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Beyond the shortlist

When providers look the same on paper, the decision is rarely made on paper alone.

When providers look the same on paper, the decision is rarely made on paper alone.

At WERC APAC 2026 in Singapore, Jo Wakeham and Mazura Noordin led two connected conversations exploring the future of global mobility, employee experience and what organisations now expect from a relocation management company. Together, the discussions revealed a clear shift in buying behaviour: clients are placing greater value on operational understanding, flexibility and delivery confidence than standardised service claims or pricing alone.

Two conversations shaping the future of global mobility

At WERC APAC 2026 in Singapore, two connected discussions helped frame an important conversation around the future of global mobility and the evolving expectations placed on today’s relocation management companies.

Jo Wakeham, Global Managing Director at K2 Group, joined the opening panel, Global Mobility at an Inflection Point, exploring whether existing mobility models remain fit for purpose in a market shaped by economic uncertainty, geopolitical shifts, changing workforce expectations and rapid AI-driven transformation.

Building on that broader discussion, Mazura Noordin, Client Account Director at K2 Group, moderated a roundtable session focused on a more commercial question: what really tips the decision when providers look the same on paper?

What the roundtable revealed

Bringing together corporate mobility leaders and service providers, the discussion explored what genuinely influences provider selection when capabilities, service offerings and written responses appear broadly similar.

The conversation highlighted a growing shift in buyer expectations. Organisations are increasingly choosing partners based not only on capability, but on how well providers understand their business, respond operationally and support employee experience throughout the mobility journey.

The shift from response to diagnosis

One of the clearest themes to emerge from the session was the growing importance of diagnosis within global mobility procurement. Participants agreed that the strongest relocation management companies are no longer simply responding to the questions within an RFP. Instead, they are identifying the wider operational challenges sitting behind it.

Understanding the challenge behind the brief

In many cases, the written brief only reflects part of the issue. Behind the review may sit inconsistent employee experience, policy complexity, regional delivery concerns, stakeholder frustration or pressure to improve programme visibility and agility.

Providers that ask stronger questions and uncover those pressures early are increasingly differentiating themselves from competitors.

This thinking closely aligns with K2’s recent insight, The move is not the outcome, which explores why global mobility success should be measured through long-term employee and business impact, not simply relocation completion. https://www.k2group.com/insights/the-move-is-not-the-outcome

Relationships, flexibility and the changing expectations of mobility buyers

The discussion reinforced that while relationships remain important within global mobility, they are rarely enough on their own to secure a final award. Strong relationships may help providers gain access, establish trust and secure a place on the shortlist, but organisations still expect providers to demonstrate operational credibility, tailored programme thinking and confidence in delivery.

Participants also agreed that flexibility, responsiveness and adaptability now carry greater weight in final decision-making than lowest base cost alone. Global mobility programmes continue to evolve rapidly as organisations respond to changing workforce expectations, regional complexity and shifting business priorities.

Employee experience is now closely linked to operational agility

Organisations are increasingly willing to invest more in providers who can improve employee experience, reduce friction during relocation and adapt effectively as operational requirements evolve.

For many businesses, value is now being defined by delivery quality, partnership approach and operational agility rather than cost alone. Buyers increasingly look for:

• operational flexibility

• commercial understanding

• delivery consistency

• responsiveness

• evidence of successful implementation

• strong employee experience outcomes

Innovation, sustainability and the future of mobility partnerships

Another strong theme emerging from the discussion was the industry’s changing definition of innovation. Participants agreed that innovation within global mobility is no longer viewed purely through technology platforms or digital tools. Increasingly, organisations are assessing how effectively solutions perform operationally, how adaptable providers are under pressure and how consistently they deliver positive employee experiences.

This perspective closely reflects K2’s latest insight, Innovation in mobility isn’t a product. It’s how it performs, which explores why meaningful innovation is often found in operational delivery, adaptability and service performance rather than standalone technology features. https://www.k2group.com/insights/innovation-in-mobility-isnt-a-product-its-how-it-performs

The roundtable also included a candid discussion around sustainability reporting. While ESG remains an important part of the wider corporate agenda, several participants questioned whether the industry may currently be over-investing in complex sustainability reporting frameworks that are not yet materially influencing final provider selection.

Balancing sustainability with operational priorities

The discussion was not dismissive of sustainability itself. Rather, many participants felt organisations are still placing greater weight on operational performance, employee experience, flexibility and delivery confidence when selecting global mobility partners.

A changing expectation of global mobility providers

Reflecting on both discussions at WERC APAC 2026, Paul Barrett, Managing Director APAC at K2 Group, believes the industry is moving into a period where operational understanding and adaptability will increasingly separate providers from competitors.

“What stood out across both conversations was the growing expectation for providers to move beyond standardised positioning. Clients are looking for partners who genuinely understand the business context behind the brief, can diagnose the real drivers behind change and adapt alongside evolving operational pressures. Relationships still matter, but they must be supported by substance, delivery confidence and a clear understanding of the client’s culture. Mobility programmes are being shaped by more complexity than ever before, and the providers that will stand out are those able to combine strategic thinking, flexibility and proven operational performance in a way that feels genuinely aligned to the client’s business.”

More broadly, the conversation reinforced a wider industry reality: when providers look the same on paper, the final decision is rarely made on paper alone. Increasingly, organisations are choosing relocation management companies based on cultural alignment, operational confidence, employee experience and the ability to adapt as business needs evolve.

Frequently asked questions

What do companies look for in a global mobility provider today?

Most organisations are looking beyond transactional relocation support. They want a relocation management company that can improve employee experience, adapt operationally and provide confidence across programme delivery, governance and communication.

Is employee experience becoming more important in global mobility?

Yes. Employee experience is increasingly viewed as a core part of programme success, particularly in competitive talent markets where relocation experiences can directly affect retention, engagement and productivity.

Why are flexibility and responsiveness becoming more important?

Global mobility programmes are changing more rapidly than before due to workforce shifts, regional complexity and evolving business priorities. Clients increasingly value providers who can adapt quickly and operate as strategic partners.

Are organisations still choosing providers based mainly on cost?

Cost remains important, but many organisations now weigh operational quality, delivery confidence and employee experience more heavily when making final provider decisions.

What differentiates a relocation management company when providers appear similar?

The ability to diagnose business challenges, understand organisational culture, improve employee experience and deliver consistently across complex mobility programmes often becomes the real differentiator.