Skip to main content

Cubic shows NextAgent virtual ticketing concept

If you want to know the future of transport ticketing, make sure you visit the Cubic Transportation stand and check out NextAgent, the virtual ticketing concept that is set to revolutionise the industry. NextAgent Video Ticket Office acts as a combination of a conventional ticket office, vending machine, and call centre. The passenger speaks and interacts, face-to-face, with a clerk throughout the ticketing process, just as they would at a traditional ticket window. The only difference is that the intera
March 24, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
If you want to know the future of transport ticketing, make sure you visit the 378 Cubic Transportation stand and check out NextAgent, the virtual ticketing concept that is set to revolutionise the industry.

NextAgent Video Ticket Office acts as a combination of a conventional ticket office, vending machine, and call centre. The passenger speaks and interacts, face-to-face, with a clerk throughout the ticketing process, just as they would at a traditional ticket window.

The only difference is that the interaction takes place over a high definition screen that provides a high speed video connection, so customers can discuss their requirements with a knowledgeable agent and get the right ticket at the right price, irrespective of the time of day. Or they can talk to the NextAgent clerk about a problem, such as a faulty ticket where the magstripe doesn’t work.

The NextAgent can interrogate the ticket to find out what is wrong with it, and then correct it, something that no ticket vending machine today could do.

For transport operators, the enormous benefits of NextAgent are immediately obvious: station ticket office staff can be freed up to assist passengers on platforms, creating safer, friendlier station environments. Operators can benefit from business models proven in other industries, including outsourcing and centralised call centres. And by outsourcing out-of-hours ticketing, operators can leverage economies of scale to provide passengers with a better ticketing experience at lower cost.

Another major benefit is that operators can pool specialist skills and experience — in foreign languages, for example, or unusual ticketing requirements — and make them available to passengers at any connected station.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 42050 0 oLinkExternal www.cts.Cubic.com Cubic web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=42050 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Traficon shows Eye-D and VIP-PTZ products at ITS World Congress
    October 22, 2012
    Traficon has brought several exciting new technologies to the ITS World Congress. Earlier this year, the company acquired Sumit, a provider of automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) technology. Traficon has been working ever since to incorporate the Sumit technology into its own portfolio and visitors to its stand can see the result here – Eye-D, a dedicated Traficon camera product for intersection enforcement.
  • NMi’s efficient calibration for enforcement technology
    March 24, 2014
    Netherlands based NMi has developed an array of accurate measuring systems for a range of traffic-related applications. Typical duties for these calibration systems include determining the accuracy of truck tachographs, parking meters that charge by the minute, speed measuring equipment or charging points for electric vehicles. The company claims expertise in meeting the legislative requirements in a wide array of countries, with worldwide acceptance of test reports or certification provided by NMi for use
  • Activu highlights new TMC visualization and collaboration system
    April 23, 2013
    Activu is showcasing its new visualisation and collaboration system for traffic management centers that enables real-time coordination with other agencies such as fire, police, EMS and HAZMAT.
  • Matrix Vision interfaces with new CMOS
    October 29, 2014
    Matrix Vision now offers its dual-Gigabit Ethernet, Gigabit Ethernet and USB 3.0 industrial cameras interfaced with the new Sony IMX174 CMOS sensor, which the company says sets standards in dynamic, speed, quantum efficiency and noise. The 1.5-inch sensor has a resolution of 1936 x 1214 pixels and reaches a frame rate of 128fps in the dual-GigE model mvBlueCOUGAR-XD using the burst mode, 52fps in the GigE family mvBlueCOUGAR-X, and 162fps in the USB 3.0 model mvBlueFOX3. Even in situations with difficul