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Airlines Industry Challenging Environment. Complex, interconnected networkThousands of dynamic prices90% discount prices20% pay less than half of average2/3's big companies get 35-45% off50% cancellations15%
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1. Airlines IndustryYield Management Ken Homa
3. Business / leisure split 50/50
Business: 50% passengers, 60% profits
25% of passengers pay more than 2.5 times average fare
Heavy users: top 5% = 40% of trips
No brand preference
for 50% of leisure and 25% of business travelers Airlines IndustryPassenger Info
4. Very high investment and fixed costs
Equipment & maintenance
Computer systems ( reservations)
Flight Fixed: fuel, crew, airport fees
Low variable cost
Agent commissions (8-10% on 85% of volume)
In flight food & beverage, incremental handling
Empty seats: nil incremental cost
Fixed, highly perishable inventory Airlines IndustryFundamental Economics
5. Variablize the fixed costs
Source services & personnel
Streamline offerings
Precisely match segments value function
Accept lower margins
Lower relative investment Airlines IndustryLow Frills Economics
6. Anybody Remember PeopleExpress? Simple strategy: low frills, low price
(Too) rapid expansion
No infrastructure (I/T, res system)
Very low average cost, but
AA killed PeopleExpress
AA marginal cost < PE average cost
AA attacked with laser fars
7. Available Passenger Miles (APM)
Gross measure of capacity
Revenue Passenger Miles (RPM)
Number of passengers weighted by distance flown
Load Factor
RPM divided by APM
Yield Factor
Revenue per RPM Airlines IndustryPerformance Metrics
8. Airlines Marketing Network routing
Capacity planning
Flight Scheduling
Yield Management
9. Network Routings Point to point
OD pairs (origin - destination)
Originating & continuation flights
Hub-and-spoke connections
Roughly 2/3s passengers arriving at a hub connect to other flights
10. Capacity Planning AggregateSeats and configurations
Route-specific
Through flight considerations
Load factorsThe performance metric
11. Flight Scheduling Customer preferences
Peaks & valleys
Connections
Planes & crews
Disruptions
Weather, equipment
12. Yield Management Overbooking
Fares Allocation
Traffic management
13. Jargon Displacement
High price customer rejected in favor of low price customerUsually undesirable, but not always
Dilution
Price insensitive customers pay lower prices
Diversion
Customer is shifted to an alternative available flight
Spillage
Customer turned away because of capacity limits
Spoilage
An empty seat on departure
14. Jargon Cancellation
Roughly half of all confirmed reservations are ultimately cancelled
No show
Roughly 15% of confirmed passengers neither cancel nor show up for the flight
Overbooking
Accepting more reservations than seat / fare capacity on a flight
Oversold
Confirmed passengers are denied boarding on a sold out flight
15. OverbookingThe No Show Issue On average 15% of confirmed passengers dont show up for a flight
Changed plans (without cancellation)
Double-booking
Spoilage: very high opportunity cost
But only on flights with denied reservations
Objective: sell-out the flight
Take more reservations than capacity in anticipation of no shows
16. Overbooking Overbooking only applies to a portion of all flights
Overbooked not the same as oversold
Overselling results from stochastic nature of no show pattern
17. Overbooking Costs Volunteer Inducements
Rerouting costs
Hospitality concessions
Loss of goodwill (involuntary denials)
18. Volunteer Inducement Magnitude of inducement Increases with number of seats oversold
Ultimate cost depends on the method of fulfilling the incentive
Space available negligible cost, except possible fare dilution (to free)
Space constrained displacement / opportunity cost unless controlled
Credit certificates ...
Dilutive or stimulative?
19. Rerouting Cost dependent on fulfillment method
Space available negligible cost
Sold out displacement / opportunity cost 2nd round oversale
Competitor flight cash cost (at premium fare)
20. OverbookingThe Number Ceiling to limit goodwill impact
Estimate (and re-estimate) no show probability function
Calculate expected cost of overselling
Probability of occurrence
Cost of remedial action
Calculate expected opportunity cost of possible spoilage
Marginal cost = marginal benefit
21. Fares AllocationPricing Considerations DilutionPrice insensitive customers pay lower prices
DisplacementHigh price customer rejected in favor of low price customerUsually undesirable, but not always
Share ShiftMovement of volume among competitive carriers
StimulationNew demand in response to lower prices
22. Fares AllocationFundamentals Fence to minimize dilution
Advance purchase, minimum stay, etc.
Equalize expected marginal revenue
Restrict inventory, nest reservations access
Dynamically re-estimate probabilities
Link to overbooking policies and to traffic management
23. Traffic Management Maximize system revenue (global optimum) not specific segment (local optimum)
Tied to inventory availability (vs. sold out)
Can create favorable displacement ...
24. Desirable Displacement A to B: full = $100, discount = $50
B to C: full = $250, discount = $125
A to C: full = $350, discount = $175
A to B is full, and B to C is availableAccept discount reservation A to C since $175 > $100
25. Yield Management Overbooking
Fares Allocation
Traffic management
26. Airlines IndustryYield Management