Both Airlines on Sabre Mosaic
A SRSIA scenario for two airlines adopting Sabre Mosaic, with emphasis on hybrid operations, offer-order architecture and PNR synchronization.
Platform note: Named platform references are neutral examples only, not recommendations, rankings or evaluations; they are based solely on publicly available product information: Sabre Mosaic, Sabre Mosaic PSS Sync.
Executive Summary
- Published Sabre material positions Mosaic as an open, modular platform built for modern offer-order retailing and hybrid operations.
- This article uses Mosaic only as a published platform example and does not assess, recommend or compare vendor capability.
- PNR-order synchronization can be a pragmatic migration aid, but it must not hide data ownership problems.
- SRSIA still defines commercial permissions, servicing authority, disruption handling and settlement evidence.
Why This Topic Matters
Hybrid operation is not a weakness; it is how most large airline transformations will run for years.
If both partners use the same published platform pattern, they can adopt modules incrementally while keeping current operational workflows alive.
The architecture challenge is to prevent synchronized records from becoming contradictory records.
Industry Background
Sabre describes Mosaic as a modular, cloud-native platform for offer and order retailing, and highlights hybrid operation with bi-directional sync between Orders and PNRs.
IATA programs point toward 100% Offers and Orders, but practical migration requires coexistence with current systems.
SRSIA creates the partnership accountability layer that keeps hybrid technology aligned with commercial reality.
The practical implication is simple: the customer promise has to be designed across offer, order, servicing, delivery and settlement, not only across shopping screens.
Detailed Explanation
Scenario: Both airlines use Sabre Mosaic capabilities, with hybrid coexistence and order-PNR synchronization as key transition design points.
In a same-platform scenario, the partners may share architectural assumptions around offer creation, order management, settlement and delivery. This can make partner onboarding less custom than point-to-point legacy integration.
The distinctive design choice is how long to keep PNR synchronization. During migration, synchronized PNRs can protect airport, agency, reporting and operational processes. Over time, they should become less central as order-native workflows mature.
The SRSIA design should name the authoritative source for each field. If the order says a seat is confirmed but the PNR sync fails, which record wins? If an involuntary change updates the operating carrier record before the retailer order, what customer message is safe?
Retailer-supplier roles help control this. The Retailer owns the customer order narrative; the Supplier owns its product promise and operational state. Synchronization is an implementation mechanism, not a substitute for authority.
A strong implementation should monitor mismatches between order, PNR, supplier status and settlement evidence. The longer a hybrid period lasts, the more important reconciliation tooling becomes.
Architecture and Operating Model Deep Dive
Offer and product governance
The offer layer is where the commercial promise is created, but it is also where many interline failures are introduced. In Both on Mosaic, the offer should not be treated as a screen-level response. It needs supplier provenance, expiry, price guarantee, inventory constraint, product attribute, refundability and settlement intent. The key rule is that every product shown to the traveler must have a known fulfilment path and a known servicing path.
Retailer composes offer using supplier products That owner should decide which supplier details are displayed directly, which are normalized into the retailer brand, and which are suppressed because the downstream lifecycle cannot support them. The product catalog, offer engine and partner adapter should work together so that the offer is not richer than the operational reality behind it.
Order and record strategy
Order-native or hybrid order with PNR synchronization depending on migration scope This is the most important system-of-record decision in the scenario. Teams should not simply ask whether an order exists. They should ask which record is authoritative for passenger identity, itinerary, price, entitlement, fulfilment, supplier acknowledgement, payment, refund, exchange and settlement. In hybrid periods, more than one record may exist, but only one should be authoritative for each field.
A good order strategy keeps correlation visible. Offer ID, order ID, supplier order reference, PNR, ticket, EMD, payment reference, settlement reference and disruption event ID should be linked so customer service, airport, operations and finance teams can reconstruct the lifecycle without manual detective work.
Servicing and disruption design
Retailer with supplier permissions and synchronized operational records This responsibility must be translated into concrete permissions: retrieve order, change itinerary, add item, remove item, refund item, split passenger, reprice supplier product, accept involuntary alternative and close an operational case. If a team cannot say which party may execute each action, the customer experience will depend on manual escalation.
Operating supplier event triggers retailer-facing reaccommodation The supplier owns operational facts such as cancellation, delay, aircraft swap, seat map change or airport delivery failure. The retailer owns the customer journey view. A modern disruption design converts the supplier event into recovery offers, customer choices, order updates, supplier confirmations and settlement adjustments.
