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

  • New CCD camera from Lumenera
    March 26, 2014
    The Lt365R USB 3.0 CCD camera from Lumenera runs at 53fps at full resolution or 66fps at an HDTV resolution of 1,920 x 1,088. It takes advantage of Lumenera’s memory buffer technology which ensures that frames are not lost while running the camera at the sensor’s maximum output. Lumenera states that the Lt365R runs at twice the speed of other USB 3.0 cameras on this image sensor.
  • AGD launches advanced FMCW radar
    March 25, 2014
    Visitors to AGD’s stand at this year’s Intertraffic will see for themselves the firm’s most advanced FMCW intelligent radar detection system to date. AGD’s ‘318’ has been developed to detect and monitor vehicles in single lanes or highways and can track multiple vehicle targets simultaneously in both directions, providing range, speed and occupancy measurement to monitor and control traffic flow.
  • Navtech highlights radar’s cost-effectiveness
    October 23, 2012
    At this year’s ITS World Congress, Navtech Radar will be demonstrating the cost-effectiveness of using radar for Automated Incident Detection (AID) and other applications. “Radar’s capabilities, even in extremely challenging visual conditions, are now proven beyond doubt and we’ve been working over the last couple of years to make procurement and operation very cost-competitive,” says Navtech’s founding partner Stephen Clark. “System for system, radar compares well with CCTV but once performance is taken in
  • Saferoads displays Omni Stop Bollard
    March 24, 2014
    Australian firm Saferoads is offering an improved roadside protection product in the shape of its new Omni Stop Bollard. The product is suited to installations such as around construction workzones or pedestrian and commercial areas, where there may be site personnel or people congregating alongside a busy roadway. The Omni Stop Bollards can be spaced so as to allow free access for pedestrians or cyclists, while providing protection from errant vehicles.