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<strong>Fare</strong> <strong>Management</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>High</strong> Per<strong>for</strong>mance—<br />

a <strong>strategic</strong> <strong>approach</strong> <strong>to</strong> benefit all stakeholders


For transport authorities<br />

worldwide the dual challenges<br />

of urbanization and environmental<br />

sustainability loom ever larger.


For the first time in human his<strong>to</strong>ry<br />

more than half the world’s people<br />

live in cities. As the conduit <strong>to</strong> services<br />

and employment <strong>for</strong> the vast mass<br />

of these populations, urban transport<br />

systems are critical <strong>to</strong> economic<br />

growth and social inclusion. Yet<br />

maintaining mobility in rapidly<br />

growing and steadily decentralizing<br />

urban environments is becoming more<br />

and more difficult—especially as<br />

governments come under mounting<br />

pressure <strong>to</strong> reduce vehicle emissions.<br />

These challenges assume still greater<br />

urgency in uncertain economic times.<br />

A global downturn can change travel<br />

patterns, of course, and constrained<br />

credit conditions could temporarily<br />

delay investments. But while the<br />

impetus <strong>to</strong> sustainability may also<br />

temporarily weaken, investments in<br />

land transport are by definition longterm.<br />

And the drivers of long-term<br />

change—technological, environmental<br />

and cus<strong>to</strong>mer—are just <strong>to</strong>o strong.<br />

Moreover, as in the private sec<strong>to</strong>r,<br />

economic adversity provides a strong<br />

incentive <strong>for</strong> transport authorities and<br />

opera<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>to</strong> boost competitiveness<br />

and achieve high per<strong>for</strong>mance through<br />

improved cost management and better<br />

cus<strong>to</strong>mer service.<br />

The providers of land transport cannot<br />

hope <strong>to</strong> meet long-term objectives by<br />

just doing “more of the same”. Passengers<br />

simply won’t stand <strong>for</strong> it. Now used <strong>to</strong><br />

swifter, more personalized service in so<br />

many aspects of their daily lives, they are<br />

demanding the same sort of premium<br />

treatment from transport providers. New<br />

levels of convenience and connectivity<br />

<strong>to</strong> help them make the best use of their<br />

time are at the <strong>to</strong>p of travelers’ agendas.<br />

But although transport opera<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

probably <strong>to</strong>uch more people on a daily<br />

basis than any other urban entity, few<br />

really know their cus<strong>to</strong>mers or how <strong>to</strong><br />

connect with them—not least because<br />

most fare collection systems are still<br />

anonymous and cash-based.<br />

Electronic fare collection, by contrast,<br />

facilitates mutually beneficial<br />

connectivity. Equipped with “smart”<br />

(electronic) media, passengers and<br />

drivers enjoy swifter, simpler, safer<br />

travel. While au<strong>to</strong>mated account<br />

management provides opera<strong>to</strong>rs with<br />

the detailed, granular view of traveler<br />

activity, trends and mobility behavior<br />

that can enable service improvements,<br />

increase cus<strong>to</strong>mer satisfaction, drive<br />

revenues—and build high per<strong>for</strong>mance<br />

in <strong>to</strong>day’s turbulent markets.<br />

That’s not all.<br />

Au<strong>to</strong>mated, integrated and interoperable<br />

fare collection—the Accenture <strong>Fare</strong><br />

<strong>Management</strong> Solution—promises <strong>to</strong><br />

revolutionize both public transport and<br />

private road use <strong>for</strong> travelers, opera<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

and transport authorities.<br />

A truly interoperable electronic payment<br />

capability—both multi-modal and multi-<br />

opera<strong>to</strong>r—can provide an extended<br />

1


service plat<strong>for</strong>m that travelers can use<br />

<strong>for</strong> broader applications throughout<br />

their daily journey. Such a capability<br />

can facilitate parking, fuel purchase<br />

and other retail activities. It can<br />

enable effective access control in<br />

congested or protected zones. And<br />

it can have wider public service<br />

applications as well. Indeed, once<br />

accepted, such a capability can<br />

actually help change public attitudes,<br />

encouraging more sustainable<br />

transport, as well as providing a <strong>to</strong>ol<br />

<strong>for</strong> easing traffic congestion.<br />

The obstacles<br />

For all their desirability, successful fare<br />

management systems are enormously<br />

difficult <strong>to</strong> build—not least because<br />

trans<strong>for</strong>ming <strong>to</strong> a more au<strong>to</strong>mated<br />

