Star Alliance has launched a Digital Services
Platform (DSP) as a first step in an overall enhancement of
digital and mobile services.
The platform was
developed and implemented in conjunction with global professional
services company Accenture as part of the alliance’s
strategy to further improve the customer journey.
The DSP
can gather data provided by an individual member airline or
third-party source and make it available to all members, enabling
them to build it into their own customer-facing digital
applications.
The longer-term aim is to allow customers to use any member airline’s website or mobile application to obtain all the
information they need for travel on several Star Alliance member
airlines.
“Most frequent travellers have a ‘home airline’
in our network and would prefer to control their entire travel
experience through a single app or website,” said Star Alliance
CEO, Jeffrey Goh. “We are therefore working to create central
capabilities that can be shared for use by our individual
members.”
Once a service offer is available from the DSP,
member airlines can decide individually if and when they make it
available to customers. For instance, a seat selection feature
launched on 2 February now allows an United Airlines customer to
select a seat on Singapore Airlines flights booked via united.com
or the United App.
As a result, the customer travelling on fare
types that include complimentary advance seat selection can choose
a specific seat at time of reservation for the entire journey on
United Airlines and Singapore Airlines, rather than only at time
of check-in.
This feature will be made available across the
Star Alliance network progressively.
Lufthansa is also using the DSP
technology to provide baggage tracking information for its
customers on journeys that include flights on other Star Alliance
airlines.
The data is provided by the Star Alliance Baggage Hub
which went into operation at the end of 2016. It collects relevant
baggage information from a wide-range of sources and makes it
available to all member carriers included in a passenger’s
itinerary.
“A seamless travel experience for airline customers depends on
an airline’s ability to participate in a broader travel ecosystem
spanning the whole spectrum of the aviation, travel and tourism
industry,” said Robert Zippel, who leads technology consulting
within Accenture’s Travel industry practice. “Airlines need to
embrace collaboration with their alliance member carriers and
associated ecosystems to orchestrate a greater understanding of a
traveller’s fast-changing requirements. By offering real-time data
exchange and standardised applications to improve a customer’s
travel experience for multiple carrier journeys and beyond, the
Star Alliance DSP is a great example of a system that enables this
kind of collaboration.”
The DSP is an integral part of a
wider Star Alliance strategy to place the customer at the centre
of its activities, especially since today’s travellers are ‘always
connected’, thanks to their mobile devices. Hence they expect
services and information updates at their fingertips and to be
able to take control of their own journey.
In the airport
environment, this means the Star Alliance is increasingly offering
self-service technologies wherever possible, for example at
passenger and baggage check-in as well as for boarding at the
gate.
In loyalty, improvements have already been implemented
using IT Hub technologies. This includes, for example, a speedier
crediting of mileage after a flight, as well as enabling customers
to claim all missing mileage from Star Alliance member airline flights online, via the customer’s respective Frequent Flyer
Programme (FFP).
By the end of 2018, these member carrier FFP websites will allow customers to check flight availability and
book redemption seats online for flights operated by all 28 Star
Alliance member airlines.
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