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Your People Are Everywhere
US travel spending is projected to push past $1.37 trillion this year, and the strain is already showing up as airport congestion, delays, and cancellations. Layer on aviation capacity pressures tied to fuel costs and global instability, and the result is simple. More of your employees are on the move, and more of them are at risk of getting stranded somewhere when a flight evaporates or a route closes.
Stranded employees become a duty of care problem the moment a disruption hits. Speed of response matters, along with knowing who is where. Knowing that you have three people connecting through a hub the day a storm rolls in, or two executives in a city where unrest is building, is the entire game. That awareness has to exist before the disruption, because it cannot be assembled in a panic after.
The Crowds And The Calendar
Summer is peak season for mass gatherings, and 2026 is an outlier even by summer standards. The FIFA World Cup is unfolding across the US, Canada, and Mexico, drawing enormous crowds, global attention, and a lot of heightened emotion to dozens of host cities. Add the usual festival, convention, and holiday calendar on top of that.
Crowds are also where grievance finds an audience. Civil unrest tied to elections is expected to intensify through the back half of 2026 in a number of countries, and large public events have a way of becoming flashpoints. If your people, your brand, or your executives intersect with any of these crowds, your threat monitoring needs to be tuned to the specific cities, dates, and venues in play, and most definitely not running on its January settings.
The Gap Nobody Plans For
Now the uncomfortable part. The same summer that stretches your exposure across more places, more heat, and more crowds is the summer your analysts, operators, and decision-makers are taking their own well-earned time off. Coverage thins out right when the workload climbs.
This is the single most fixable item on the list, and the most overlooked. Summer mode means pressure-testing your escalation paths for a skeleton crew. If your most experienced operator is on a beach with no signal, does the alert still reach someone who can act? Are your playbooks written so a stand-in can execute them without a three-paragraph backstory? A program that only holds up when the A-team is fully staffed will let you down in the exact week it matters most.
What Summer Mode Actually Looks Like
Summer mode is a deliberate re-tune of your operation for the next ninety days. Here is what that looks like in practice:
Proactive preparation is essential for a successful summer. A deceptive forecast can lead a program to become complacent, which often results in teams struggling to react when a single heat wave, storm, or stranded executive escalates into a full-blown crisis.
That's the whole point of duty of care: doing the quiet work now so nobody has to do the loud work later.