Making an appointment for breast and cervical cancer screening should be as simple as booking a plane ticket online, says the man behind an overhaul of the current system in England.
Prof Sir Mike Richards said text reminders and out-of-hours appointments were also a good idea.
Cervical screening or smear-test rates are at their lowest for a decade.
His interim report calls for technology to be used to stop the decline so more lives can be saved.
There are three national cancer screening programmes in England:
Cervical screening - offered to women aged 25 to 64, every three years for women aged up to 49 and every five years from 50 to 64
Breast screening - offered to women aged 50 to 70, with women over 70 able to self-refer for screening
Bowel screening - offered to men and women aged 60 to 74, and another bowel screening test offered to men and women at the age of 55 in some parts of England
The screening programmes aim to detect cancer, or abnormal cells, early, often before symptoms develop, when treatment may be more effective.
More than 11 million invitations to screening were sent out last year.
But a recent report found that none of the programmes in England met its target last year, and many women experienced delays in getting results after cervical screening.
Blood deliveries to dozens of hospitals could be stalled 'because 100 couriers plan to go on strike over their pay.'