Data-driven agility helping Wizz Air to soar above rivals DIGITAL REPORT 2022
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ta-driven agility helping izz Air to soar above rivals
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Zsolt Nadas, Head of Technology at Wizz Air, explains how their digital ecosystem is leading to faster processes and better deals for their customers
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izz Air likes to be the ultralow cost challenger airline in the aviation industry full of numerous, larger legacy rivals. The company prides itself on its agility to move passengers, and customers, as quickly and as efficiently as possible between points to out-manoeuvre the competition. In the world of ultra low cost airlines, one of the core principles at Wizz Air is flying its aircraft as full as possible. Reducing costs generally makes people happy about flying on its airline. But to achieve this, the data comes in to calibrate ticket prices and make sure that the airline can fill the aircraft. Zsolt Nadas is Head of Technology at Wizz Air. His responsibility is to provide a foundation for all of Wizz Air’s digital ecosystem, to build and enhance digital capabilities. This includes data and analytics, cybersecurity, infrastructure, networking, and interface with all the thirdparty providers for prepackaged software. “We can use trends in ticket prices to proactively predict for the future. We sense demand and change our capacity in markets respectively. It all comes down to a very simple formula that if our aircraft are full, and we're maximising all our resources, such as our pilot time and aircraft utilisation time, we can reduce the cost to the customer. And so correctly predicting and understanding our customer's behaviour has enabled us to offer our ultra-low cost product,” he said. 4
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Zsolt Nadas, Head of Technology at Wizz Air
2003
Year founded
€739 mn Revenue in 2021
150+
Aircrafts
1,140+
Routes
196
Airports
51
Countries
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“We've really prided ourselves on the fact that - throughout this period - we were able to continue flying” ZSOLT NADAS
HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY, WIZZ AIR
How Wizz Air became a data-driven business COVID-19 resulted in an accelerated investment into the data capacity of the organisation, so where it used to spend six to 18 weeks researching new routes, markets and opportunities, Nadas’ team department has now turned that time into six to 18 days. The airline industry as a whole was static pre-pandemic, moving slowly in terms of route planning, capacity planning and pricing. With things changing on a weekly basis, Wizz Air adopted increased agility with opening new routes and new bases. “We've really prided ourselves on the fact that - throughout this period - we were able to continue flying. We were able to provide people with mobility and the opportunity for those who needed to fly during the pandemic. “We’re being incredibly reactive and responsive. We need more granular data so we can make more granular decisions. We were already better than the competition - who were looking at pure demographics from yearly statistics. Now we’re at the point that we make daily decisions based on promotions, where we expect to see a certain uptick. If we see more, that means the market's hot. If we see less, that means the market's cold, and we can actually model not just in real time, but far more actively respond,” said Nadas. corporate.wizzair.com
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Wizz Air soars higher with value of unlocked data Wizz Air and Avanade executives discuss transforming data to build a stronger airline: faster insights, lower costs, and better customer experiences Leading European airline Wizz Air aims to give its customers the lowest cost. To find new ways to drive efficiency, they needed to squeeze insights from every data set. Zsolt Nadas, Wizz Air Head of Technology, called upon Avanade to help transform their data on Microsoft Azure: “I was looking for a partner who wasn’t just going to come in and provide the delivery muscle, but somebody who would guide us and be more prescriptive with the vision”. Alan Grogan, Global Data Platform Modernisation lead at Avanade, rapidly assembled a multi-geographic team to align data strategy to Wizz Air’s operational ambitions. “We saw a huge opportunity to help improve data accessibility and trustworthiness – and accelerate the time it took to generate high-value insights from that data,” said Grogan.
Accelerating data and better decisions A delay in data availability meant Wizz Air’s systems and people couldn’t act quickly
enough to make time and cost-saving decisions. With data now streamed to a modern Azure Data Platform, Avanade helped the airline unify and accelerate data value for near-real-time visibility into nearly every aspect of operations: from on-thefly decisions to staffing models to tweaks to flight paths that save fuel. Every incremental operational improvement meant reduced waste, reduced down-time, and ultimately, lower cost for Wizz Air customers.
Better green outcomes and beyond Wizz Air aspires to be the greenest airline in the industry. By moving to Azure, the world’s greenest cloud, Wizz Air can immediately lower its carbon footprint, and scale its data and analytical processing in a responsible way. “We’re proud of the data-driven culture we’ve helped develop with Wizz Air,” said Grogan. “I’m thrilled to say we’re only getting started.” Nadas said, “Data projects are easy to dream and hard to deliver. And that’s why partners like Avanade are really what make this possible.”
