Australian Airline Airnorth chooses Comply365
The northern Australian airline recently began transforming to paperless flight operations and chose ProAuthor, Comply365’s end-to-end operational content and compliance management system to enable faster, more routine manual revisions, and to allow Airnorth to always be audit ready.
“We are excited to switch from a paper distribution of our manuals to our first Electronic Flight Bag (EFB) model. We needed a reliable solution to distribute manuals and flight briefing information, as well as an authoring platform to improve our document control, and to maintain regulatory compliance,” said Simon Gibbons, General manager of Flight Operations of Airnorth. “Comply365 came out on top, offering a proven solution that will bring tremendous value to our airline and a great user experience for our pilots.”
Pilots will receive flight plans delivered to their iPads via Comply365’s Digital Briefing solution, saving paper and printing costs as well as enabling more timely delivery. Electronic forms will give pilots and cabin, ground, and airport crews the ability to instantly send information to operations teams, offering insights to make data-driven decisions.
Airnorth operates into some of the world’s most challenging environments, operating scheduled and charter services to over 20 destinations for a wide range of companies including mining, defense, and government clients. Based in Darwin, Australia, its serves domestic destinations across the Northern Territory, Western Australia, Queensland, and Victoria, and internationally to Dili, Timor-Leste.
Airnorth becomes the sixth Australian airline to join Comply365’s global customer base.
“It’s always exciting to partner with a new customer to help them transition from paper manuals and processes to a digital operation. We are glad to welcome Airnorth to our Comply365 community,” Comply365 CEO Tom Samuel said. “We look forward to providing a great user experience for Airnorth’s frontline staff, who will be able to receive more personalized and targeted information. We expect this will lead to a more efficient and safer operation.”