luggage

The end of paper luggage tags?

Courtesy British Airways

A permanent digital luggage tag being tested by British Airways could help make temporary tags obsolete and speed up the check-in process.

The 2.95 billion adhesive luggage tags that airlines now print each year are enough to circle the Earth 39 times, according to the International Air Transport Association. “And they’re not just made of paper, but a silicon derivative that’s very hard to recycle,” said Andrew Price, IATA’s head of baggage services.

British Airway’s digital tag would allow travelers to use the same ID tag on each journey.

Here’s how it works: Using the airline’s mobile app, travelers can check in for a flight and hold their smartphones over a personalized digital tag to program it with flight details and baggage destination information. The tag uses Near Field Communication (NFC,) a short-range low-power wireless technology to transfer the information and long-lasting Kindle-like electronic ink to keep the unique barcode displayed and readable by baggage handlers and machine readers.

At the airport, the traveler can bypass the kiosk that prints tags and leave the electronically tagged luggage at a luggage drop or with a service rep at a counter. When it’s time for a new trip, the information on the tag is reprogrammed.

During the recent month-long test of the digital tags on British Airways flights between Seattle and London, “all bags went where they needed to go,” said Glenn Morgan, the airline’s head of service transformation. He declared that digital tag a success, but said the next step is expanding the type of smartphones that can program them. “Right now only Android and Windows phones support NFC,” said Morgan, and the airline wants to make sure the tags work fully with Apple phones as well.

British Airways may roll out a more sophisticated version of the digital tag for use by passengers in early 2014, but Morgan said the airline hasn’t decided whether it will give the tag to its frequent fliers and/or offer it for sale at a price yet to be determined.

British Airways isn’t the only company working on a digital bag tag.

Qantas Q BAG Tag

In 2011, Australian airline Qantas Airways introduced its QBag Tag.The permanent electronic tag can currently be used only on the airline’s domestic routes (with some exceptions) and relies on radio-frequency identification (RFID) rather than near-field communication to encode flight details onto the tag. Frequent fliers get a Q Bag Tag for free; others can purchase a tag for cash (about US $28) or for 6,500 Qantas points.

In April, IATA put together an industry working group to create standards for a permanent bag tag “that can be used in an interline environment and on any airline, regardless of the issuer of the tag.”

Airbus_-_Bag2go

Airbus Bag2Go

 

And at the Paris Air Show in June, aircraft manufacturing company Airbus showed off a prototype of Bag2Go, a digitally enabled suitcase developed with the IT services and consulting company T-Systems and luggage manufacturer Rimowa. The bag not only incorporates electronic tagging but also a scale to weigh its contents and GPS for real-time tracking.

“Convenience and speed is the key for frequent travelers,” said Richard Warther, president and CEO of Vanguard ID Systems, a Pennsylvania-based company that makes digital luggage tags. Security is built into the design so “electronic bag tags are now as good as the digital passports that are scanned when you get to customs,” said Warther.

Morgan agreed on the safety. “The digital bag tag contains the same information as a paper tag so there are no security risks,” he said.

And while the home-printed bag tag is becoming more popular, IATA’s Price doesn’t think anything will totally replace the thermal adhesive-paper tags travelers have become so familiar with.

“But,” he said, “I expect you may begin to see airlines using the digital tags within a year.”

(My story about digital luggage tags first appeared on CNBC Road Warrior)

Would you use this? Carry-on bags & training bands.

I’m a “if it doesn’t fit in a carry-on, I’m not taking it” kind of gal, and so was paying attention to all the small bags at the Travel Goods show last May in Las Vegas.

One of the interesting carry-on bag twists introduced there was the Genius Pack -a carry-on bag bag with a variety of built-in and add-on features such as integrated mobile chargers and speakers, an easy-to-access compact umbrella compartment, a coat hook and a separate compartment for laundry that compresses air – saving space and keeping your dirty togs away from your still-clean items.

If you look closely in the lower left side of the bag in the picture below, you’ll see some writing. That’s a built-in packing list, which seems helpful for last-minute packers.

Genius Pack 22- Upright

I’ve got one of these bags at my house right now, just begging me to fill it up and take it out on the road.

One of the items already in the bag is a small sack of Rexist 360 Training Bands and instructions for a 20 minute hotel workout that promises toning “in all the right places.”

I’ll let you know if this new carry-on ends up replacing the smaller shoulder bag I’ve been using and if the training bands replaces the single pink resistance band I’ve been toting around the world.

But in the meantime… just wondering: would you use these?

Who buys luggage at the airport?

Orlando_Bags4Travelstorefront

Bag 4 Travel – courtesy Orlando International Airport

 

Whether it’s a quick business trip or a two-week vacation, most every traveler leaves for the airport with a carry-on bag or suitcase to be checked that is filled with clothing, toiletries and other items that might be useful on the trip.

So who’s buying all that luggage for sale at airports?

Travelers like Los Angeles-based freelance writer Sue Facter.

When the zipper on her tote bag broke on the return leg of a business trip, she planned to just “wing it” until she got home and had time to transfer her travel essentials to another bag. “However, I was in an airport gift shop buying a newspaper and a gorgeous leather tote with lots of pockets caught my eye,” said Facter. “Not only was it chic, it was on sale for $75. To this day, it is my favorite tote. I use it so much, I just replaced the zipper.”

