A few days ago, I shared about WhereFlight.com
— a flight tracking platform I built to make travel simpler and more human.
Today, I’m excited to introduce Ava, our new intelligent travel assistant 🧠
Ava isn’t just another chatbot — she has full flight context, knows where you’re going, and helps you discover local attractions, dining spots, and things to do right from the flight tracking page.
💬 You can ask Ava things like:
• “When does EK540 land?”
• “Any good restaurants near Dubai Airport?”
• “What can I explore if I arrive early?”
Ava turns flight tracking into a personalized travel experience — and it’s now live for everyone on WhereFlight.com
.
🚀 We’re also launching on Product Hunt today — would love your feedback and thoughts!
Curious — if you travel often, what’s one thing that always feels stressful before or after a flight?
Congrats on launching Ava! The concept of contextual travel assistance during flight tracking is smart.
Quick UX thought: Since Ava already handles natural language for questions, why not extend that to the main search bar too?
Instead of requiring flight numbers like "EK540", let users type things like:
Then parse it into the actual flight search. Would make discovery way more intuitive, especially for people who don't have a flight number yet but want to track someone arriving.
Big congrats on shipping your platform! It looks great. But I'm just curious, what marketing approach worked best for your launch?
I get it. Building Ava’s intelligent UX is a serious win, and I know the grind of launching something this polished.
But chasing vanity metrics and vague traveler pain points is leaving revenue on the table, disconnected from a real financial goal. You’ve got intelligence, but no predictable revenue funnel.
Pivot now: weaponize Ava’s personalized outputs, like local dining recommendations, into micro-offers tied to a Conversion Certainty Sequence with a travel partner.
How are you turning those responses into referral revenue that justifies the engineering?