Inside Qantas' next gen check-in project

 

Airline sets sights on international roll-out.

Qantas has credited a small, internal workshop at the airline for sparking the two-year, $200 million project that helped to halve check-in times at domestic airports.

The ‘next generation check-in’ project, conceived in 2009, has so far delivered automated check-in kiosks in Australian capital cities, 21 regional airports, as well as Auckland and Wellington in New Zealand.

Passengers who choose to use the new, self-service system are able to check in within 30 seconds, avoiding queues and delays associated with traditional airport check-in counters.

The automated processes allow passengers to check in online, via a mobile device, by tapping their frequent flyer cards against custom-built 'Q Card Readers', or entering booking details into automated kiosks.

The kiosks are integrated with Qantas’ Amadeus Altea reservation, inventory and departure system through the airline’s existing, custom-built Enterprise Integration Platform (EIP) middleware.

The kiosks transmit data in “close to real time” to automated bag drop stations, which either program passengers’ reusable RFID bag tags or print adhesive tags before sending luggage to the appropriate airplane.

Qantas head of technology Gabrielle D'Alessandro told iTnews that the project involved a core team of 200 workers including contractors, about 70 in-house staff and 60 from integrator IBM.

Some 200 vendors were involved in the installation of Q Card Readers and IBM’s N Series check-in kiosks, including manufacturing radio frequency identification (RFID) scanners and bag tags, development, and integration.

IBM contractors, led by the company’s Qantas services executive Doug Regan, were tasked with systems integration and developing a custom user interface for the N Series kiosks.

Regan said IBM had worked on Amadeus integration projects with other airlines but the end-to-end Qantas check-in system was one of the first of its kind.

Qantas outsourced its project delivery functions to IBM in 2009 under a seven-year agreement that extended an infrastructure outsourcing relationship begun in 2004.

Under-budget, ahead of schedule

Qantas initially planned to deliver self-service kiosks to 27 airports by April 2012 but ultimately completed the project nine months early in July 2011, saving the airline an undisclosed sum.

It began trialling the technology in Perth in July 2010 and launched next gen check-in kiosks in Sydney in November that year.

Union members complained in March 2011 that passengers were unhappy with the new technology, with reports of passengers taking their frustrations out on Qantas staff.

D’Alessandro said Qantas monitored user behaviour on the new system, storing details about check-in use, time taken, as well as numbers of passengers and bags in its corporate data warehouse.

The information was analysed by various teams and used to improve user experience, resulting in a number of tweaks to the “flow of the screen”.

D’Alessandro said the system now ranked highly on customer and staff satisfaction surveys.

Though Qantas' hosted Amadeus booking system has been hit with several outages over recent years, D’Alessandro said Qantas’ increased reliance on technology did not necessarily expose passengers to more outages. The airline had improved its business continuity plans to cope with such outages, she said.

International expansion

Qantas introduced the next gen check-in kiosks in Auckland and Wellington late last year and has agreed to test the technology with partner British Airways in London, after the Olympics.

But D’Alessandro said the current next-gen system would likely remain within its domestic arm only, noting that international flights had a different set of security, visa and passport requirements.

She hinted that a new automated check-in offering for international departures was in the works but would not reveal when Qantas would introduce such a service, or what it might entail.

“We started this [next gen check-in project] in 2009,” she noted.

“The world has changed since then.”

Earlier this year, Qantas chief executive officer Alan Joyce said it would boost productivity by improving infrastructure, people, processes and technology – including aviation technology and IT.

For the six months to 31 December 2011, Qantas recorded a half-year profit of $202 million – down $215 million from the previous year.

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


Inside Qantas' next gen check-in project
Qantas' Q Card Reader. (Credit: Qantas)
 
 
 
 
Top Stories
Photos: HTC One vs Samsung Galaxy S4
Android giants battle it out.
 
Project management lessons from the QLD Health payroll inquiry
Analysis: How not to run a major IT project.
 
Review: Asus Fonepad
Calling on the Big Phone.
 