Settlement and revenue accounting
Order-aware settlement bridge with legacy coexistence when needed Finance should be involved before launch because settlement fields are not back-office decoration. They determine whether a partner accepts the record, whether revenue can be recognized correctly, whether refunds are allocated to the right party and whether disputes can be resolved from evidence rather than email threads.
The finance-grade order item should carry product owner, seller, supplier, amount, taxes, commission, fulfilment status, refund status, change history and settlement reference. Where a legacy partner remains in the flow, the bridge must map those order item facts to ticket, coupon, EMD or billing records without losing commercial meaning.
Data, observability and audit
Every Sabre Mosaic interline implementation needs an observability model. Teams should trace search request, supplier response, offer construction, customer selection, payment authorization, order creation, supplier confirmation, delivery event, servicing action and settlement event. The audit trail should show what each party knew at the time the customer promise was made.
Operational dashboards should be organized by partner, readiness state, platform, market and relationship type. A spike in order-PNR mismatches, supplier timeouts, failed order changes or settlement rejects should be visible before customers and finance teams discover the issue manually.
Partner onboarding and governance
SRSIA onboarding should be a product process, not only a legal process. Each partner needs a readiness score, supported lifecycle actions, API version inventory, test cases, exception handling model, disruption SLA, settlement evidence checklist and executive escalation path. The output should be a go-live decision that everyone can defend.
The governance model should also define change control. If a supplier adds a new ancillary, changes refund rules, migrates a market to order-native servicing or retires a legacy bridge, the retailer needs advance notice, regression tests and customer messaging updates.
Operational Scenario Walkthrough
- Search trigger: The customer asks for a journey and the retailer identifies whether the flow is interline, codeshare or virtual interline. At this point the system should already know the readiness state of each partner and which fallback rules are allowed.
- Supplier content request: The retailer requests supplier content with enough context for the supplier to return a meaningful promise. That context may include route, dates, passengers, loyalty status, channel, currency, point of sale, baggage needs and servicing requirements.
- Offer assembly: The retailer assembles a customer-facing offer using supplier constraints. The offer should not hide material differences in product, baggage, seat, refund, change or disruption treatment. If a feature cannot be fulfilled or serviced, it should be excluded or marked as conditional.
- Acceptance and payment: The customer accepts the offer. Payment, fraud, tax, commission and settlement allocations should be captured before the order is confirmed so the financial record can be reconciled later.
- Order creation: The retailer creates the order or legacy equivalent. The supplier receives a fulfilment request or mirror record. Correlation IDs are written at this stage because retrofitting them after failure is expensive and unreliable.
- Post-booking servicing: A change, refund or ancillary request is evaluated against both retailer policy and supplier capability. The customer sees a simple servicing action, while the back end may execute order change, ticket exchange, EMD update or supplier authorization.
- Disruption event: The operating supplier sends an event. The retailer determines whole-journey impact, requests alternatives if necessary, displays customer options and records the accepted recovery path as an order update or legacy servicing action.
- Settlement close: The retailer and supplier reconcile sale, change, delivery, refund and disruption evidence. Exceptions are routed to a dispute process with enough order and legacy references to avoid manual reconstruction.
SRSIA Annex Blueprint
A strong annex for Both on Mosaic should begin with role definitions. Name the Retailer, Supplier, any selling intermediary, any platform provider and any operational delegate. Then define which role owns the customer relationship, which role owns the product promise and which role is allowed to make binding changes after purchase. This avoids the common situation where legal terms are clear but product teams still disagree on who may act.
The second annex area is product eligibility. List the routes, markets, passenger types, fare brands, ancillaries, bundles, loyalty benefits and service attributes that are allowed in the scenario. For each product, state whether it is searchable, sellable, changeable, refundable, disruptable and settleable. If an item is only supported in direct channels or only before ticketing, that limitation should be written into the operating model.
The third area is data exchange. The annex should specify mandatory fields for offer requests, supplier responses, order creation, supplier acknowledgement, servicing actions, disruption events and settlement evidence. It should also define timeout behavior, idempotency rules, duplicate message handling, version compatibility and minimum logging. These details are rarely glamorous, but they are what prevent operational disputes later.