Let Avanade show you how to use data to unlock better results
According to Nadas, data models used to need 18 or 24 months of data. But if things have changed twice in the last three weeks, he knew Wizz Air needed to become far better at using capabilities like machine learning (ML) to really know how quickly it can respond to new data, new questions and new hypotheses. The lowest reasonable price ticket without compromising service Nadas believes it is really important that people continue to trust Wizz Air and have positive experiences. Some of the company’s predictive data isn't even just used for pricing and for market demand, 10
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but for improving on-time performance and the overall customer experience. “We can't continue to push downward so far that we become an airline that people don't want to fly with, but we want to become as efficient as possible without compromising on our customer service. “From its very inception, Wizz Air was different because it was trying to make air travel affordable to everybody. When it was founded here in Hungary 18 years ago, many in the country had not ever been on an aeroplane, so the CEO was really aiming to make it accessible for all. “The biggest way we could make it accessible is through cost and making flying
WIZZ AIR
Zsolt Nadas TITLE: HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY COMPANY: WIZZ AIR INDUSTRY: AIR TRAVEL
EXECUTIVE BIO
LOCATION: BUDAPEST, HUNGARY Zsolt Nadas, as the Head of Technology at Wizz Air, ensures that the technology foundation grows with the agility and scalability to match the aggressive goals of the airline. As the fastest growing airline in Europe, Wizz Air is constantly expanding the breadth and depth of technology investments. This includes modernisation of its website – which is Europe’s fourth most visited website – and an acceleration of the migration to public cloud. It also includes the governance, optimisation, and exploitation of the 300+ TB of data used in its day-to-day operation. Zsolt started his career as a software engineer and later pivoted to Data and Analytics with a focus on data-centric transformation. He also has significant depth in compliance and enterprise risk management, having been responsible for the control design for the first Sarbanes-Oxley compliant Data Lake on a big data platform. Nadas stays close to cutting-edge innovation by being active in the start-up community, acting as a mentor for multiple data driven pioneers. Zsolt graduated with a degree in Computer Science from University of Illinois, and later supplemented this with a Master’s in Computer Information Systems from the University of Phoenix.
“ W e’re being incredibly reactive and responsive” ZSOLT NADAS
HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY, WIZZ AIR
WIZZ AIR
more affordable. And not just that. It was also about making sure it was an experience that everybody would appreciate and enjoy and giving people the choice to pay for the services they wanted. One of the early taglines was that ‘a smile is free’. What makes Wizz Air is the fact that we really are passionate about helping people move from A to B and back. The culture has always been all about that. Connecting people with people,” said Nadas.
HOW WIZZ AIR MAXIMISES ITS RESOURCES Wizz Air carried more than 3.6 million passengers in April 2022, against 564,643 last year. The strong growth in passenger numbers brought along an encouraging load factor of almost 84%, which was a more than 24% increase from last year's load factor of 59.2%. Factors that have helped Wizz Air to achieve this: •
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An aircraft that is parked makes no money, but still needs to be paid for. Consumers will pick up this cost, so this needs to be avoided wherever possible. A grounded pilot costs money and planning time. The ultra-low cost model is designed around simplicity, and utilisation of Wizz Air resources to the maximum. Wizz Air aims to fly more efficient point to point routes only (direct). This maximises revenue from a fuel and sustainability standpoint.
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Cloud allows accelerated digitalisation The differentiator in the past couple of months for Wizz Air has been its accelerated movement to cloud, and specifically Microsoft Azure and the leveraging of modern data technologies. Gone is the traditional, older SQL server. Now using Databricks, the business moves towards a cohesive data ecosystem where partners were able to accelerate progress from zero to functional in six weeks. Combined with industry leading aviation knowledge from its partners at DAA labs, the company could do things like analysing the entire network in under an hour, by scaling up resources, and then scaling them back down when done. “By analysing our customer behaviour, whether through something as simple as the efficiency and the proper response to promotions, to see if the market is responding as anticipated in almost real time, these technologies were a capability that tackles off the ball and chain. We can not just react, but predict; using multiple hypotheses that we can process and validate to pivot quickly. Our technology toolset– especially Databricks – transformed how quickly we can go from question to results. We’re not trying to replace human intuition, we’re maximising it with modern approaches,” Nadas said.