Susan Facter with bag she bought for $75 to replace a tote with a broken zipper

Susan Facter with bag she bough at an airport for $75 to replace a tote with a broken zipper. Courtesy Susan Facter.

 

 

While travelers with broken bags can often be spotted in airport hallways trying to re-arrange their belongings in a newly purchased suitcase, at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport, “staff repacks luggage right in the store so travelers can immediately put their new luggage to use,” said Karen Pride, spokesperson for the Chicago Department of Aviation.

“We sell just as much luggage to people returning from trips as leaving for them,” said Lee Barrett with Hudson News at Houston’s Hobby Airport. “A lot of times their luggage is just worn, but we had one man come in who had all of his clothes in Walmart [shopping] bags. He couldn’t believe the airline wouldn’t let him check those bags.”

The weight restrictions airlines have set for checked baggage – and the hefty fees faced by passengers whose bags exceed those weight limits – also drive luggage sales at airports.

Lindsey Slater, a meteorologist for KSPR News in Springfield, Mo., paid $30 to buy a new bag at Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, Wis., when she learned that the bag she had planned to check weighed in at just over 50 pounds. “Instead of paying an enormous fee of 90 buck or so, I decided it was actually cheaper to buy a smaller bag and check it for an additional 25 dollars. Crazy.” said Slater.

Lindsey Slater bought this bag at the airport in Milwaukee to avoid paying an overweight bag fee

Lindsey Slater bought this bag at Mitchell Int’l Airport in Milwaukee to avoid paying an overweight bag fee. Courtesy Lindsey Slater.

 

When American Airlines ticket counter worker Chris Lancaster informed a passenger at Arizona’s Tucson International Airport that her 60-pound suitcase was 10 pounds overweight and would incur an extra $100 fee, “she elected to visit the gift shop to buy an inexpensive carry-on bag for those extra 10 pounds to avoid the charge,” said Lancaster.

“Open luggage strewn across the lobby floor, with the owners repacking overweight bags into new bags purchased at the airport, is a familiar sight out here in Honolulu,” said Bill Payne. “Overweight charges can be $200 and more, so it can be a good investment to pay $50 for a bag that will accept 50 pounds of belongings and cost $25 to check.”

And then there are travelers returning to the airport after vacation shopping sprees

“Many international travelers heading home fill a carry-on with merchandise from the United States that they can’t buy in their home countries,” said Laura Samuels of Hudson Group, which operates branches of the Travel + Leisure Travel Store and Tumi luggage and accessories shops at various airports.

At Orlando International Airport, “we had to open a luggage store for all the travelers who come to our city to shop,” said Carolyn Fennell of the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority. “Bags 4 Travel opened in 2011 and the bestsellers are duffel bags, items from the nostalgic Pan Am line of luggage and “luggage for international travelers to use; sometimes to pack up large-screen televisions.”

At times, passengers simply see a beautiful bag in an airport store and buy it, whether they need it or not.

That’s how Earlyne (Lena) Alexander ended up with a colorful suitcase sporting a design by pop artist Romero Britto. “It was just pretty,” she said. “I saw it in the Travel + Leisure Travel Store in JFK Terminal 2. I had a carry-on at the time and stuck my luggage into the new one and checked it. In fact, I’m traveling through JFK again this weekend and thinking of purchasing the matching carry-on piece.”

Earlyne's luggage

Earlyne (Lena) Alexander couldn’t wait to tweet a photo of the luggage she bought at the airport.

 

The Tumi store on Concourse E at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is a regular stop for Benjamin Pendry. “My wife and I travel through ATL quite a bit and I always try to talk her into letting me go,” said Pendry, who reports buying more of his luggage at airports than anywhere else. “If your mind is set on traveling and you are in the middle of a trip, sometimes it’s the most convenient time to grab something new.”

Like Pendry, many travelers just have “luggage on the brain” when they’re at the airport, said Michele Marini Pittenger, president of the Travel Goods Association. “Travelers take notice of what others are rolling or carrying. So for travel retailers, airport locations are smart business” And, of course, “you’ve got a captive audience with time to kill.”

(My story “Who buys luggage at the airport?” first appeared in my “At the Airport” column on USAToday.com.

Who buys luggage at the airport?

women with luggage

I’m all for a very wide array of shops and amenities at airports, but whenever I see luggage for sale in a terminal I’m a bit perplexed.

After all, if you’re going on a trip, wouldn’t you already have a packed suitcase with you?

Bags break, of course, and many people do end up over-doing it a bit on the souvenirs, but I’m on a quest to hear some first-hand stories from people who have purchased a piece of luggage in an airport.

If that’s you, please leave a note in the comment section below. Your story may end up in a future column.

More stuff spotted at the Travel Goods Show in Las Vegas

Darling

I spent two full days this week walking up and down the aisles of the giant Travel Goods Show in Las Vegas.

A few of the fun items soon to be in stores and gift shops – including 3-D rolling bags featuring SpongeBob Squarepants and friends – were posted yesterday here on StuckatTheAirport.com.

Here are a few more:

Among the many new designs from Heys USA is this set of pieces called Divas

DIVA LUGGAGE SET

And this one called Travel :

TRAVEL SUITCASES

The folks at Visionair have several pieces of luggage featuring Felix the Cat:

felix

And these retro tags from Retro Tags are so… retro:

Retro Tags

And, because no trip to Las Vegas is successful without an Elvis sighting, here’s “Zebra Elvis” – spotted while I was in the van on the way to the airport.

elvis