 
Qantas' Q Card Reader. (Credit: Qantas)
Sign up to receive iTnews email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Bankwest builds continuous delivery capability
Bankwest builds continuous delivery capability
To automatically deploy test/dev sandboxes by mid-year.
Veterans' Affairs sets sights on modernisation
Veterans' Affairs sets sights on modernisation
Data safe with Human Services, CIO says.
Citi Australia drops platform customisations
Citi Australia drops platform customisations
Technology chief shifts focus from building to leveraging systems.
VicRoads restructures IT team
VicRoads restructures IT team
Department moves to align with industry benchmarks.
Zurich Australia extends IT team offshore
Zurich Australia extends IT team offshore
Malaysian staff served from Australian data centres.
Leigh Berrell - Utilities CIO of the Year
Leigh Berrell - Utilities CIO of the Year
Yarra Valley Water CIO Leigh Berrell accepts his Benchmark Award for Utilities CIO of the Year.
Wayne McMahon - Retail CIO of the Year
Wayne McMahon - Retail CIO of the Year
Domino's Pizza CIO Wayne McMahon accepts his Benchmark Award for Retail CIO of the Year.
Inside Perpetual's ongoing IT transformation
Inside Perpetual's ongoing IT transformation
CIO Jenny Levy discusses how outsourcing will help the firm "simplify, refocus and grow".
Managing Complexity - Defence's Daniel McCabe
Managing Complexity - Defence's Daniel McCabe
Daniel McCabe, Assistant Secretary of Australia's Department of Defence, provides the audience at the iTnews Data Centre Strategy Summit with a deep dive into the organisation's data centre consolidation program.
How Facebook designed the data centre from scratch - Marco Magarelli
How Facebook designed the data centre from scratch - Marco Magarelli
The full keynote by Facebook data centre architect Marco Magarelli at the Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit. Magarelli details the design considerations behind the social network's Prineville, Oregon; North Carolina and Luleå, Sweden data centres.
Modernising Legacy Data Centres - Telstra's Jon Curry
Modernising Legacy Data Centres - Telstra's Jon Curry
Telstra general manager of managed data centres Jon Curry guides the audience at the iTnews Australian Data Centre Summit through the build of the telco's Clayton, Victoria data centre.
NSW Government launches NABERS data centre rating tools
NSW Government launches NABERS data centre rating tools
Matthew Clark from the NSW Department of Environment guides facilties managers through the details of the new NABERS data centre energy rating tool at the Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit.
NABERS launch panel: Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit
NABERS launch panel: Australian Data Centre Strategy Summit
Matthew Clark (NSW Dept of Environment), Greg Boorer (Canberra Data Centres), Glenn Allan (National Australia Bank), Mike Andrea (Strategic Directions) and Bob Sharon (Green Global Consulting) discuss the impact of the NABERS data centre rating.
Judges notes: Fortescue Metals [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Fortescue Metals [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Fortescue Metals 'New World of Work" project, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Industrials category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Retail [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Retail [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss the shortlisted finalists for the Retail category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Pacific Aluminium [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Pacific Aluminium [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Pacific Aluminium's lightning fast service desk refresh, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Industrials category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Domino's Pizza [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Domino's Pizza [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Domino's Pizza's shift to hosted services, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Retail category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: McDonald's Australia [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: McDonald's Australia [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss McDonald's Australia's new self-service portal for employees, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Retail category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: ING Direct [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: ING Direct [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss ING Direct's 'Bank in a Box', one of three shortlisted finalists for the banking and finance category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Judges notes: Yarra Valley Water [The Benchmark Awards]
Judges notes: Yarra Valley Water [The Benchmark Awards]
iTnews' panel of judges discuss Yarra Valley Water's insourcing project, one of three shortlisted finalists for the Utilities category of the CIO Benchmark Awards.
Latest Comments
Polls
Do you prefer the Coalition's NBN policy?

   |   View results
Yes
  19%
 
No
  81%
TOTAL VOTES: 1669

Vote