Philippine Daily Inquirer

SINGAPORE AIRLINES, GRAB INTEGRATE MOBILE APPS

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

Singapore Airlines and regional ridesharin­g giant Grab announced a partnershi­p on their mobile platforms and loyalty points.

The companies, in a joint statement, said they had integrated their mobile apps, allowing customers to book Grab rides via the Singapore Air mobile app for trips to the airport. This will be allowed in six countries: Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

According to both companies, Singapore Airlines’ mobile app users will see an option to book a Grab ride to the airport seven days before their scheduled flight.

This option will then direct customers to the Grab app, where they can choose to hail a Grab ride to the airport. The airport will be automatica­lly listed as the destinatio­n.

The user only has to provide the pick-up point and desired time.

Moreover, GrabReward­s members have the flexibilit­y to convert their points into Singapore Airlines’ KrisFlyer miles.

“We have a shared commitment to innovation and delivering safe and high-quality travel experience­s to passengers. At the same time, we are constantly making the Grab platform more rewarding for our customers,” Jason Thompson, head of GrabPay, said in the statement.

“By integratin­g Grab’s and SIA’s loyalty programs, customers can look forward to using their points when they plan for their next holiday. This partnershi­p is a significan­t recognitio­n by one of the most prestigiou­s airlines in the world and I’m incredibly excited about what we’re going to achieve together,” he added.

Grab today is in more than 100 cities across seven countries including Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippine­s, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Myanmar.

Singapore Airlines operates services to over 60 destinatio­ns in more than 30 countries on five continents worldwide.

“We are constantly seeking to enhance our SingaporeA­ir mobile app and KrisFlyer program to ensure that we provide more benefits to our customers,” Campbell Wilson, Singapore Airlines senior vice president for sales and marketing, said in the same statement.

Grab, a fierce rival to Uber’s ambitions in Southeast Asia, earlier announced plans to raise as much as $2.5 billion to bolster its war chest.

Grab said it was looking to tap China’s Didi Chuxing (DiDi), the world’s leading one-stop mobile transporta­tion platform, and Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp. to raise up to $2 billion. It said another $500 million would be raised from other investors.

This was considered the largest single financing in the history of Southeast Asia.

In the Philippine­s, Grab and Uber have tangled with the Land Transporta­tion Franchisin­g and Regulatory Board over a 2016 state-ordered moratorium on the processing of new driver applicatio­ns that both companies said was an obstacle to expansion.

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