The Hamilton Spectator

Air Canada frequent flyer program part of digitizati­on push

- ROSS MAROWITS

Air Canada’s plans to develop its own frequent flyer program are one of several digitizati­on initiative­s the airline is pursuing to meet the varying needs of its 45 million passengers a year, CEO Calin Rovinescu says.

Weeks after Air Canada announced it was ditching Aeroplan, Rovinescu said the decision was part of the company’s broader strategy to become more digital in its operations. That includes looking at working with artificial intelligen­ce specialist­s to recognize patterns in customer data and employing augmented reality to change how employees learn and collaborat­e.

Using data analytics on informatio­n collected from frequent flyers will help the airline better understand their shopping patterns, improve service and build loyalty, Rovinescu said. Air Canada plans to launch its own loyalty rewards plan in 2020.

“By bringing it in house, it will enable us to be much, much closer to our customers in terms of the offers that can be made and having the ability to in some respects deal directly with our key frequent flyers,” he said in an interview.

Michael Kamel, who advises airlines on business strategy and innovation for Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, said carriers are feeling pressure to act from tech-savvy passengers and competitor­s that operate with lower costs.

Airlines around the world are using different technologi­es in an effort to improve passenger service, such as texting flight changes to cellphones. Still, the industry has been slow to adapt.

“We are in that pre-evaporatio­n phase where we’re just seeing the bubbles,” Kamel said.

The transporta­tion sector as a whole is becoming increasing­ly focused on technology with the advent of automation.

Air Canada’s focus on its next wave of growth comes after a series of restructur­ing efforts since 2009 that have helped turn around the financial position of the country’s largest carrier.

It has signed long-term labour agreements, spent billions of dollars adding new aircraft, expanded its internatio­nal network, launched a low-cost travel airline and restored its pension plan to a surplus.

“This is a totally different company than it was in 2009 in almost every single respect,” said Rovinescu.

On Tuesday, Air Canada was selected Tuesday as the best North American airline according to a survey conducted by Skytrax of nearly 20 million passengers around the world.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? CEO Calin Rovinescu cited a company strategy to become more digital.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO CEO Calin Rovinescu cited a company strategy to become more digital.

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