world requires the collaboration of<br />

multiple stakeholders, each of which<br />

will have their own particular concerns.<br />

2<br />

Travelers, <strong>for</strong> example, may perceive<br />

enabling technologies <strong>for</strong> au<strong>to</strong>mated<br />

fare collection <strong>to</strong> be intrusive, and<br />

consequently derail an opera<strong>to</strong>r’s<br />

business case by traveling less or<br />

choosing <strong>to</strong> stick with the anonymous<br />

tickets that would otherwise be phased<br />

out. Opera<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>to</strong>o may object <strong>to</strong> the<br />

standardization and centralization of<br />

fare collection, and their resistance<br />

can scuttle the simplest of technical<br />

solutions.<br />

The fact that the technologies that<br />

sustain such systems are constantly<br />

changing further complicates the<br />

picture. Contact-less bankcards,<br />

mobile and wireless data devices<br />

and global positioning system (GPS)<br />

technologies are all now <strong>to</strong>uted<br />

as enablers <strong>to</strong> the future <strong>for</strong> fare<br />

management. Yet harnessing their<br />

power without increasing the risks<br />

that the resulting system will become<br />

technologically obsolescent during its<br />

lifespan can be a delicate balancing<br />

act. Furthermore, since most transport<br />

authorities are part of larger political<br />

structures, there’s no guarantee that<br />

funding <strong>for</strong> fare management projects<br />

will remain constant.<br />

Accenture’s response—<br />

a <strong>strategic</strong> <strong>approach</strong><br />

Accenture understands these challenges<br />

better than most. As specialists in<br />

delivering innovation that works—in<br />

this case, true interoperability—we<br />

have real-world knowledge and<br />

experience of the business processes,<br />

software and technology infrastructure<br />

solutions, both mature and evolving,<br />

that can help companies achieve high<br />

per<strong>for</strong>mance. We also have broad and<br />

deep capabilities as systems integra<strong>to</strong>rs.<br />

We have worked in close collaboration<br />

with transport authorities from the<br />

Ceskoslovenska obchodni banka, a. s. (CSOB), a universal bank<br />

operating in the Czech Republic, contracted Accenture <strong>to</strong> develop<br />

the revenue management solution <strong>for</strong> the Czech Republic national<br />

HGV <strong>to</strong>lling scheme which went live in January 2007. Accenture<br />

utilised its <strong>Fare</strong> <strong>Management</strong> Solution <strong>to</strong> develop the necessary<br />

plat<strong>for</strong>m <strong>to</strong> clear and settle financial transactions generated from<br />

the core electronic <strong>to</strong>lling system.<br />

The Accenture system collects transactions from the <strong>to</strong>ll distribution<br />

and contact points across the country <strong>to</strong> clear and settle all pre-paid and<br />

post-paid transactions. The system communicates with all fleet card<br />

and payment card issuers <strong>to</strong> process the data. This solution provides<br />

payment processing, clearing and settlement as well as compliance<br />

processing. The solution calculates commissions <strong>for</strong> the distribution<br />

and contact points and fee calculation <strong>for</strong> fleet cards issuers.


Czech Republic <strong>to</strong> Canada, successfully<br />

building au<strong>to</strong>mated fare collection<br />

systems <strong>for</strong> both the eTicketing<br />

that sustains fare management in<br />

public transport or mass transit, and<br />

<strong>for</strong> road charging.<br />

Our extensive experience has taught<br />

us that success hinges on much more<br />

than technology alone. The key <strong>to</strong><br />

achieving high per<strong>for</strong>mance through<br />

fare management systems is <strong>to</strong> take<br />

a holistic <strong>approach</strong>.<br />

And that <strong>approach</strong> starts, crucially, with<br />

the development of a <strong>strategic</strong> road<br />

map; it incorporates the principle of<br />

developing relevant plat<strong>for</strong>m services;<br />

and it seeks <strong>to</strong> generate competitive<br />

advantage when addressing the need<br />

<strong>for</strong> sustainability.<br />

A holistic view<br />

Technology, of course, is a key enabler of any fare management system. And<br />

innovative use of new technology, if deployed and integrated with care, can<br />

