For more than 40 years, Accelya has been the industry’s partner for change, simplifying airline financial and commercial processes and empowering the air transport community to take better control of the future. Whether partnering with IATA on industry-wide initiatives or enabling digital transformation to simplify airline processes, Accelya drives the airline industry forward and proudly puts control back in the hands of airlines so they can move further, faster.
Lead and mentor a team of release management professionals, providing guidance and support.
Develop and manage release schedules, including planning, coordination, and execution of software releases.
Collaborate with development, QA, and operations teams to ensure that releases are properly tested and validated.
Oversee the creation and execution of release plans, including deployment procedures and rollback strategies.
Monitor release activities, address issues or risks, and ensure successful deployment with minimal disruption.
Maintain release documentation, including release notes and deployment reports.
Analyze release performance metrics and identify opportunities for process improvements.
Report on release progress, challenges, and outcomes to senior management.
What does the future of the air transport industry look like to you? Whether you’re an industry veteran or someone with experience from other industries, we want to make your ambitions a reality!
Top Skills
What We Do
Accelya is a leading global technology and service provider to the air transport industry, delivering innovative change at speed and scale. Our market-leading Passenger Cargo, and Industry platforms support airline retailing from offer to settlement. For more than 40 years, we’ve been the industry’s partner for change, simplifying airline financial and commercial processes. As a result, we're always driving the airline industry forward, from partnering with IATA on industry-wide initiatives to creating strategic solutions that simplify airline processes.
We’re proudly putting control back in the hands of airlines so they can move further, faster.