FlightStats Builds Mobile Messaging System - Business Travel News

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FlightStats Builds Mobile Messaging System

August 18, 2010 - 04:45 PM ET

By Jay Boehmer

Tech firm FlightStats is developing a mobile messaging system for agents to send itinerary-relevant messages to travelers' mobile devices from the travel management company, as well as airlines and airports. The Portland, Ore., company said it plans to package the offering as part of what it is dubbing Agent Advantage, a suite of tools will include the TripTalk offering along with such previously available offerings as Trip Assist, which alerts agents to traveler itineraries that face cancellations, missed connections or other travel interruptions, and Itinerary Monitoring capabilities, which offer cancellation and delay trip alerts to travelers.

FlightStats calls TripTalk a "conversation engine" that ultimately would enable bidirectional, itinerary-specific communications between a traveler and corporate travel agent, through the traveler's mobile device. Through the offering, an agent can reach out "to tell the traveler that I saw you have this connection problem, we've taken care of that for you, and here's what we've done to help you out," said FlightStats owner Mark Tilden. Conversely, a traveler—perhaps one sitting in a business meeting running long—"can open his mobile itinerary viewer, click on a segment to say this is the one in trouble, fill out a couple of check boxes and send it off to the agent," he said. The first capability is already available, Tilden said, while the second—traveler-initiated messages and two-way communications—would be enabled by year-end through a mobile app it is developing with Mobiata.

However, the company is building the system to go beyond agent-to-traveler communications, enabling an agency to broadcast itinerary-relevant information to travelers from other sources, which FlightStats said would include airports and airlines.

"Airports have got information that basically nobody else has—last-minute gate changes, security problems, construction that's affecting access or parking. Using the same infrastructure, we can give the airport the ability to publish information," Tilden said, noting that agents could push such messages to travelers passing through the airport in an agency-branded message.

Tilden said he expects to launch the airport messaging system by the end of September, free of charge to airports. "We have about 30 airports in the U.S. and abroad that plan to use the system," added FlightStats vice president of business development Meara McLaughlin, noting about 100 worldwide airports use the company for flight delay data. The company also plans to enable airlines to use the system to send similarly relevant advisories to travelers, broadcasting to passengers that a certain flight is in an oversold situation, for example.

Still, all those messages from all those sources could be a source of frustration for travelers, who could experience alert overload, FlightStats acknowledged. However, TMCs will be able to police and prioritize information sent to travelers, and travelers will be able to opt out of certain message categories.

"Certain things are nice to know, but you don't want to get a message about them. Others, you'll want to know ASAP. The infrastructure that we designed follows the idea of graded message classes," McLaughlin said. "Even if a TMC wants to do a broadcast, they don't have to worry about being in their travelers' faces or being annoying with too much information. But, in all cases, whether it's their information they're broadcasting, something from an airport, an irregular operations notice from an airline or a security company that wants to push out information, the TMC always has the control."

As initially developed, agents would have to log in to FlightStats.com to manage the TripTalk experience, though the company said it is working with third parties to incorporate the system into other user interfaces. For example, Amadeus said it is considering extending FlightStats services in its upcoming Amadeus One agent desktop.

McLaughlin said FlightStats already works with 70 agencies on Itinerary Monitoring and plans to extend the TripTalk capability to them. FlightStats would not disclose specific pricing, but expects to charge agencies a one-time fee to load PNRs into the system in addition to a fixed monthly fee for the agency based on air transaction volume, not on use of the system. TMCs, meanwhile, would determine their own charges for corporate clients.

This story originally appeared in the August 9, 2010, edition of Business Travel News.

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