offer travelers more choices and greater flexibility by providing the means <strong>to</strong><br />

per<strong>for</strong>m processes in more efficient and creative ways. Technology, however,<br />

is just one aspect of long-term strategy. Processes and people are just as<br />

important <strong>to</strong> successful delivery—and can be major stumbling blocks if<br />

not tackled systematically as part of the <strong>strategic</strong> road map <strong>to</strong> becoming a<br />

high-per<strong>for</strong>mance business.<br />

Successful system design should address all of the following:<br />

• Cus<strong>to</strong>mer requirements—what do citizens actually value?<br />

• The business case—what are we trying <strong>to</strong> achieve?<br />

• Multiple stakeholders and governance—can we meet everyone’s needs<br />

and ensure compliance?<br />

• Technology—can we integrate diverse components and accommodate<br />

rapid change?<br />

• The environment—does the <strong>approach</strong> promote sustainability?<br />

5


Figure 1: Taking a holistic <strong>approach</strong><br />

Building a <strong>strategic</strong> road map<br />

Designing a <strong>strategic</strong> road map is a fundamental<br />

first step—but one that <strong>to</strong>o many organizations<br />

ignore, usually in the interests of trying <strong>to</strong><br />

accelerate the process.<br />

4<br />

Key Tasks<br />

Key Deliverables<br />

Understand<br />

business<br />

context<br />

Define<br />

value<br />

levers<br />

• Conduct Public Service<br />

Value/Shareholder<br />

Value Analysis<br />

• Review current conditions<br />

review and processes<br />

• Outcome/Shareholder<br />

Value model<br />

• Current conditions review<br />

and baseline<br />

Analyze<br />

requirements<br />

Develop<br />

options<br />

• Assess technology and<br />

solution landscape<br />

• Develop requirements and<br />

use cases<br />

• Per<strong>for</strong>m option analysis and<br />

develop solution set<br />

• Undertake feasibility check<br />

• Develop business case(s)<br />

• Outline technology roadmap<br />

• Technology assessments<br />

• Solution ‘long list’<br />

• Business case <strong>for</strong><br />

short-listed solutions<br />

• Technology Roadmap<br />

Define and<br />

confirm<br />

<strong>approach</strong><br />

Develop<br />

implementation<br />

plans and<br />

frameworks<br />

• Develop solution architecture<br />

• Build organization models<br />

• Determine commercial and<br />

financial models<br />

• Develop governance <strong>approach</strong><br />

and model<br />

• Finalize Strategic Roadmap<br />

• Strategic Roadmap and<br />

supporting materials<br />

Define Value Explore Options Develop Strategy


As a result, those responsible <strong>for</strong><br />

taking key decisions often have<br />

insufficient evidence <strong>to</strong> validate their<br />

choices. And in projects like these,<br />

which involve so many stakeholders,<br />

this omission can prove fatal. As Jeroen<br />

Kok, CEO of Trans Link Systems (TLS),<br />

the company that was established <strong>to</strong><br />

bring a nationwide eTicketing system<br />

<strong>to</strong> the Netherlands, observes: “These<br />

projects don’t fail on the technology;<br />

they fail on decision making.”<br />

Define value<br />

It’s critically important <strong>to</strong> define not<br />

only why the organization might want<br />

<strong>to</strong> undertake the journey <strong>to</strong> develop<br />

more advanced fare management<br />

capabilities, but also what the final<br />

destination might look like <strong>for</strong> all<br />

stakeholders in the initiative. Because<br />

most public transportation systems<br />

are not fully commercial, self-funding<br />

ventures, new structures should<br />

incorporate an evaluation framework<br />

that reflects public service value, as<br />

well as the shareholder value methods<br />

more appropriate <strong>for</strong> private entities.<br />

The key here is <strong>to</strong> determine what the<br />

scheme’s end users value most highly,<br />

as well as what will deliver optimum<br />

value <strong>for</strong> the organization.<br />

When the Finnish Ministry of Transport<br />

and Communications was considering<br />

a charging system that would reduce<br />

road use at peak periods—congestion<br />

charging—in Helsinki, Accenture worked<br />

with them <strong>to</strong> develop an evaluation<br />

framework that incorporated and<br />

balanced the desired outcomes of all<br />

stakeholder groups. Similarly, in Italy,<br />

we worked with Trenitalia, the national<br />

rail company, <strong>to</strong> evaluate not just the<br />

