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What two days at the ABTA Finance Conference told us about where travel finance is heading - and what’s at stake if businesses get left behind
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Growth introduces complexity that most finance systems are not designed to handle. This article examines how hidden assumptions about stability undermine automation, why AI often accelerates existing problems rather than solving them, and what it takes to build finance operations that scale in industries defined by change.
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Step up your SEO and AI Optimisation (AIO) strategy
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Experiment cautiously with customer facing AI tools
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Growth is usually framed as a positive problem. More customers, more bookings, more revenue, more opportunity. But inside most growing businesses, especially in travel, growth introduces something far less visible and far more corrosive: constant change.
Volumes increase. Customer behaviour shifts. Bookings are amended. Prices move. Deposits turn into balances, balances into refunds. Support teams evolve, systems get layered on top of each other, and processes that once felt “good enough” start to bend under pressure.
Yet finance operations are still often designed as if the business will behave predictably.
That mismatch is where things start to break.
Most finance tools and workflows are built on an unspoken assumption: that transactions are largely static. A booking is made. An invoice is issued. A payment is taken. Revenue is recognised. The books balance.
This assumption holds just long enough for early growth to feel manageable. Then reality intervenes.
In travel, change is not an exception, it is the norm. Dates move. Passengers change. Suppliers reprice. Customers cancel and rebook. Funds are held, released, protected, refunded, and reallocated. Each change ripples across systems that were never designed to expect movement.
When systems assume stability, finance teams are forced to manually correct for reality.
Automation is often blamed when things go wrong. The automation broke. The workflow did not handle the edge case. The system could not be trusted so it had to be switched off.
But the root cause is rarely the automation itself.
Automation fails when it encodes a version of the business that no longer exists. If a workflow assumes a booking will not change after confirmation, that data fields mean the same thing across systems, or that amendments flow cleanly downstream, it will inevitably break in a growing business.
The result is predictable. Finance teams stop trusting the system. They double check everything. Manual work creeps back in. Efficiency disappears. Automation becomes a liability instead of an asset.
This is often the point at which artificial intelligence enters the conversation. When complexity increases and systems start to strain, it is tempting to believe intelligence can compensate for instability.
But AI does not fix fragile finance operations. It exposes them.
If your data is inconsistent, AI will produce inconsistent outputs faster. If your processes are unclear, AI will automate confusion. If ownership of data quality is weak, AI will surface that weakness at scale.
This is why so many AI led finance initiatives stall. Not because the technology is immature, but because it is introduced before the fundamentals are in place. AI is an accelerator, not a foundation.
The real constraint in finance operations is not technology. It is trust.
Finance teams do not resist automation or new tools because they dislike change. They resist them because they are accountable. When something goes wrong, it is finance that must explain it to auditors, regulators, leadership, and customers.
Trust is built when systems show clearly how a number was produced, handle change without breaking, leave a clear audit trail, and behave predictably under pressure. Until that trust exists, automation simply creates more checking rather than less.
Efficiency only appears once trust is absolute.
The businesses that scale finance operations successfully do not chase cleverness. They design for reality. They accept that change will happen and model for it explicitly. They get granular before getting sophisticated. They automate today’s process before optimising tomorrow’s. They prioritise clarity of data over novelty of tooling.
In other words, they build systems that expect movement, not perfection.
Once that foundation exists, automation delivers fast, tangible returns. Only then does AI become genuinely useful, as a way to speed up pattern recognition, anomaly detection, or decision support, not as a replacement for understanding.
AI is exciting. It is visible. It signals progress. But in finance operations, especially in complex, high change industries like travel, progress is often quieter.
It looks like fewer manual corrections, fewer spreadsheets running in parallel, fewer “just to be safe” checks, and more confidence in the numbers without heroics from the team.
That does not come from intelligence layered on top of chaos. It comes from designing systems that survive reality.
Growing businesses do not need smarter finance systems. They need finance systems designed for change.
Automation pays the bills. AI can help when used deliberately. Trust, built slowly and structurally, is what makes either of them work.