Ch12 Yield Management
Ch12 Yield Management
Ch12 Yield Management
Chapter 12
Services Versus Manufacturing
• Work-shift scheduling
• Shared capacity
• Partitioned demand
• Yield management
• Supply Management
– Capacity
– Work-shift scheduling
– Increasing customer participation
– Adjustable (surge) capacity
– Sharing Capacity
– Personnel – cross training, part-timers
• Demand Management
– Partitioning demand
– Price incentives
– Promoting off-peak demand
– Develop complementary services
• Yield Management
Chapter 12 –Chapter
Yield Management Successful Service Operations
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Nested, Static System – Fixed
Number Rule
• EMSR heuristic (Expected Marginal Seat
Revenue)
– Allocating first through 51st seats
revenue per seat:
100% certain of $10,000 premium vs. $2,500 discount
Allocating 52nd seat
98% certain of $10,000
= $9,800 expected revenue vs. $2,500 discount
Allocating 53nd seat
96% certain of $10,000
= $9,600 expected revenue vs. $2,500 discount
– Rule:
Accept discount passenger until
pr(spill) < discount revenue/premium revenue
• Effects:
– Expands overall industry
– Shifts consumer surplus to supplier
• Two views
– Using imaginative methods to expand the economy and give
consumers what they want
– Capitalist pig price gouging
• Alienating Customers
• Difficulty of customer understanding
• Customer cheating
• Employee Issues
• Limiting decision power
• Sabotage: add, not subtract responsibility
• Reward system: in-synch with managerial goals
- Consistency across personnel and units
• Exception processing
• Monitoring
• Cost/Time of Implementation
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Chapter Summary
• Yield management systems are used in a variety
of industries that have limited capacity
• Components of a yield management system
include overbooking, capacity allocation, and
pricing
– For overbooking and capacity allocation, numerical
methods can help to solve those problems
– The pricing problem still remains out of reach
• The human elements of a yield management
system must be attended to carefully
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Management, 2006, Thomson