potential economic benefits of an<br />

integrated fare management initiative,<br />

but also the broader public costs<br />

and benefits—passenger safety and<br />

satisfaction, as well as the impact on<br />

Trenitalia’s accessibility goals.<br />

Explore options<br />

If an organization is <strong>to</strong> establish a<br />

compelling business case <strong>to</strong> secure<br />

stakeholder buy-in be<strong>for</strong>e proceeding<br />

with a fare management trans<strong>for</strong>mation,<br />

it’s vital <strong>to</strong> take a long-term view of<br />

what available solutions can achieve,<br />

as well as likely future developments<br />

and requirements. Technologies, after<br />

all, are constantly changing.<br />

This <strong>approach</strong> should encompass<br />

people, processes and technology—and<br />

proceed in harmony with a solutions<br />

design <strong>for</strong> the business organization<br />

and operations. Critically, the design<br />

should include clearly defined<br />

specifications <strong>for</strong> both current and<br />

future fare management solutions so<br />

that organizations can move <strong>for</strong>ward<br />

in the knowledge that they are wellpositioned<br />

<strong>to</strong> manage developments<br />

in fare media technology and security,<br />

as well as constantly evolving<br />

cus<strong>to</strong>mer demands.<br />

In 2006, <strong>for</strong> example, Accenture spent<br />

five months conducting a global<br />

market and vendor benchmarking and<br />

analysis exercise <strong>for</strong> Societe Nationale<br />

Chemins de Fer Francais (SNCF), the<br />

French national rail opera<strong>to</strong>r, which<br />

was reviewing eTicketing technologies.<br />

The exercise confirmed the volatility<br />

of the market and, by helping the<br />

client understand the full range of<br />

options, reduced the risk of adopting<br />

technologies that could rapidly<br />

become redundant.<br />

Develop strategy<br />

<strong>Fare</strong> management systems are huge<br />

undertakings, with significant long-<br />

term implications <strong>for</strong> business<br />

processes, organizational structures<br />

and cus<strong>to</strong>mer relationships. And there<br />

are many issues <strong>to</strong> consider.<br />

Resistance <strong>to</strong> change is just one<br />

aspect of the challenge that fare<br />

management systems pose. Failure <strong>to</strong><br />

review and update business models<br />

impacted by new technologies is<br />

another. Introducing multi-opera<strong>to</strong>r<br />

smartcard ticketing without adequate<br />

revisions <strong>to</strong> fare and tariff structures<br />

between opera<strong>to</strong>rs, <strong>for</strong> example, could<br />

confuse cus<strong>to</strong>mers as well as alienating<br />

opera<strong>to</strong>rs.<br />

If organizations want <strong>to</strong> avoid these<br />

threats <strong>to</strong> their business, they must<br />

take actions beyond merely selecting<br />

a strategy and instead move <strong>to</strong> fully<br />

enable that strategy by developing the<br />

detailed implementation plans and<br />

operational frameworks <strong>to</strong> support<br />

success. Strong governance models are<br />

crucial. In fact, they are an ongoing<br />

necessity, from the early stages of<br />

bringing <strong>to</strong>gether different viewpoints<br />

and coming up with a workable longterm<br />

strategy, all the way through<br />

delivery <strong>to</strong> the actual operation.<br />

The Trans Link Systems (TLS) project,<br />

<strong>for</strong> example, was the Netherlands’<br />

fifth serious attempt <strong>to</strong> introduce a<br />

nationwide electronic ticketing and<br />

payment system. Its predecessors all<br />

failed <strong>to</strong> reach agreement between<br />

the country’s nearly 20 different, and<br />

often turf-conscious, public transport<br />

opera<strong>to</strong>rs. So TLS was careful <strong>to</strong> get<br />

its governance structure right upfront.<br />

The company also helped ensure<br />

opera<strong>to</strong>r buy-in right through <strong>to</strong> the<br />

launch of what became the world’s<br />

first “single card access” <strong>to</strong> all <strong>for</strong>ms<br />

of public transport, by holding regular<br />

workshops and meetings <strong>for</strong> all the<br />

participating agencies, and sharing<br />

progress reports and key issues with<br />

all relevant decision makers.<br />

5


Figure 2: Common service plat<strong>for</strong>ms underpinning our <strong>Fare</strong> <strong>Management</strong> Solution<br />

