IATA will host the fourth annual World Passenger
Symposium (WPS 2014), 15-17 October in San Diego, California.
More than 700 high-level delegates from
airlines, global distribution systems and travel technology
providers, airports and travel management companies are expected
to attend the event.
“2014 marks a century of commercial aviation.
Some 65 billion passengers have flown in the 100 years since the
first airline flight. Airlines will carry the next 65 billion
passengers between today and 2030. WPS 2014 is the ideal forum for
all stakeholders in the air travel value chain to join together to
set a vision and identify the practical steps in order to meet
rising demand for air travel safely, securely and with a human
touch,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO, who will
deliver a keynote address at WPS.
Under the theme, “From Exclusivity to Commodity:
Is Flying Still Glamorous?” WPS 2014 will focus on how industry
collaboration can trigger innovation and drive value for the
benefit of air travelers. It will cover the transformation
currently taking place in the industry in the areas of
Distribution, Customer Experience and Airport Design.
The Leadership Panel will be moderated by BBC
Presenter
Rajan Datar, who will also facilitate a panel discussion
dedicated to “100 years and beyond: The Lens of the Customer”. The
sessions present different perspectives on commercial aviation’s
value proposition as it enters its second century.
New to WPS 2014 will be the CIO and IT
Executives Forum, bringing together airline CIOs and senior IT
executives to discuss trends in aviation technology.
With the New Distribution Capability (NDC)
entering the deployment phase, WPS 2014 also will be a forum to
debate whether the industry is on the verge of a revolution in
distribution and if airline distribution is ripe for venture
capital investment.
Other topics to be presented include: how
millennials will connect and travel, the value proposition of
real-time interaction between passengers and travel suppliers and
if airport check-in will be the next process to be eliminated in
the campaign to give passengers a more streamlined travel
experience.
IATA,
Symposium,
San Diego,
California
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