The fourth area is customer treatment. Define what the traveler sees when a supplier product is unavailable, when a price changes, when confirmation is delayed, when a servicing action requires manual handling, or when disruption affects only part of the journey. The retailer should not have to invent customer language in the middle of an incident. The approved treatment should be part of the launch pack.
The fifth area is exception management. Every scenario needs named queues, SLAs, escalation paths and compensation authority. If a supplier cannot confirm, if order creation succeeds but settlement evidence fails, if a refund is accepted by one record and rejected by another, or if the customer is stranded between two partners, the annex should state who opens the case and who closes it.
The final area is change governance. SRSIA is not static. Airlines will migrate markets, retire bridges, add products, upgrade APIs and change servicing rules. The annex should require advance notice, regression testing, release notes, rollback procedures and joint operational readiness sign-off. This turns SRSIA from a launch document into a living operating contract.
Readiness Questions by Function
| Function | Question to answer before launch |
|---|---|
| Executive sponsor | Which customer promises are commercially approved for Both on Mosaic, and which promises must wait for partner or platform readiness? |
| Product manager | Which products can be searched, priced, ordered, changed, refunded and disrupted without leaving the agreed Airline A as retailer / Airline B as supplier ownership model? |
| Solution architect | Which API, event, PSS adapter, order, ticket, EMD and settlement records are authoritative at each stage of the Sabre Mosaic interline lifecycle? |
| Operations leader | Who can act in disruption, what alternatives are valid, and how quickly must supplier events reach the customer-facing retailer? |
| Finance and revenue accounting | Which order item, payment, refund, delivery and settlement references prove who owes whom after sale, change, cancellation or disruption? |
Implementation Roadmap
| Phase | What the team should do |
|---|---|
| 1. Baseline | Document current partner records, customer promises, manual queues, settlement references and operational exceptions. |
| 2. Capability negotiation | Agree which supplier products, servicing actions, disruption events and settlement evidence are supported for each flow. |
| 3. Controlled pilot | Launch a narrow itinerary, market, channel or product set with clear fallback and reconciliation monitoring. |
| 4. Lifecycle scale | Expand from shopping into order creation, payment, servicing, disruption, fulfilment and revenue accounting. |
| 5. Retire bridges | Reduce ticket, EMD, PNR or manual settlement dependencies only after downstream consumers have moved to order-aware processes. |
The roadmap should be repeated for each partner pair. One partner may be ready for shopping but not servicing. Another may support order events but still depend on legacy settlement. Treat readiness as a matrix by flow, not a binary partner label.
KPI and Control Framework
| Control area | Useful measurement |
|---|---|
| Offer confidence | Percentage of supplier-backed offers that remain bookable through order creation. |
| Order integrity | Mismatch rate between order, PNR, ticket, supplier status and settlement references. |
| Servicing automation | Share of changes, refunds and ancillary actions completed without manual intervention. |
| Disruption recovery | Time from supplier event to customer-visible recovery option and accepted order update. |
| Settlement quality | Value and count of disputed items per partner, product and readiness cell. |
These metrics should be reviewed jointly by distribution, digital, operations, customer service and finance. SRSIA succeeds when ownership is visible across the lifecycle and failure modes are measured before they become structural cost.