Back Office<br />

Infrastructure<br />

Plat<strong>for</strong>m services<br />

6<br />

Business Intelligence<br />

and Reporting<br />

Cus<strong>to</strong>mer Relationship <strong>Management</strong><br />

Payments Processing and Financial <strong>Management</strong><br />

Transaction <strong>Management</strong><br />

Network and Infrastructure <strong>Management</strong><br />

Asset <strong>Management</strong><br />

The technologies that can help satisfy <strong>to</strong>day’s travelers’<br />

as they clamor <strong>for</strong> speed and convenience are constantly<br />

evolving, but capturing the opportunity they present is<br />

not straight<strong>for</strong>ward—largely because the business case<br />

and commercial structures that could accommodate<br />

these technologies have yet <strong>to</strong> crystallize.<br />

Integration


Introducing an electronic ticketing<br />

scheme where contact-less bankcards<br />

are the primary media, <strong>for</strong> example,<br />

means applying complex, variable<br />

fare structures <strong>to</strong> a transaction model<br />

designed more <strong>for</strong> the supermarket<br />

checkout than <strong>for</strong> mass transit<br />

services. Moving an electronic <strong>to</strong>ll<br />

scheme from microwave transponders<br />

<strong>to</strong> GPS based on-board units will<br />

also create a significant change in<br />

the way roadside transactions are<br />

mediated and processed.<br />

What’s more, while such technologies<br />

hold tremendous potential, they<br />

cannot help transport authorities<br />

avoid the big issues that underlie any<br />

fare management initiative: Cus<strong>to</strong>mer<br />

convenience, accessibility and social<br />

inclusion, opera<strong>to</strong>r revenue assurance<br />

and trust.<br />

Accenture understands these challenges<br />

well, and the <strong>Fare</strong> <strong>Management</strong><br />

Solution addresses them with a set<br />

of service plat<strong>for</strong>ms that underpin all<br />

our fare management applications.<br />

The systems and services we have<br />

implemented incorporate the open<br />

architecture and common standards<br />

that can integrate a multitude of<br />

suppliers and devices—as well as the<br />

scalability <strong>to</strong> accommodate more<br />

of them as technologies evolve and<br />

operational requirements change.<br />

Our <strong>approach</strong> offers end-<strong>to</strong>-end<br />

completeness within a central<br />

system. Its common plat<strong>for</strong>m of preintegrated<br />

functions (see figure 2) is<br />

modular so it can accommodate both<br />

evolving technologies and changes in<br />

operational requirements; they don’t<br />

have <strong>to</strong> be continually rebuilt. It<br />

comprises a centralized system with<br />

a common plat<strong>for</strong>m and standards<br />

based on a service oriented open<br />

architecture that enables any number<br />

of decentralized single opera<strong>to</strong>rs or<br />

other providers <strong>to</strong> plug in seamlessly,<br />

realizing both interoperability and<br />

low <strong>to</strong>tal cost of ownership (TCO).<br />

(For a detailed explanation of<br />

how these plat<strong>for</strong>m services relate<br />

<strong>to</strong> eTicketing and road charging,<br />

please see inserts)<br />

Thanks <strong>to</strong> the modularity of the<br />

solution’s common plat<strong>for</strong>m,<br />

decentralized, single opera<strong>to</strong>rs can<br />

shape it around their existing legacy<br />

systems <strong>to</strong> address the following key<br />

business functions:<br />

• <strong>Fare</strong> collection and media<br />

management: The solution<br />

accommodates the complex<br />

management of fare-event data<br />

generated by transport network<br />

systems where volumes may easily<br />

exceed 100 million a month.<br />

• Clearing and settlement: The<br />

solution can consolidate the fare<br />

events across multiple journeys<br />

in<strong>to</strong> one single event and control<br />

the disbursement of revenues<br />