“ W e’ve actuall y put a price tag on disruption” ZSOLT NADAS
HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY, WIZZ AIR
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Data-driven agility helping Wizz Air to soar above rivals
“ F rom its ver y inception, Wizz Air was different because it was trying to make air travel affordable to ever ybody” ZSOLT NADAS
HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY, WIZZ AIR
Able to test new territories with agility and low risk When Wizz Air tried to expand into Norway’s domestic market, it was able to rethink the rollout after observing that the market conditions weren’t perfectly set up for the service at the time. “And that's something that 20, 30, 40 years ago; wouldn't have been possible because the decision would've come too slowly and the data wouldn't have been able to give us that feedback as necessary and the analysis would've taken too long. “Aviation is probably one of two industries that I've worked in, as part of my consulting background, that has always had a rich data tradition. The other one being oil and gas specifically because of the amount of investment to realise value. Aircraft are corporate.wizzair.com
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expensive. Deciding what to do with an incredibly expensive resource is critical. Decades ago, the amount of analysis being done to decide where to deploy aeroplanes was non-trivial. The data available has actually increased since then, but modern tools like Databricks coupled with our Cloud compute in Azure allow us to take that data and process quickly to drive decisions,” explained Nadas.
Disruption management and pricing modelling for added agility Disruption management pricing modelling is something Wizz Air wants to maximise. Nadas said that the most direct feedback loop that the company has is its customers: “The best way to predict customer behaviour is to watch the customer behaviour.” “So whether it's a matter of having tighter integration between our marketing department and our pricing departments, so that we can correctly hypothesise the impact of our promotions, to determine whether that had the appropriate impact on passengers, or to measure outside factors; we are not a sole provider within any of our markets. And sometimes we will see external factors influencing our ridership and our average ticket there,” he said. corporate.wizzair.com
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“ W e've been able to use the customer data as a source of information and feedback without actually using traditional surveys” ZSOLT NADAS
HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY, WIZZ AIR
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Pricing is one of the core differentiators for the airline, where it has actually pivoted from being for pure revenue maximisation to developing a communication channel with its customers, both directly and indirectly, in terms of automation. Another element is disruption management. Having been a travelling consultant himself - who flew every day for almost a decade - Nadas knows those terrible days at the airport, wondering what's going on,
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without actually using traditional surveys. By experimenting with various customer segments, we learned a lot and it has made us a better airline”, said Nadas.
where the flight is going to take off from and the distress associated with this experience. “We know from customer behaviour that a passenger who's been rescheduled three times will likely continue to fly with us. But a passenger whose flight has been rescheduled five or six times is less than 50% likely to continue flying with us. We've actually put a price tag on disruption. Should we cancel a flight and say it might go tomorrow, or should we just reschedule the flight and say it will go in three days and we can guarantee you that? So we've been able to use the customer data as a source of information and feedback
Beyond data and into new technologies As part of the disruption management, Nadas knows how challenging it is when things aren't going to plan, and whether it's utilising existing technologies like its freshly launched chat bots, which have reduced call centre loads significantly, providing passengers with more immediate feedback online or using airport maps and in future, geofencing, to give customers more guidance in the airport, the solutions are always geared towards reducing stress. “Airports are probably the most stressful part of the journey. And as an airline, we are merely tenants at an airport, but we aim to alleviate any stress with proactive communications. We’re continuously improving in our goal to be helpful and customer friendly, with such features as push notifications to alert customers that boarding has started, with a boarding percentage to see if you need to start running or not to the gate,” said Nadas. corporate.wizzair.com
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“ B y being a responsible global citizen as a company, we become a better partner ” ZSOLT NADAS
HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY, WIZZ AIR
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Wizz Air standing up in a crisis The leadership and crisis management team at Wizz Air are empowered to take the actions needed to protect and help people where possible. An example of this is offering free tickets to those fleeing the war in Ukraine, to help support refugees to reach a safe place: “We can continue to transport them around Europe on our network, if they need to evacuate or flee Ukraine,” said Nadas. Wizz Air was also proactive in providing financial assistance by offering free seats available for Ukrainian refugees to book on all continental Europe flights departing from Ukraine’s border countries (Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania). The airline is continuing to provide support by partnering with notfor-profit organisations Choose Love, The Shapiro Foundation, The Steve Morgan Foundation and USPUK, to offer 10,000 free tickets for Ukrainian refugees to travel from Ukraine’s neighbouring countries (Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia) to the UK, in support of the UK Government ‘Homes for Ukraine’ visa scheme. “Our crisis management team, who has been working 24/7, since the conflict started, needs information as they are constantly making decisions. “Recently, we've had to make some very rapid cybersecurity decisions and information privacy decisions to do things like opening up WhatsApp, to open up Telegram, to get us more connected, not just with our own ecosystem, but with the whole world, because we are part of a large ecosystem. By being a responsible global citizen as a company, we become a better partner in reacting to this as a unified member of the EU and of the world,” he added.
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