Scenario Matrix
| Scenario | Result | Complexity | SRSIA Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid shopping | Published platform offer modules with legacy inventory coexistence | Medium | High |
| Order-PNR sync | Bi-directional records during transition | Medium | High |
| Servicing | Order action plus legacy sync validation | Medium | High |
| Settlement | Order-aware evidence with legacy reporting where needed | Medium | High |
Comparison Table
| Design topic | Published platform example | Governance risk |
|---|---|---|
| Module adoption | Incremental rollout | Uneven capability by market or partner |
| Order architecture | Modern offer-order pattern | Shadow PNR can obscure authority |
| Operational continuity | Legacy workflows remain available | Customer promise may lag technology |
| Settlement | Can preserve order context | Finance may still depend on legacy reports |
| Disruption | Potential event-driven flow | Record sync failure during time-critical events |
Process Flow
- Retailer receives search
- Platform offer service evaluates products
- Supplier confirms constraints
- Order is created
- PNR sync supports legacy workflows
- Events reconcile order, delivery and settlement
Mermaid Diagrams
Process Flow Diagram
flowchart LR C[Customer] --> R[Airline A as retailer] R --> SRSIA[SRSIA responsibility layer] SRSIA --> S[Airline B as supplier] R --> O[Order-native or hybrid order with PNR synchronization depending on migration scope] S --> D[Delivery and supplier events] D --> R
Sequence Diagram
sequenceDiagram participant Customer participant Retailer participant SRSIA participant Supplier participant Settlement Customer->>Retailer: Shop and choose itinerary Retailer->>Supplier: Request supplier content and constraints Supplier-->>Retailer: Return product promise Retailer->>Customer: Present combined offer Customer->>Retailer: Accept and pay Retailer->>SRSIA: Create accountable order context SRSIA->>Supplier: Confirm fulfilment obligation Supplier-->>Retailer: Send delivery or disruption events Retailer->>Settlement: Generate settlement evidence
Swimlane Diagram
flowchart TB
subgraph Customer
c1[Search] --> c2[Accept offer] --> c3[Receive updates]
end
subgraph Retailer
r1[Compose offer] --> r2[Create order] --> r3[Service customer]
end
subgraph Supplier
s1[Return availability] --> s2[Confirm fulfilment] --> s3[Send operational event]
end
subgraph Finance
f1[Capture price owner] --> f2[Allocate settlement] --> f3[Reconcile dispute]
end
c1 --> r1
r1 --> s1
c2 --> r2
r2 --> s2
s3 --> r3
r3 --> f2
Risks, Benefits and Controls
Risks
- Treating synchronization as source-of-truth strategy
- Module readiness mismatch
- Order-PNR divergence
Benefits
- Practical migration path
- Reduced platform mismatch
- Continuity for legacy operational teams
Key Takeaways
- Hybrid design should be explicit, not accidental.
- PNR synchronization is a bridge, not the destination.
- SRSIA should declare field-level authority where records coexist.
- Reconciliation monitoring is a core product requirement.
FAQ
Why cite Mosaic at all?
It is used only as a named public platform example. The article does not recommend, rank or evaluate the platform.
Does order-PNR sync solve interline?
It helps coexistence, but it does not define commercial ownership or customer-facing authority.
What is the biggest risk?
Divergence between synchronized records during servicing, disruption or settlement.
When should airlines remove the shadow PNR?
Only when downstream airport, agency, reporting, servicing and finance processes no longer depend on it for the relevant flows.
SEO Metadata
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Meta title | Both Airlines on Sabre Mosaic | Modern Airline Retailing |
| Meta description | A SRSIA scenario for two airlines adopting Sabre Mosaic, with emphasis on hybrid operations, offer-order architecture and PNR synchronization. |
| Primary keyword | Sabre Mosaic interline |
| Secondary keywords | Sabre Mosaic Offer Order, Sabre Mosaic airline retailing, hybrid offer order interline |
| Canonical URL | https://www.modernairlineretailing.com/blog/2026-06-10-both-airlines-on-sabre-mosaic.html |
Suggested Social Media Snippets
- Both Airlines on Sabre Mosaic: a practical SRSIA scenario for airline retailing teams. https://www.modernairlineretailing.com/blog/2026-06-10-both-airlines-on-sabre-mosaic.html
- If your interline roadmap stops at shopping, you are missing servicing, disruption and settlement. Read: Both Airlines on Sabre Mosaic.
- Retailer-Supplier design question: who owns the customer promise when platforms and readiness differ? Both on Mosaic
Interactive Graphic Specification
- Default state in the SRSIA Scenario Explorer should highlight Both on Mosaic.
- Controls: airline A state, airline B state, platform, relationship and transition maturity.
- Outputs: owner table, complexity heat map, Sankey flow, swimlane, sequence diagram, architecture diagram and readiness matrix.
- Primary KPI: time for a product manager or architect to answer who owns offer, order, servicing, disruption and settlement.
Image Prompts for AI Generation
- A clean executive aviation technology infographic showing Both Airlines on Sabre Mosaic, with two airline system blocks, an SRSIA layer, order items and settlement lines, realistic airport operations background, modern editorial style, no logos.
- A detailed airline retailing architecture diagram for Both on Mosaic, showing retailer, supplier, offer, order, disruption event and settlement evidence, high contrast, professional consulting visual.
- A product manager dashboard visualization for Sabre Mosaic interline, with readiness matrix, heat map and interline lifecycle timeline, modern airline technology aesthetic.
Internal Links and Related Articles
References
Only publicly available sources from the approved source set are used. The analysis above is independent and implementation details vary by airline, vendor and partner agreement.