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surfside6
28th Jan 2011, 06:31
While Qantas passengers greeted recent news of new domestic baggage...
Cathay Pacific's new business class seating helps make it one of the world's most innovative airlines...
Aviation research company AirlineTrends has cited a range of products and services for business travellers as key factors in choosing the world’s most innovative airlines.

“The airlines featured on our list do not necessarily feature on the various ‘best airlines in the world’ surveys that are published regularly” explains Raymond Kollau, founder of AirlineTrends.

“We aimed to select airlines that have come up with interesting innovations in recent years, be it as part of a company culture of continuous innovation, a strategy to challenge the industry status quo, or as part of efforts to catch up after years of underinvestment.”

Here’s a rundown of the key business traveller-friendly features which catapulted these airlines onto the ‘it list’.

Air New Zealand
“For avid airline industry watchers it may come as no surprise that Air New Zealand tops our 2011 list of most innovative airlines in the world” Kollau observes. “Air New Zealand is a small airline in a small country at the end of the world with powerful competitors everywhere, so it has to be innovative and nimble to gain an edge over larger rivals.”

These include the premium economy ‘Spaceseat’ (below) which is so good that AirNZ is looking to licence it to other airlines for their business class cabins.


AirNZ is the first commercial airline to introduce induction ovens, which allows it to serve fresh pizza, burgers, toast and eggs as well steak cooked the way passengers want it. Passengers in all classes can also use the new IFE touch screen system to order food and beverages outside of main meal times.


As frequent flyers prefer a fast and hassle-free experience on the ground, members of AirNZ’s Airpoints loyalty program with an ‘ePass’ RFID sticker that for example can be attached to the back of a mobile phone.

Passengers then can use their mobile device to check-in on domestic and short-haul flights, enter passenger lounges and self-board at the gate. (Qantas’ Next-Generation Check-in system builds upon this by using smartchipped frequent flyer cards and bag tags.)

ANA
All Nippon Airways (ANA) has been courting business passengers with an improved product at a time its major competitor JAL is in the middle of a restructuring. The opening of Tokyo Haneda’s new international terminal in October 2010 and the trans-Pacific joint venture with United/Continental also has given ANA an opportunity to capitalize on its large domestic network out of Haneda.

ANA’s new first class features a private suite with a full-flat bed, a 23-inch LCD touch screen and an individual coat closet. At both Tokyo Haneda and Narita airports, First Class passengers can also work or relax in their own private ‘ANA Suite Lounge’ pod as they get checked-in and wait for their flight. The new business class also offers a full-flat bed in a staggered 1-2-1 layout which gives all seats unrestricted aisle access.

Further raising the bar, ANA offers First and Business class passengers travelling round trip from Japan to North America or Europe a ‘welcome-home’ helicopter or limousine transfer to central Tokyo.

ANA’s new economy seats have a very generous 34 inch pitch, USB and power ports, and the fixed back shell allows passengers to recline inside their seat, instead of into the lap of the passenger seated in the next row.

In a nod to business travellers that have traded down to economy class, full-fare economy passengers departing from Japan are eligible for priority check-in, free lounge access and priority baggage arrival.

ANA operates B767-300ERs on intra-Asian routes with business class seats that do not have in-seat power ports, so the airline lends passengers an external laptop battery which is compatible with approximately 20 different manufacturers and provides up to eight hours of extra laptop power. On domestic routes ANA passengers can have their luggage picked up or delivered at their home or office for a small fee.

Cathay Pacific
The Hong Kong flag carrier has been praised for its new business class seating (shown below) and the super-stylish Cabin departure lounge at Hong Kong International Airport.


CX is also “among a limited number of airlines that prepare parts of the menu fresh on board” according to AirlineTrends. The airline’s long-haul aircraft feature an onboard rice cooker as well as a toaster oven and an espresso machine.

Catering to the connected traveller, Cathay Pacific will fit its entire fleet with broadband Internet and mobile phone connectivity by early 2012 in partnership with Panasonic.

Emirates
Emirates is one of the very few airlines to provide its cabin crew with real-time customer information. “Cabin crew can access the airline’s CRM (customer relationship management) system to learn about passengers preferences, register possible complaints and let passengers pay for a last-minute inflight upgrade with miles” applauds AirlineTrends.

Asiana Airlines
The Korean airline is a long-time yet often little-known innovator – for example, in 1999 it introduced a coat storage service Seoul Incheon Airport during the winter season for passengers travelling to sunny destinations.

