According to Smart Thinking, released by SITA,
more than half of passengers would use their mobiles for flight
status, baggage status and airport directions and by 2016 the
majority of airlines and airports will offer these services.
In total, 100% of airlines and 90% of
airports are investing in business intelligence solutions to
provide the intelligent information across their operations which
these, and other services, demand.
SITA, an IT and communications provider to the
air transport community, regularly conducts global research on
airports, airlines and passengers. This provides the unique
opportunity to look across the entire industry and identify
alignment, misalignment, and potential for acceleration. SITA’s
Smart Thinking is based on this global research and incorporates
additional input from leading airlines and airports including
British Airways, Saudia, Dublin Airport Authority, London City
Airport and Heathrow.
According to SITA’s paper, flight status updates
are already a mainstream mobile service and will extend to the
vast majority of airlines and airports by the end of 2016. By
then, what today are niche services will also be well established.
Bag status updates will be offered by 61% of airlines; and 79% of
airports will provide status notifications, such as queues times
through security and walking time to gate. More than three
quarters will also be providing navigation/way-finding at the
airport via mobile apps.
“Our research has clearly shown that the
move to smartphone apps and mobile services is well underway. But
many of the services that airlines and airports are planning are
heavily dependent on their ability to provide more meaningful data
and insight - providing passengers and staff the right information
at the right time. Efforts are being made across the industry to
collaborate and SITA has established the Business Intelligence
Maturity Index to benchmark the progress,” said Nigel Pickford,
Director, Market Insight, SITA. “We asked airlines and airports to
measure themselves in four categories of business intelligence
best practice for this index: Data Access and Management;
Infrastructure; Data Presentation; and Governance. Our analysis
shows that on average the industry is only halfway to achieving
best-in-class and further progress is needed.”
There are ongoing efforts across the industry to
establish data standards and ensure system compatibility.
Pickford said, “Though the picture is not
perfect now, change is coming. All airlines and 90% of airports
are planning to make business intelligence investments in the
coming three years. Both face the issue though that while
passengers are very keen to access information about their
journey, they are also sensitive about privacy. The smart use of
non-intrusive passenger information however will provide benefits
to airlines and passengers.”
SITA’s report describes how today the focus is
on building the foundation for business intelligence but looking
ahead the combination of business intelligence plus predictive
analysis will help improve the passenger experience, while
optimizing the use of infrastructure and space at airports. In the
past, airlines and airports had no choice but to react when
“irregular” events such as bad weather disrupted their
finely-tuned schedules. Using business intelligence they will
bemore proactive by analyzing past events and combining live data
feeds from multiple sources to predict future events and take
preventative action before they occur. By making the transition
from reactive to proactive to preventative there are
significant benefits to be gained for passengers and the industry
alike.
SITA
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