between multiple opera<strong>to</strong>rs.<br />

• Order/inven<strong>to</strong>ry: The solution<br />

supports the management of<br />

electronic fare media, enabling high<br />

levels of self-service and end-<strong>to</strong>-end<br />

device lifecycle management.<br />

• Cus<strong>to</strong>mer service: The solution can<br />

handle millions of active accounts,<br />

encompasses campaign management<br />

and can service a wide range of<br />

channels.<br />

• Financial and reporting: The<br />

solution supports the millions of<br />

invoices and thousands of payments<br />

involved in regional and national<br />

fare collection operations.<br />

• Security and maintenance: The<br />

solution helps reduce integration<br />

risks and boosts operational<br />

efficiencies.<br />

In fact, the solution can support any<br />

number or type of opera<strong>to</strong>rs and<br />

providers, not just those that are<br />

transport-oriented. And thanks <strong>to</strong><br />

its open architecture, providers from<br />

industries as diverse as parking and<br />

retailing can migrate <strong>to</strong> the multimodal<br />

environment that the solution<br />

creates without having <strong>to</strong> reconfigure<br />

their existing equipment or rethink<br />

entire operations.<br />

7


Sustainability<br />

Transport authorities and opera<strong>to</strong>rs are coming<br />

under mounting pressure <strong>to</strong> deliver a sustainable<br />

transport system—a <strong>to</strong>ugh proposition given<br />

short-term pressures on cost, capacity and winning<br />

the next franchise, pressures that intensify in an<br />

economic downturn.<br />

8


The good news is that well-designed<br />

fare management systems can make<br />

a significant contribution <strong>to</strong> tackling<br />

both short-term challenges and the<br />

longer-term goal of sustainability,<br />

thanks largely <strong>to</strong> the sophisticated<br />

cus<strong>to</strong>mer relationship management<br />

that they enable.<br />

By making public transport more<br />

convenient <strong>to</strong> use, such systems<br />

capture more users, reducing the<br />

carbon footprint of each passenger<br />

kilometer. This is generally better<br />

<strong>for</strong> the environment—a key goal <strong>for</strong><br />

practically all the transport authorities<br />

and opera<strong>to</strong>rs Accenture works with.<br />

Public transport has a head start in<br />

regard <strong>to</strong> sustainability—but many<br />

passenger vehicle manufacturers<br />

are now starting <strong>to</strong> invest heavily<br />

in cleaner vehicles, reducing the<br />

competitive advantage that public<br />

transport opera<strong>to</strong>rs hold. The<br />

Accenture <strong>Fare</strong> <strong>Management</strong> Solution<br />

can help as the vast quantity of data<br />

about passenger journeys that both<br />

eTicketing and road-user charging<br />

technologies generate-who's traveling,<br />

where, how and when-facilitates more<br />

accurate benchmarking of passenger<br />

and service emissions which can in<br />

turn improve service planning and<br />

traffic flow management. Both of<br />

these can help <strong>to</strong> significantly<br />

cut emissions, especially in highly<br />

populated urban areas.<br />

More advanced fare management<br />

can also help <strong>to</strong> achieve better<br />

yield management by influencing<br />

demand, as well as capacity. After<br />

all, connectivity is a two-way street<br />

and feeding in<strong>for</strong>mation back <strong>to</strong><br />

travelers as well as soliciting it<br />

from can offer the environmentally<br />

conscious the option of traveling offpeak,<br />

by public transport than by car.<br />

Some opera<strong>to</strong>rs have set up “carbon<br />

clubs” rewarding greener travel choices<br />

in a similar way <strong>to</strong> loyalty cards in the<br />

retail industry. Others have established<br />

websites that provide data about<br />

the carbon footprint of every travel<br />

choice. And some are making use of<br />

