Bookings and queues live in the same system
When someone books a slot online, the token is generated for the right counter automatically. No copy-paste between calendars and a separate display.
Most service organisations end up running two tools side-by-side: a booking page on the website, and a basic token machine in the lobby. That works until someone asks how many bookings actually arrived, or which counter is slowest on Tuesdays. QPass Global makes that one platform — and one boring report.
Why teams pick QPass Global
Most service desks run on two disconnected tools: a booking page somewhere on the website, and a paper or basic token machine in the lobby. QPass Global joins them, so a booking becomes a real token, a recall is one button, and a manager can see the day at a glance.
When someone books a slot online, the token is generated for the right counter automatically. No copy-paste between calendars and a separate display.
Call, recall, transfer, skip, complete. Sub-counters for specialist services. Priority tokens for elderly and differently-abled visitors. The buttons are where operators expect them.
Wait time, serve time, peak hour, busiest counter, and where people abandoned. Numbers you can take into a Monday meeting and act on.
Big, readable displays. Tokens with bilingual labels where needed. SMS and email confirmations that read like a normal message, not a corporate template.
A pilot in a single clinic uses the same code that a 200-branch bank runs in production. Add branches, services, and operators without re-architecting anything.
A demo is a working environment, not a slide deck. You can replay it, share it, and try the operator screen before procurement starts asking questions.
Whether your priority is shortening queues at a single clinic or standardising service across a region, QPass Global gives you appointments and queues in one place so the visitor sees one journey, not two systems patched together.
If those questions are open in your current setup, a 30-minute demo is the fastest way to see what one platform looks like in practice.