ATLANTA – Delta Airlines is already using Surface 2 tablets in the cockpit and Nokia Lumia devices in the cabin, but will soon upgrade to the Lumia 1520 across its workforce of flight attendants as a point-of-sales (POS) solution.
Put forward by Microsoft during the opening keynote at its Convergence conference and awarded in Microsoft’s Customer Excellence recognition program, Delta showcased how it’s using custom apps on Nokia Lumia devices running Windows Phone 8. Currently Delta’s flight attendants are taking in-flight food orders using Lumia 820 phones, but will soon be upgrading to larger-screen Lumia 1520 devices.
Using the smartphones, or “phablets,” as smartphones that exceed six-inches in screen size are sometimes called, flight attendants can also sell seat upgrades available on the flight, says Darrell Haskin, the director of IT for Delta. While Delta uses SAP for its corporate enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, it will be relying on Dynamics AX for its retail operations. It adopted Microsoft’s software about 18 months ago.
“Although we sell seats to passengers, we never really considered ourselves to be in the retail space until recently,” he says.
The mobile devices used by Delta’s workers are connected thanks to Ku-band satellite Internet provided by Gogo Inc. A secure WiFi network means the credit card payments, accepted via a phone attachment, can now be checked in real-time instead of after a flight touches down.
“We weren’t telling customers we weren’t doing that. So we’d just swipe the card and you’d get your treat, and only later would we find out if that was a good card or not,” he says. “So there was a lot of loss that way.”
During his opening keynote, Kirill Tatarinov, executive vice president for Microsoft Business Solutions, described Microsoft’s software as helping its customers to drive a culture that is customer-centric, an important focus when consumers have more options than ever before at their fingertips.
“It’s an environment where the competitor is one click away,” he says. “At the same time, those who are happy are willing to pay more.”
The apps and services framework for Microsoft Dynamics AX will let customers take their own custom-built mobile apps – inside or outside the company firewall – and connect them to the ERP backend. Microsoft’s cloud platform, Windows Azure, sits in the middle between the mobile app and Dynamics AX to facilitate the communication. A white paper is offered to developers interested in creating the connection in their app.
Further support for businesses looking to deploy custom mobile apps comes in the form of beta-mode Project Siena, a code-free platform for business managers to use to create apps that pull from multiple databases in the Microsoft stack, including Excel files, RSS feeds, SharePoint, and Azure Mobile services.
Microsoft is showing its customers that it’s easy to build out mobile solutions on its Azure cloud platform, says Ray Wang, the founder of Constellation Research. It’s focused on building out more vertical capabilities with Dynamics AX, particularly for the retail and manufacturing sectors.
“It’s actually pretty easy if you’re a Microsoft shop to deploy on mobile devices,” he says. “They’re doing it with preconfigured instances inside Azure.”
Microsoft is also updating its other Dynamics products later this year, GP and NAV. GP is expected to see a release this quarter to include identity management, workflow, and self-service apps. NAV will see an update in Q4 of 2014.