technologies that tell drivers when they<br />

are driving inefficiently.<br />

In Genoa, Italy, Accenture—through<br />

the Italian Accenture Foundation—has<br />

worked with the municipal authorities<br />

and others <strong>to</strong> design a system of socalled<br />

mobility credits that enlists user<br />

self-interest <strong>to</strong> promote environmental<br />

protection while preserving people’s<br />

basic freedom <strong>to</strong> move. Instead of<br />

restricting or prohibiting access as most<br />

road charging systems do, the scheme<br />

actually expands freedom of choice. It<br />

awards every citizen an equal number<br />

of mobility credits annually, which they<br />

can use (or not) <strong>to</strong> travel freely within<br />

the city limits. The rate at which the<br />

credits are used up depends on the<br />

mode of transport chosen, the time of<br />

day or other elective parameters. Using<br />

private cars in peak periods obviously<br />

consume more credits than at quieter<br />

times.<br />

Of course, different users will also have<br />

different transport needs. The system<br />

allows say, a pensioner with a surfeit<br />

of credits <strong>to</strong> sell the surplus <strong>to</strong> users<br />

with higher needs—or <strong>to</strong> exchange<br />

the surplus credits <strong>for</strong> other services.<br />

Similarly, those who need more credits<br />

can buy them from the municipality.<br />

The market in credits that could emerge<br />

when the application is mature is<br />

expected <strong>to</strong> be analogous <strong>to</strong> the carbon<br />

trading system between nations that<br />

arose after the Kyo<strong>to</strong> pro<strong>to</strong>col on<br />

climate change.<br />

9


16<br />

How the Accenture <strong>Fare</strong> <strong>Management</strong><br />

Solution creates value<br />

The Accenture <strong>Fare</strong> <strong>Management</strong> Solution takes a <strong>strategic</strong> and holistic<br />

<strong>approach</strong> <strong>to</strong> the challenges of fare management in <strong>to</strong>day’s <strong>to</strong>ugh markets.<br />

It starts by designing a <strong>strategic</strong> road map that takes account of the views<br />

and interests of the multiple stakeholders whose buy-in is essential <strong>to</strong><br />

the success of any fare management system. It offers the flexibility <strong>to</strong><br />

accommodate diverse additional users and players with a set of service<br />

plat<strong>for</strong>ms that incorporate open architecture, common standards and<br />

scalability. And because it helps improve the trade-off between capacity<br />

and demand, it can lead <strong>to</strong> better yield management—the key <strong>to</strong> sustainable<br />

transport provision, both public and private.<br />

For more in<strong>for</strong>mation, please contact:<br />

Europe<br />

Mark Elliott<br />

mark.elliott@accenture.com<br />

+44 207 8440447<br />

North America<br />

Michael Boushka<br />

michael.e.boushka@accenture.com<br />

+1 913 3191119<br />

Asia<br />

Won-Joon Lee<br />

won-joon.lee@accenture.com<br />

+82 2 3777 8833


About Accenture<br />

Accenture is a global management<br />

consulting, technology services and<br />

outsourcing company. Combining<br />

unparalleled experience, comprehensive<br />

capabilities across all industries and<br />

business functions, and extensive<br />

research on the world’s most successful<br />

companies, Accenture collaborates<br />

with clients <strong>to</strong> help them become<br />

high-per<strong>for</strong>mance businesses and<br />

governments. With more than 186,000<br />

people serving clients in over 120<br />

countries, the company generated net<br />

revenues of US$23.39 billion <strong>for</strong> the<br />

fiscal year ended Aug. 31, 2008. Its<br />

home page is www.accenture.com.<br />

Copyright © 2009 Accenture<br />

All rights reserved.<br />

Accenture, its logo, and<br />

<strong>High</strong> Per<strong>for</strong>mance Delivered<br />

are trademarks of Accenture.

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