François-Joseph Van Audenhove

Managing Partner

Global Practice Leader, Travel & Transportation

Belgium

François-Joseph assists transportation organizations in addressing complex strategic and organizational transformation programs.

François-Joseph Van Audenhove

Education

Solvay Business School (Brussels)
Master of Business Administration
UCL University (Louvain-La-Neuve)
Master in Law

Past Experience

Imphobia Media Company
Managing Director

François-Joseph Van Audenhove

François-Joseph Van Audenhove is a Partner based in Arthur D. Little's Brussels office and is the Global Practice Manager Travel and Transportation (T&T).

François-Joseph is part of the Strategy & Organization practice and responsible for our Global Competence Center in Rail and Urban Transport. He also heads the Future of Urban Mobility (FUM) Lab, our think tank on mobility, and is a recognized key speaker on mobility topics. 

François-Joseph specializes in the management of complex strategic and organizational transformation programs, serving clients across several industries on topics ranging from strategy development and implementation, strategic positioning, commercial offering redesign, value-based risk management, performance improvement to strategic competence management. 

Improving airport resilience
Improving airport resilience
Even as it resurges, air travel faces new risks and regulatory changes that will necessitate more resilient airport management. In this Viewpoint, we propose a four-step approach to help airport executives handle emerging risks by making their operations more resistant to disruptions and better prepared for any future.  HIGH-STAKES RISKS & POTENTIAL DISRUPTORS 
Making the shift
Making the shift
When Arthur D. Little (ADL) first set up its Future of Mobility Lab in 2010, there was much optimism that by now, we would have made significant progress toward the goal of more sustainable, resilient, safe, inclusive, efficient, and human-centric mobility systems in our cities. Technological developments — particularly the rapid advances of digitalization, connectivity, and automation — promised the ability to deliver tailored, diverse, and convenient mobility solutions to customers that would be attractive enough to prompt a major shift away from private cars.
The future of mobility 5.0
The future of mobility 5.0
Changing gear in the journey toward sustainable mobility
Public transport fare models
Public transport fare models
The right moment to revisit fare models & help transport authorities cope with challenges
Sharing in success
Sharing in success
How car sharing can deliver on its potential in an ecosystem play
Postal retail networks
Postal retail networks
The digitalization of the economy is profoundly changing trade. Traditional retailers must transform to survive reduced foot traffic and sales. Postal operators that have not yet outsourced their branches face the same problems as retailers, amplified by the progressive disappearance of mail, the growth of virtual banking, and the digitalization of a substantial proportion of counter operations. A deep transformation is necessary.
ESG: Last call to take effective action
ESG: Last call to take effective action
How innovation unlocks economic opportunities in a volatile world
End-to-end incident management in transport: A key driver of customer excellence
End-to-end incident management in transport: A key driver of customer excellence
Performance around punctuality (and regularity) has not made enough progress in reaching customers’ high standards in spite of many programs. Similarly, the occurrence of other adverse events — faulty passenger information, defective seats — and the absence of prompt, satisfactory treatment of such issues generate disappointment, which may offset any positive customer experiences. In this Viewpoint, we reflect on the levers transport operators should put in place to better prevent, identify, and control operational incidents — and boost customer satisfaction.
