Serving our customers and running our airline has taken on many new faces throughout the pandemic. For Lucy Mak, Head of Global Airports, it has meant a whole variety of things outside her typical job description - from hunting down laboratory accreditations, to making hotel bookings, to creating a whole new system to help passengers check in.
The travel restrictions that have come into force since the pandemic have been strict, confusing and subject to constant change. This has caused many issues for customers and airport colleagues alike – with some passengers being caught out and denied travel.
“The Hong Kong Port Health Authority restrictions have particularly specific requirements for the data and the wording,” explains Mak. “For example, the name of the passenger on the test report and travel documents must be an exact match. If a Hong Kong person added their English name to one but not the other, it would not be accepted as a valid test report.
“Another example is the requirement to have the sample collection time stated: not when the test was taken, but when the sample was collected. Or proof that the laboratory is ISO15189 accredited: but it’s not enough for the laboratory to state that themselves, they separate documentary proof” explains Mak. “You can get a sense of how difficult it is for customers as well as the airport teams to check all these documents.”
In the early days, Mak and her Live Support teams leapt into action to help customers in every way possible - from trawling the internet to find all information available to calling labs for the correct data - but it quickly became apparent that there was a limit to what could be done at the check-in counter.
“I remember one case of a family from Sydney who had their flight cancelled and rebooked to the day before - but their quarantine hotel couldn’t accommodate them and they were panicking. We spent all morning on the phone to the hotel and eventually managed to negotiate an extra night for them on their original booking.”
That’s why the team spent three months rapidly developing Fly Ready: a new portal that allows customers to upload their documents in advance for pre-verification, so Cathay Pacific can confirm they have everything in order and alert them to any issues.
It offers peace of mind and improves the airport experience, allowing passengers to skip lengthy check-in queues and sail through dedicated Fly Ready lanes. And just as importantly, it helps to ensure that Cathay Pacific is in compliance with all the new rules and regulations – because a breach can have serious consequences.
“If we breach the regulations in a non-compliance case, there are severe problems: the route could be suspended and fines could be imposed of around HK$50,000 per case. Individuals could also be imprisoned for six months. So that is quite a heavy responsibility in making every single decision”, says Mak.
Launching Fly Ready has successfully eased the pressure on customers and airport colleagues, with up to half of all inbound passengers making use of the service and 10,000 cases processed. But it also placed a huge burden on Mak and her three-person Global Airport and Management Support team.
For the first nine months, these four individuals were solely responsible for handling the many cases coming through the Fly Ready portal. This meant being on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, handling an influx of sensitive passenger data to help everyone abide by frequently changing and complex new travel restrictions.
“I can describe those first 9-10 months as hell”, laughs Mak, who suddenly found herself becoming an expert on inspecting laboratory regulations.
She also had to deal with a discussion with the police, regarding 90 suspected cases of non-compliance. Thankfully, the team was able to prove due diligence - and Fly Ready has since been a handy tool in resolving suspected cases - with not a single case of non-compliance slipping through the net.
“Knowing what a huge problem it would be for the company if there was even one case of non-compliance has really helped to drive me and keep up a can-do spirit”, says Mak. "And I want to say thank you to my team for their hard work all the way”.
The team has now seconded 20 new colleagues to help process the Fly Ready cases, providing them with four months of extensive training beforehand.
“Our attitude is that it’s easy just to say no and deny a customer boarding. It’s much harder to try and help - but we really want to go the extra mile,’ says Mak. “Honestly, at the end of the day if you can help the customer, it’s just so satisfying.”
How we’re flying
Learn how our employees are making a difference for our customers and our communities.
-
Diary of a Closed Loop
One Cathay Pacific pilot shares his diary of life inside the five-week Closed Loop system.
-
What is the Closed Loop?
All about the roster system that has seen our people spend up to 49 days away from loved ones.
-
Proud to be flying
One pilot reflects on why he’s happy to be flying and helping serve the community.
-
Parks and reactivation: How we are storing aircraft during the pandemic
How we stored over 70 of our most valuable assets in Alice Springs, in the Australian desert.