Group Assignment – Schipol
International Hub
Company Background
Amsterdam
Airport Schiphol (Dutch: Luchthaven Schiphol, (IATA: AMS, ICAO: EHAM) is the
main international airport of the Netherlands, located 20 minutes (4.9 NM (9.1
km; 5.6 mi) southwest of Amsterdam, in the municipality of Haarlemmermeer. It
is the fourth busiest airport in Europe in terms of passengers.
Schiphol
is the primary hub for KLM and its regional affiliate KLM Cityhopper as well as
for Arkefly, Corendon Dutch Airlines, Martinair, and Transavia.com. The airport
also serves as a European hub for Delta Air Lines and as a base for easyjet and
Vueling. Schiphol is considered to be an airport city. The airport's official
English name, Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, reflects the original Dutch word
order (Luchthaven Schiphol).
How many levels of complexity
can you identify in Schiphol’s baggage conveyors network?
There are four layers of complexity each of them is intermingled with
others. The layers are given as below:
- The first level of complexity with Schiphol’s baggage conveyors network is where the bags are moved from check in area to departure gate. There was less coordination between software and hardware levels (e.g. conveyor belts, scanners, security checkers, etc.)
- The second level of complexity is at the level where the bags are moved gate to gate the place where the bag are handled by human support and aid the work (e.g. human baggage handlers) and also human-to-human relations (e.g. security officer with conveyor technician).
- Third level of complexity is at movement of the bogs from the arrival gate to the baggage claim where owner claim their bags from the security officers and conveyor technician.
- The fourth and last level of complexity is to plan and control peripheral Hardwar and software handling area where the conveyor network is large and intricate.
What are the
management, organization, and technology components of Schiphol’s baggage
conveyors network?
Management
1.
Setting the goal: right bag must be at the right place on right time
2.
Allocating human resources: in every level of conveyor there must be
available human resources to control, manage and handle the bags.
3.
Allocating financial resources like they have invested over 1billinon in
last 10 years
4.
New product development such they are going to introduce new baggage
handling and controlling system to handle huge bags in every year.
5.
Try to introduce new service offering and technology to give better
services
Organizational components:
Like every organization in Schiphol’s baggage conveyors network is made
up of different department. Each department contributes to the running of
the business. The most common departments are:
- Marketing & Sales
- Finance
- Human resource
- Information Technology departments
- Production Department
Technological Components
Technological components of Schiphol’s baggage conveyors network consists of Destination Coded Vehicles (DCVs), Automatic Bar Code Scanner, Radio Frequency Identification Tags, and High Tech Conveyer Sorting Machine.
What is the
problem that Schiphol is trying to solve? Discuss the business impact of this
problem?
The problem they are trying to
solve is the mishandling of baggage in Schiphol’s baggage conveyors network.
They are trying to increase efficiency of their baggage handling system
network. There is
huge business impact of this mishandling of baggage in their baggage conveyors
network such as loss of $2.5 billion for industry with annually affect 51
million passenger travelling through this airport.
Think of the data
that the network uses. What kinds of management reports can be generated from
that data?
Data items of circulating
across Schipol Conveyor Network comprise of four items are scheduling data;
hit/failure reports; delays; usage information. All of this data was designed
to allow plotting of cost-per-baggage reduction progressions.
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