At the AI Summit at London Tech Week, Cruz reached out to artificial intelligence experts to aid in finding a solution to all of these problems. He says that startups can be able to join the International Airline Group's (IAG), the parent company of British Airways, accelerator program called Hangar 51. Here, innovators would be able to work alongside British Airways' 80 data scientists to develop and test new ideas. An example of the work that is done in Hangar 51 is from the startup Assaia. The artificial intelligence tech firm created an intelligent software that "captures on video every moment from when an aircraft arrives at the airport to its departure, helping airline workers to see the numerous tasks going on around the aircraft (fuelling, cleaning, baggage and catering loading and unloading) and alerting them to issues that could delay the flight's departure." Hangar 51 is looking for applicants that can help in these seven categories: airport operations and logistics, future of customer interaction, disruption management, future cargo logistics, sustainability, new products and service and wildcards (" any new disruptive ideas that have the potential to reshape the travel industry.")