Would you like a version tailored for a specific industry (e.g., consulting, nonprofit, government) or a video script format?
Here’s a short, illustrative story based on a scenario. It follows a fictional employee, Alex, as they navigate the demo environment for the first time. Title: The Demo That Saved the Budget concur travel request demo
Jordan uploads a mock agenda and client email. “Always attach supporting docs. It speeds up approval.” Step 4: Submit for Approval Jordan clicks Submit Request . A pop-up: “Request sent to Parker Smith – pending.” “That’s it. Parker gets an email. They review, approve, or push back.” Scene 3: The “Aha” Moment Parker (on the demo call as well) switches to their approver view. “I see Alex’s request. Green check – under budget. One click: Approve .” Alex’s demo request status changes to Approved . Would you like a version tailored for a specific industry (e
Later, Alex tells a colleague: “I thought it would be bureaucratic hell. But that demo… it actually made sense. I could see where my request was the whole time. And Parker approved it while checking email on her phone.” Alex’s trip happens without a hitch. The expense report later auto-populates from the travel request. Finance closes the month with zero surprises. Moral of the story: A good demo doesn’t just show buttons — it shows a faster, less painful way to work. For Alex, Concur turned “travel request” from a chore into a 5-minute checkpoint. Title: The Demo That Saved the Budget Jordan
Jordan clicks . “Just edit and resubmit. The system tracks versions. No more lost spreadsheets.” Parker adds, “And Finance loves this because we see total trip cost before you fly.” Scene 5: The Takeaway After the demo, Alex books the Chicago trip in 7 minutes. The request, approval, and booking are linked. No frantic emails, no “did you get my form?”
Jordan grins. “Now you can book travel through Concur or outside – but the policy reminder says: ‘Use preferred airlines for reimbursement.’” Alex raises a hand. “What if I need to change dates?”
Jordan clicks Expense > Travel Request . “See that ‘New Request’ button? That’s your start line. Name it clearly: ‘Q2 Chicago Client Visit – Alex Chen.’” Alex nods. Simple enough.