Could tech companies spell trouble for airlines?

Could tech companies spell trouble for airlines?

It’s no secret tech companies are getting bigger and better every day, but what impact is that having on airline business models?

Well, as highlighted at the Singapore Airshow Aviation Leadership Summit this week, it could be a bigger impact than expected.

In an article from CNBC, companies like Amazon, Uber and Airbnb are threatening the core operations of travel transport industries.

For starters, there’s the concern that Amazon, with its air cargo services for US deliveries, could wind up competing with global giants such as FedEx or DHL.

Then you’ve got Google’s self-driving car, and Uber’s helicopter initiative with Airbus.

Seeing a pattern here?

As CNBC reports, these tech juggernauts are concentrating their energy on something airlines and a number of travel businesses already do: move customers “from point A to point B”.

Director General for mobility and transport at the European Commission, Henrik Hololei, said tech companies have access to vast amounts of data, meaning they “know better what the customer wants”, before cautioning the aviation industry to be wary of companies flying drones. Who knows what they have planned, he warned.

But technology and data analysis can be used for airlines too, not just against them.

“Technology is moving at a faster pace than we can use it,” Bahrain’s Transport and Telecommunications Minister Kamal bin Ahmed Mohammed said at the summit, per CNBC.

“Airline operators will be forced to invest in technology.”

With this in mind, CNBC reported Boeing has assembled 800 analytics experts to create a whole new division that works out how to use data for solving customer-centric problems.

The unit is called Boeing AnalytX, and is already operating with partners like Delta Air Lines, Turkish Airlines and Korean Air.

Goh Choon Phong, CEO of Singapore Airlines, told CNBC that his company wasn’t concerned about its potential to utilise big data.

“Airlines have their own advantage when it comes to data and interactions with customers,” Phong told the publication.

“I don’t think you can find any other business where you have customers, in some sense, with you for the duration of a whole flight.”

Phong suggested to CNBC that this was a huge undervalued opportunity for airlines to get even more familiar with customers.

“If we can understand our customers better, surely we can use that data to serve them better,” Phong added.

According to CNBC, Phong also didn’t seem worried about competition from tech firms, like some of his aviation peers.

Instead, he confirmed that Singapore is so open that “anybody can set up an airline”, saying competition overall wasn’t a cause for concern at Singapore Airlines.

Latest News

  • Business Travel

Apparent launches ‘All heart, no hassle’ campaign for Flight Centre’s Corporate Traveller

Apparent’s first integrated brand campaign goes live this week for Corporate Traveller, the flagship SME business-to-business brand of Flight Centre Travel Group. The campaign features a number of scenarios with playful headlines such as ‘We’re friends with (travel booking) benefits’ and ‘Corporate by name, not by nature’ which gives the campaign a cheekiness and levity […]

  • Tourism

Indaba 2024: Losing out on memory, South Africa Tourism hands its fate to children

Thembisile Sehloho was appointed as the new chief marketing officer (CMO) South Africa Tourism in early April, so she’s literally had her feet under the desk for just longer than a month. At Africa’s Travel Indaba, David Hovenden sat down with for her only Australian interview and discussed the work being done on South Africa […]

  • Cruise

ACA & CLIA join forces ahead of Australian Tourism Exchange

Australian Cruise Association (ACA) and Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA) will return to Australian Tourism Exchange (ATE) this month to promote the diverse range of cruising products in Australia to the international travel market. ATE is a pivotal opportunity to position Australia’s thriving cruise industry on the global stage and will this year be held […]

  • Destinations

South Africa eyes affordable tourism to grow market

Australian tourists feeling the pinch from the cost-of-living crisis, might find an unlikely ally in South African Tourism in the future according to a panel at Africa’s Travel Indaba (ATI). With six out of ten young Africans failing to explore their own continent, despite constituting the largest demographic within the 1.3 billion-strong African population, the […]

  • Luxury

COMO launches new family-sized farmhouse in the heart of Tuscany

COMO Hotels and Resorts has launched its new farmhouse apartments in the heart of Tuscany, just in time for Australians to escape our wet winter. And it’s also an ideal time for Aussies of Italian ancestry to explore their home country as 2024 has been declared the year of Roots and Heritage Tourism by the […]

  • Destinations
  • News

New Caledonia in lockdown and airport closed after violent riots rock Noumea

New Caledonia officials have announced a 6pm-6am curfew, a liquor ban and have closed the country’s main airport after overnight riots in which vehicles were torched and roads blocked in the wake of proposed constitutional reforms. Australian Government website Smartraveller has issued an alert informing visitors to exercise a high degree of caution in metropolitan […]