Toward sustainable, efficient & resilient mobility systems
Toward sustainable, efficient & resilient mobility systems
Most transportation systems and companies have defined elements of their sustainability strategy and launched initiatives related to improving efficiency and strengthening resilience. However, we believe these concepts — sustainability, efficiency, and resilience (SER) — should be considered not in isolation but with a holistic and integrated view.
Leveraging account-based ticketing
Leveraging account-based ticketing
A pragmatic step to enable MaaS
How to realize the promise of Mobility-as-a-Service
Setting the scene It has been said that diseases shape cities, from the development of urban sewers in the 19th century as a response to cholera outbreaks, to the COVID-19 pandemic today, which has acted as a watershed for city authorities to reflect and reset mobility visions and strategies. Similarly, sustainability is now becoming a truly central and urgent issue as the adverse impacts of human activity on the environment become ever clearer. The mobility systems of the world’s cities therefore need to adapt rapidly to become more environmentally sustainable, more resilient, and adaptable in the face of shocks and discontinuities. They should be centered on the needs of human beings rather than being determined primarily by their technological infrastructure. Becoming more sustainable, resilient, and human-centric should be a central ambition of every urban mobility system today.
Artificial intelligence in mobility
Beyond the hype, where the true value lies
Dematerialized ticketing
Transport authorities and mass transit operators should consider dematerialization of ticketing for increased resilience and to pave the way for Mobility-as-a-Service in a post-Covid world
The Future of Mobility post-COVID
Turning the crisis into an opportunity to accelerate towards more sustainable, resilient and human-centric urban mobility systems
Commercial excellence in B2B environments
Saying that the world is undergoing a fast-paced transformation is not only stating the obvious, but also an understatement. Traditional business models and go-to-market strategies are challenged, and often even rendered obsolete, by rapidly evolving customer needs. In many cases, industry convergence has led to new entrants that have caused major disruptions to many established ecosystems using novel, more agile, business and operating models. This is just the tip of the iceberg.
Rethinking on-demand mobility
Turning roadblocks into opportunities
The Future of Mobility 3.0
The mobility landscape is being completely reshaped, and urban mobility poses a massive challenge to metropolitan authorities and businesses as well as great opportunities. The global demand for passenger mobility in urbanized areas is set to double by 2050. Meanwhile, the number of individual journeys taken on a daily basis has grown massively since 2015, thereby putting increased pressure on existing urban mobility systems.
The rapid growth of bike sharing in China
With significant venture capital injected, bike sharing has been booming rapidly in China since the second half of 2016, and already looks to be impacting the future development of the urban mobility ecosystem. Arthur D. Little considers the market dynamics and competition landscape, as well as some key takeaways for different stakeholders, including city authorities, the existing bicycle supply chain, and the new entrant bike-sharing companies themselves. 

