As airports embrace digitalization to optimize operations and increase asset lifespans, they also see digitalization — and particularly data analytics — as a means to improve the customer experience.
With the exponential growth in air travel, enhancing the passenger experience has become a top priority for busy airports around the world. Toronto Pearson Airport (GTAA), for example, used a Near-Field Communication (NFC) scanning system to enable passengers to quickly report problems using their mobile phones.
Singapore Changi Airport, renowned for its exceptional passenger experience, is leveraging facial recognition technology to offer passengers a contactless experience from check-in to boarding. Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA), meanwhile, has created a data-driven smart queuing system that reduces congestion, shortens wait times, and enhances the security screening process.
Why this steady drumbeat of passenger experience improvements driven by data analytics? Largely because airports know that improved passenger experiences and satisfaction lead directly to growth in non-aero revenue. According to ACI World Airport Service Quality (ASQ) data, an increase of 1% in global passenger satisfaction (as defined in the ASQ Survey) generates, on average, a non-aero revenue (NAR) growth of 1.5%.
But airports are just getting started. Airports generate vast amounts of data, yet this data remains underutilized – and customer data and analytics is particularly underutilized. If airports can use their growing wealth of customer data to create personalized offerings — services tailored to individual passengers — they will redefine the passenger’s relationship to the airport and supercharge the profitability gains stemming from sophisticated customer experiences.
To improve the passenger experience and pursue non-aero revenue growth, airports must capture more passenger data and use that data to deliver a hyper-personalised experience for passengers. The way to start is by building a 360-degree profile — a unique, individualized perspective — on every passenger.
To achieve a 360-degree view of passengers, airports need to first build a centralized operational data layer. This centralized data layer (or data lake) will leverage integration technologies such as APIs, data connection bridges, SQL queries, and batch uploads to capture data from niche airport systems and operations such as flight schedules, the Airport Collaborative Decision Making system (A-CDM), terminal ops, safety and security, and preventive maintenance. These kinds of operational data will help in mapping the passenger journey from entry to exit.
Beyond this operational data, it’s vital to capture data from passenger touchpoints like the airport’s mobile app, free Wi-Fi registration, and duty-free shopping in international terminals. Of course, data capture plans must comply with relevant data privacy and compliance laws and regulation, such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
A robust analytics layer can turn a deep pool of passenger data into actionable insights. This business intelligence layer is critical in understanding data and using it to generate insights and predictive intelligence. This analytics layer will allow airports to:
Non-aeronautical revenue growth can be an important component of an airport’s bottom line, and data analytics, harnessed well, can generate real growth. It requires the ability to unlock synergies between airport operations and airport facilities and, most important, to be able to hyper-personalize the passenger experience.
A good first step for an airport is to start with a short data strategy phase designed to provide a “current state” assessment of their existing data landscape. That discovery initiative will inform the creation of a data and technology roadmap to help improve airport KPIs such as operational excellence, customer satisfaction, and non-aero revenue. If they can effectively use data to improve passenger experiences, non-aero revenue will follow.
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Tushar Batra
Global Practice Lead & Industry Partner - Engineering, Construction & Operations and Airports
Tushar leads the Domain and Consulting Practice at Wipro and focuses on the needs of engineering, construction, real estate, facilities management and airport sectors. He has more than 18 years of diverse experience developing and implementing industry-specific IT and digital solutions. He is a strong customer advocate and has worked with leading industry players across the globe as a subject matter expert in multiple business transformation initiatives.