Last year’s new services include an onboard chef and sommerlier as well as a sushi chef on select flights to Los Angeles. In June 2010 Asiana started an US$70 million upgrade program, introducing new flat-bed seats in business class and free video-on-demand in-flight entertainment system on even short-haul routes.

Other airlines
AirlineTrends also calls out Lufthansa’s A380 first class, which has sound-absorbing curtains and carpet and special sound-insulating material in the aircraft’s outer skin blocking noise; and US carrier Delta’s rollout of in-flight Internet access on all mainline domestic aircraft, along with free ‘recharge stations’ dotted around its US airports where passengers can top up their laptop, smartphone or tablet.

fishers.ghost
28th Jan 2011, 06:47
How I wish an Asian carrier would buy Qantas and give Australians a decent innovative airline instead of the cheap and nasty Qantas and JetStar seem to think we want/deserve.
Qantas is the world's best airline......of 1976

industry insider
28th Jan 2011, 07:44
I flew United recently from JFK to SFO and they had wifi internet for $12 .....brilliant, does anyone have it between Australia and the USA? If they do they will get my 4 J Class trips per year guaranteed

chainsaw
28th Jan 2011, 07:46
We aimed to select airlines that have come up with interesting innovations in recent years, be it as part of a company culture of continuous innovation, a strategy to challenge the industry status quo, or as part of efforts to catch up after years of underinvestment.

Well, as far as I'm concerned, the LCC JQ 'innovation' spawned by QF certainly doesn't inspire any confidence whatsoever that the management of either entity has a clue about what continuous improvement/innovation is all about! The only evidence I'm seeing of a challenge to industry status quo with either QF or JQ is the challenge to see what can be cut next in the race to the bottom for the most crappy product on offer.

The years of underinvestment in the QF domestic offering is quite obvious if you're a regular traveller................it's all...............so bloody TIRED!

The only bright spot on the horizon is the QF frontline staff. IMHO, as a frequent traveller, they do a great job! :D

73to91
28th Jan 2011, 10:15
Was told last year that QF has a department, not sure of numbers, but people fly other airlines to appraise them.

My reply was 'what class do they fly? ' and the answer was "J class and mainly on SQ" - there in lies the joke.

They would be better off picking staff travel bookings and asking singles and families to fly on other airlines (full paying seats) and get them to appraise those carriers. Imagine a family with 2 young kids for example appraising Y class on x, y or z and providing the feedback rather than a manager flying J class.

QF lost their way before Dixon got there, he just followed on from Jimmy Bow Tie.

TIMA9X
28th Jan 2011, 11:24
a manager flying J class
and, forgets the bread & butter back in Y, "chattering class" for spreading the airlines ratings on mass.

You know the feeling, just get back from a mission traveling Y (wife & three kids, holiday for others) and one of the first questions normally is "who did you fly with?" Oh it was......... we all can guess the answer, (depending on how we feel that day.)

Lets just say, on a busy daily flight with 300 Y class seats... over a year that is 109,500 varied opinions.

A special useful innovation which feels part of the service (something that you remembered about the experience) would probably create more positive answers .

moa999
28th Jan 2011, 12:58
Cathay Pacific
The Hong Kong flag carrier has been praised for its new business class seating (shown below) and the super-stylish Cabin departure lounge at Hong Kong International Airport.


spin...spin...spin
That would be those business seats not yet in service, replacing their previous world-leading coffin class that was so derided.
(and the new seats are basically just copied off other airlines on a standard design)
And the Cabin, with uncomfortable seats, no view and no First section. I'll stay at the pier, or give me the QF First Lounge any day

Eastwest Loco
28th Jan 2011, 13:41
I actually have an unexpected boquet for CX.

I had a J class passenger ex HKG to SYD tonight with a waitlist for a later flight that came good. I actioned it and contacted the psgr but calling CX is impossible. They do not have any voice contact in Oz.

Fired a SSR into the system asking them to reassociate the e ticket to the new flight and butter me on both sides and call me Barbara, they actioned it within 3 hours.

Still not chuffed. I would rather talk to a human.

The J class config is 1 1 1 which is excellent.

Not happy with nobody to yell at if it goes pear shaped. I guess I never got over TAA pulling out. All good in the end though.

Best all

EWL

Kiwiconehead
29th Jan 2011, 00:47
That would be those business seats not yet in service, replacing their previous world-leading coffin class that was so derided.
(and the new seats are basically just copied off other airlines on a standard design)

CX neglect to mention that the new config also replaces the torture chamber that is their economy shell seats. They were innovative and world leading until people actually had to spend 15hrs in them