• Home
  • »
  • Water Cooler
  • Home
  • Executive Jobs
  • Features
    • Focus
    • Career Couch
    • Radar
    • Water Cooler
    • Insight
    • Podcasts
  • Place an executive ad

Text means less queueing before take-off

By Garry Barker | smh.com.au | 10 November
Email to a friend
Print
Increased Text
Decreased Text

In a bid to reduce check-in times and long queues, the SMS "passes" can be scanned electronically from the phone's screen at the departure gate.

The SMS boarding pass was developed during the past six months by the Sissit Group, which was set up in Melbourne in early 2008 to work on airport immigration and other services.

The company's 22-year-old chief executive, Aaron Hornlimann, says the agreement with Jetstar is exclusive in Australia and New Zealand but a number of Asian and Middle Eastern airlines have also shown interest in the technology.

The product analyses the alphanumeric codes included in the SMS and relates them to the airline's database where flight and passenger information is assembled.

Unlike other electronic boarding pass systems, the Sissit SMS pass does not carry all the passenger's information but relates the pass number to details in the airline database.

This, Hornlimann says, makes his system much more secure. The system is also compatible with "at least 98 per cent" of mobile phones in the market.

Trials will start this month with passengers on domestic flights originating at Melbourne's Avalon airport.

A successful trial would see the system rolled out across the full Jetstar domestic network by the end of the year, an airline spokeswoman says.

Later, it could be introduced in other markets, including Jetstar's domestic services in New Zealand.

The chief executive of Jetstar, Bruce Buchanan, says getting a boarding pass for a domestic flight would be "as simple as receiving a standard text message 24 hours prior to travel and having that SMS message electronically scanned at the gate, if you do not have bags to check in".

The system would improve efficiency at the airport by freeing ground staff to "get on with the job of processing checked-in baggage", he says.

During trials of the SMS system, passengers who use Jetstar's online Web Check-in system will be given the option of having their boarding pass and unique boarding code delivered to their phone by SMS.

Some airlines overseas use a similar system but require passengers to have more expensive and less common WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) or internet-enabled smartphones.

The Jetstar system will work with any mobile handset capable of receiving SMS texts.

First published by Smh.com.au on November 10 2009
Visit smh.com.au for the latest news updated throughout the day

More Water Cooler news

  • Opinion: The deficit dilemma
  • Benefits of a Tweet surrender
  • Twiggy rises to the top as Packer loses his crown
  • More water cooler
  • Home

Focus news

  • Pressure mounting on Canberra in struggle for copyright control
  • Casting a spell on the priests of voodoo finance
  • Jobs boom could mean budget surplus next year
  • Resigned to the daily grind
  • More focus

Executive jobs

  • Executive Mining Engineer$161,757 - $187,430 Brisbane Metro, QLDSimtars has an exciting opportunity for a results oriented person with expert experience in mining engineering. The organisation This is your... view job12/03/2010
  • Rail Signal Engineers x 2$150,000 pkg Brisbane Metro, QLDLeading global consultancy requires two Signal Engineers to join their growing team in Brisbane. Up to $150K package depending on experience view job1/03/2010
  • Business Manager Melbourne Metro, VICBrookfield Multiplex is a fully integrated property, funds management and infrastructure business with activities in commercial property,... view job10/03/2010
  • Lead Structural Engineer Brisbane Metro, QLDBrisbane City LocationHighly negotiable package - very competitiveApply now and seize the opportunity to...View job1/03/2010
  • National Manager Safety Programs Sydney Metro, NSWMascot LocationCompetitive Salary and BenefitsLeading OrganisationView job22/02/2010

Career Couch news

  • How to hit your target
  • No need to tick all the boxes
  • Play the boardroom game
  • Networking for work
  • More career couch

Podcasts

VV Show #49 - Rafat Ali of paidContent and contentNext
Download the MP3. Attention entrepreneurs dealing with the current economic downturn: This interview is for you. After working as a journalist for Jason Calacanis at Silicon Alley Reporter, Rafat Ali ended up broke in a market with a dearth of employment opportunities. To try to find a new job, Rafat created paidContent.org as an "interactive resume." Luckily, no one hired him. From these humble beginnings, Rafat bootstrapped his blog holding company, ContentNext Media, for four years before taking a small investment from famed media investor Alan Patricof in June 2006. From its inception paidContent has doubled revenues each year and was recently acquired by UK-based Guardian Media Group for a rumored $30 million. Listen in as Rafat outlines the past, present, and future of online media, while sharing his war stories from another uncertain economic time.

Harvard Business IdeaCast 141: Use Failure to Grow Your Business
Featured Guest: Rita McGrath, coauthor of "Discovery-Driven Growth." Copyright 2009 Harvard Business School Publishing

More Podcasts
Home | Executive Jobs | Focus | Career Couch | Radar | Water Cooler | Insight | Podcasts | Sitemap | Contact us | Privacy Policy | Conditions of Use | Advertising Terms | About us | Place an Executive Ad
Fairfax Digital
NEWS | MYCAREER | DOMAIN | DRIVE | FINANCE | MOBILE | RSVP | TRAVEL | WEATHER
  member centre | login  
Fairfax Digital
  member centre | network map | mobile | advertise with us | place a classified ad  
SMH | THE AGE | BRISBANE TIMES | THE FINANCIAL REVIEW | MYCAREER | DOMAIN | DRIVE | RSVP | FINANCE | FAIRFAX NZ