1. Monitor every flight automatically
Manual flight monitoring — checking airline websites, calling clients — is the single biggest operational risk in airport transfers. A flight lands 40 minutes early and your driver is not there. A flight is delayed three hours and your driver waits at the terminal burning fuel and time.
Modern dispatch software tracks the flights linked to each booking and pushes alerts directly to your driver when status changes. No manual checking, no missed updates, no costly mistakes.
2. Standardise your meet-and-greet process
Define exactly what your meet-and-greet looks like and train every driver to deliver it consistently. Which terminal doors? What signage? How long does the driver wait before contacting the client? Consistency is what builds reputation.
3. Build buffer time into your rate matrix
Airport pickups include inherent unpredictability: luggage collection, customs, immigration. Build a standard waiting time into your pricing — typically 45–60 minutes after landing for international flights, 30 minutes for domestic. Anything beyond that is billable waiting time.
4. Automate client communications
Clients flying into an unfamiliar city are anxious. Reduce that anxiety with automatic, timely communications: booking confirmation immediately, driver details 24 hours before, and a live tracking link when the driver departs for the airport. Each message that goes out automatically is one less "where is my driver?" call your team has to handle.
5. Use zone pricing for airport routes
Airport-to-city routes are the most predictable in your business. They should have fixed, published prices by zone and vehicle class. This allows online booking, instant quotes, and eliminates the back-and-forth of manual quoting for standard routes.
6. Know your terminals inside out
Every driver in your fleet should know the layout of every terminal they serve: where to park, where the arrivals hall is, where the best cell phone lot is, and which exits are quickest. This is operational knowledge that reduces missed pickups and frustration for clients.
7. Follow up after every airport booking
A brief, automated post-ride message — "Thank you for travelling with us. We hope your journey was smooth." — is a low-cost way to reinforce the client relationship. Include a link to your online booking page. The client who just arrived will need a transfer when they leave.