François-Joseph Van Audenhove

François-Joseph Van Audenhove is a Partner based in Arthur D. Little's Brussels office and is the Global Practice Manager Travel and Transportation (T&T).

François-Joseph is part of the Strategy & Organization practice and responsible for our Global Competence Center in Rail and Urban Transport. He also heads the Future of Urban Mobility (FUM) Lab, our think tank on mobility, and is a recognized key speaker on mobility topics. 

François-Joseph specializes in the management of complex strategic and organizational transformation programs, serving clients across several industries on topics ranging from strategy development and implementation, strategic positioning, commercial offering redesign, value-based risk management, performance improvement to strategic competence management. 

Improving airport resilience
Improving airport resilience
Even as it resurges, air travel faces new risks and regulatory changes that will necessitate more resilient airport management. In this Viewpoint, we propose a four-step approach to help airport executives handle emerging risks by making their operations more resistant to disruptions and better prepared for any future.  HIGH-STAKES RISKS & POTENTIAL DISRUPTORS 
Making the shift
Making the shift
When Arthur D. Little (ADL) first set up its Future of Mobility Lab in 2010, there was much optimism that by now, we would have made significant progress toward the goal of more sustainable, resilient, safe, inclusive, efficient, and human-centric mobility systems in our cities. Technological developments — particularly the rapid advances of digitalization, connectivity, and automation — promised the ability to deliver tailored, diverse, and convenient mobility solutions to customers that would be attractive enough to prompt a major shift away from private cars.
The future of mobility 5.0
The future of mobility 5.0
Changing gear in the journey toward sustainable mobility
Public transport fare models
Public transport fare models
The right moment to revisit fare models & help transport authorities cope with challenges
Sharing in success
Sharing in success
How car sharing can deliver on its potential in an ecosystem play
Postal retail networks
Postal retail networks
The digitalization of the economy is profoundly changing trade. Traditional retailers must transform to survive reduced foot traffic and sales. Postal operators that have not yet outsourced their branches face the same problems as retailers, amplified by the progressive disappearance of mail, the growth of virtual banking, and the digitalization of a substantial proportion of counter operations. A deep transformation is necessary.
ESG: Last call to take effective action
ESG: Last call to take effective action
How innovation unlocks economic opportunities in a volatile world
End-to-end incident management in transport: A key driver of customer excellence
End-to-end incident management in transport: A key driver of customer excellence
Performance around punctuality (and regularity) has not made enough progress in reaching customers’ high standards in spite of many programs. Similarly, the occurrence of other adverse events — faulty passenger information, defective seats — and the absence of prompt, satisfactory treatment of such issues generate disappointment, which may offset any positive customer experiences. In this Viewpoint, we reflect on the levers transport operators should put in place to better prevent, identify, and control operational incidents — and boost customer satisfaction.
Toward sustainable, efficient & resilient mobility systems
Toward sustainable, efficient & resilient mobility systems
Most transportation systems and companies have defined elements of their sustainability strategy and launched initiatives related to improving efficiency and strengthening resilience. However, we believe these concepts — sustainability, efficiency, and resilience (SER) — should be considered not in isolation but with a holistic and integrated view.
Leveraging account-based ticketing
Leveraging account-based ticketing
A pragmatic step to enable MaaS
How to realize the promise of Mobility-as-a-Service
Setting the scene It has been said that diseases shape cities, from the development of urban sewers in the 19th century as a response to cholera outbreaks, to the COVID-19 pandemic today, which has acted as a watershed for city authorities to reflect and reset mobility visions and strategies. Similarly, sustainability is now becoming a truly central and urgent issue as the adverse impacts of human activity on the environment become ever clearer. The mobility systems of the world’s cities therefore need to adapt rapidly to become more environmentally sustainable, more resilient, and adaptable in the face of shocks and discontinuities. They should be centered on the needs of human beings rather than being determined primarily by their technological infrastructure. Becoming more sustainable, resilient, and human-centric should be a central ambition of every urban mobility system today.
Artificial intelligence in mobility
Beyond the hype, where the true value lies
Dematerialized ticketing
Transport authorities and mass transit operators should consider dematerialization of ticketing for increased resilience and to pave the way for Mobility-as-a-Service in a post-Covid world
The Future of Mobility post-COVID
Turning the crisis into an opportunity to accelerate towards more sustainable, resilient and human-centric urban mobility systems
Commercial excellence in B2B environments
Saying that the world is undergoing a fast-paced transformation is not only stating the obvious, but also an understatement. Traditional business models and go-to-market strategies are challenged, and often even rendered obsolete, by rapidly evolving customer needs. In many cases, industry convergence has led to new entrants that have caused major disruptions to many established ecosystems using novel, more agile, business and operating models. This is just the tip of the iceberg.
Rethinking on-demand mobility
Turning roadblocks into opportunities
The Future of Mobility 3.0
The mobility landscape is being completely reshaped, and urban mobility poses a massive challenge to metropolitan authorities and businesses as well as great opportunities. The global demand for passenger mobility in urbanized areas is set to double by 2050. Meanwhile, the number of individual journeys taken on a daily basis has grown massively since 2015, thereby putting increased pressure on existing urban mobility systems.
The rapid growth of bike sharing in China
With significant venture capital injected, bike sharing has been booming rapidly in China since the second half of 2016, and already looks to be impacting the future development of the urban mobility ecosystem. Arthur D. Little considers the market dynamics and competition landscape, as well as some key takeaways for different stakeholders, including city authorities, the existing bicycle supply chain, and the new entrant bike-sharing companies themselves. 

More About François-Joseph
  • Solvay Business School (Brussels)
    Master of Business Administration
  • UCL University (Louvain-La-Neuve)
    Master in Law
  • Imphobia Media Company
    Managing Director