Saving seats for strategic customers

EB Cil, MA Lariviere - Operations Research, 2013 - pubsonline.informs.org
Operations Research, 2013pubsonline.informs.org
We consider a service provider in a market with two segments. Members of the first request a
reservation ahead of service and will not patronize the firm without one. Members of the
second walk in and demand service immediately. These customers have a fixed cost of
reaching the firm and may behave strategically. In equilibrium, they randomize between
walking in and staying home. The service provider must decide how much of a limited
capacity to make available to advance customers. When the advance demand segment …
We consider a service provider in a market with two segments. Members of the first request a reservation ahead of service and will not patronize the firm without one. Members of the second walk in and demand service immediately. These customers have a fixed cost of reaching the firm and may behave strategically. In equilibrium, they randomize between walking in and staying home. The service provider must decide how much of a limited capacity to make available to advance customers. When the advance demand segment offers a higher per customer margin, the firm may opt to decline some reservation requests in order to bolster walk-in demand. When walk-in customers are more valuable, classical revenue management models would dictate that at least some capacity be set aside for high-value later arrivals. Here it is possible that the optimal policy saves no capacity for walk-ins. Thus, it may be better to ignore rather than pamper walk-in customers. This outcome is robust to changes in the model.
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