should be asking

The expectations placed on global mobility programmes today are very different from those of five years ago. Employee experience has become a board-level conversation. Data visibility is increasingly important. Flexibility is expected. Talent strategies are evolving rapidly. Organisations are looking for providers that can support not only relocation delivery, but broader workforce objectives.

As a result, mobility leaders should periodically challenge whether their current provider relationship continues to support where the business is heading, rather than where it has been.

Five questions worth asking

  • Are we receiving the level of service we would expect if we were selecting a provider today?
  • Has employee experience improved, remained static or declined over the last three years?
  • Are internal teams spending more time managing the supplier than they should?
  • Does our provider actively challenge our thinking and help us improve?
  • If we were running a procurement process tomorrow, would our incumbent still win?

Not every provider relationship needs to change. Long-term partnerships can create tremendous value when they continue to evolve alongside organisational needs.

However, organisations should also recognise that staying with an underperforming provider carries risk of its own. Employee experience can suffer. Operational inefficiencies can become embedded. Opportunities for innovation can be missed.

Sometimes the biggest risk is not changing provider. Sometimes it is assuming that doing nothing is the safer option.

Frequently asked questions

How often should organisations review their relocation management company?

Most organisations formally review provider performance annually and conduct broader market assessments every three to five years, depending on programme complexity, stakeholder requirements and business priorities.

What are the biggest reasons organisations change mobility providers?

Common drivers include declining service quality, inconsistent employee experience, limited innovation, poor reporting, regional delivery challenges, increasing operational burden on internal teams and changing business requirements.

Does changing providers create disruption for relocating employees?

With effective planning, governance and communication, most provider transitions can be completed with minimal impact on employees and ongoing relocations.

What should organisations look for in a modern relocation management company?

Organisations increasingly prioritise employee experience, operational flexibility, programme visibility, strategic partnership, technology enablement, global delivery consistency and the ability to adapt alongside evolving business needs.

How can mobility teams determine whether change is necessary?

Regular stakeholder feedback, employee satisfaction data, service performance metrics and strategic programme reviews often provide the clearest indication of whether a provider relationship continues to deliver value and support future objectives.