Revenue Management Defined - Ultimate Guide For 2022 - NetSuite
Revenue Management Defined - Ultimate Guide For 2022 - NetSuite
Revenue Management Defined - Ultimate Guide For 2022 - NetSuite
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Many businesses face huge swings in demand over the course of a week, a month or a year. This can be especially difficult
for businesses with inelastic supply and high fixed costs, like airlines, hotels and golf courses. Revenue management is the
art and science of predicting those swings in demand and responding in a way that maximizes the business’s revenue.
This article outlines the basic principles of revenue management along with strategies and tips for becoming a good
revenue manager.
Revenue management is more than just figuring out what price to charge. With revenue management, the right price is
often more a function of the needs of potential customers than the economics of the product. So, for example, businesses
where cost-plus pricing (adding a consistent margin to the cost of producing the product) works well might not need a
process as sophisticated as revenue management. Industries with high fixed costs and low marginal costs are the most
common users of revenue management. These industries tend to be in the travel and hospitality sectors: Hotels, airlines,
golf courses and car rental agencies are some examples of businesses that make heavy use of revenue management to
set prices and other sales terms.
1. There’s a fixed amount of what you’re selling — in other words, a “depletable” inventory, such as the rounds of golf a
country club can sell in one day on a single course.
2. What you’re selling expires. This isn’t necessarily literal; inventory may expire in the way a round of golf tomorrow
can’t be sold the day after. The point is, when the unsold inventory expires, it’s worthless.
Some people add a third condition, which, while not strictly necessary for yield management, is required for any analysis
more complicated than “find the
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3. Differences in customers’ willingness to pay for what you’re selling must be correlated with something the business
can use to segment its offerings. On our hypothetical golf course, for example, perhaps weekday customers are
willing to pay more than weekend golfers because they’re mostly paying from business expense accounts, or maybe
weekday customers want to pay less because they’re retirees on fixed incomes who happen to have more time for
midweek rounds. Whichever way it goes, the point is to establish different selling terms based on the segmentation.
That said, yield management practices are at the core of many revenue management strategies. You may want to think of
revenue management as a broader strategic approach, with yield management containing a particularly useful set of
tactics you can employ toward your goals.
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Key Takeaways
Revenue management lets businesses treat individual days like separate micro-markets, with their own supply-and-
demand curves.
Good information — about the business, customers, competitors and the calendar — is essential to revenue
management.
While revenue management can be a highly quantitative practice, a numbers-only approach isn’t always the right
long-term strategy.
For some businesses, revenue management is the difference between success and failure.
Knowing your offerings means not only your inventory but also what you can do with it. A hotel room night, for example,
might be sold by itself, as part of a longer stay or as part of a room block for a conference or wedding.
Knowing your customers is essential to predicting demand, including several different aspects of demand. Business
travelers are different from leisure travelers and will respond differently to promotions, events, seasons and even the day of
the week. Conventional wisdom suggests that leisure travelers book further in advance than business travelers, though
there are certainly spontaneous leisure travelers who look for last-minute deals.
That feeds directly into knowing the calendar. If a hotel primarily caters to business travelers, demand may be higher
during the week, but a beach resort may see higher demand on the weekend. That same beach resort may see higher
demand in the summer than winter, but then high demand, again, around the holidays. All of these factors interact: For
example, what will demand be like for a summer holiday weekend? Infrequent and irregular events are also important. A
major political party’s nominating convention can result in sold-out hotel rooms citywide, regular festivals and events bring
in large crowds and even smaller happenings may bring in unexpected customers that represent an excellent opportunity
for revenue managers with a keen eye. Special exhibits at art museums have been known to create demand for hundreds
of hotel room nights spread out over many weeks or longer. Such calendar events can create wild swings in demand, along
with subtle opportunities to attract a particular customer type. In that case, the key questions become: What can you offer
to appeal to that customer type and how can you advertise to reach them better than the competition?
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And that leads to knowing your market. The first step to knowing your market is knowing your competitors and
“comparables” — substitutes that exist for what you’re selling (e.g., a hotel needs to know other hotels but may also keep
an eye on short-term home rentals or local campsites). Which comparables are relevant is defined by customers’
preferences. The next step is collecting pricing information for the “comps” (shorthand for comparables, competitors or
both). Chances are prices are available online. Sometimes you’ll use competitor prices tactically — can you undercut a
close competitor or justify a price premium? Sometimes competitor prices may help you avoid a mistake. For example, if
everyone is charging three times your rate, you probably missed an event on the calendar.
Having all of this information not only helps set prices, but it can help establish constraints as well. For example, a sharp
revenue manager may not want to sell out all hotel rooms in advance of a big weekend event because experience suggests
some guests will be willing to pay a lot more at the last minute. Or a beach resort selling room nights over a popular three-
day weekend may not want to offer the middle night for one-night stays, as it will make it harder to fill that room on the
other two nights. Alternatively, the resort could raise the price of one-night stays to adjust for the risk of an empty room on
a popular night.
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Why Is Revenue Management Important?
Revenue management helps businesses get the most out of what they have to sell, offer specific deals to customers who
value them the most and capitalize on opportunities in a way fixed pricing never could. But even more than that, some
businesses wouldn’t even exist without revenue management — it can be the deciding factor that lets a business offer
products to customers at all.
Take, for example, a hotel in a popular weekend spot. During the week, it can only charge $100 per night if it wants to fill a
room. On weekends, it can charge $300 per night. Without revenue management, a $100 room night price would bring in
$700 per week assuming the room is filled each night. A $300 room night price would bring in $600 per week, leaving the
room vacant most nights. Now, if the hotel needs a room to bring in $800 per week to operate, it can’t stay in business. But
with revenue management, the hotel can make $1,100 per week on that room by charging $100 on the five weekday nights
and $300 on Friday and Saturday nights.
That logic applies to any business with high fixed costs and low variable costs. For such businesses, operating at all is
costly, but serving an extra customer when capacity is available becomes very inexpensive.
1. Gathering information (data collection): In this step, you’ll want to collect as much relevant information as you
can. It helps to focus on the following four key areas, though that’s not to say relevant information won’t exist outside
of this framework.
Know your offerings: What are you selling? What ways can you sell them?
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Know your customers: This includes regular customers and potential customers. Who are you trying to reach?
What do you know about them?
Know your calendar: Every season, every week, every weekend and even every day can be thought of as its own
micro-market.
Know your market: Collect enough information about competitors and comparables (substitutes) to know your
potential customers’ entire choice set — not just what your offerings look like to them.
Know your history: What do you know about the history of everything above? How do things usually go for a
particular day/month/event? What can you learn from past experiences? What are your customers used to?
What past strategies worked and didn’t, and do you know why?
2. Slicing and dicing (segmentation): After step 1, you have a lot of data that can be broken down in 1,000 different
ways. The question isn’t about which is the “right” way to do it, but what are the useful ways to partition the data? If
you know that customers who buy at the last minute don’t care as much about price, on any given day you can divide
your offerings in time, with prices higher for closer dates. If weekend customers are different from weekday
customers, or Monday morning customers are almost all business travelers (true enough for many airline routes), you
can segment by day of the week (and for the airline example, even time of day). If a recurring promotion has loyal
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fans who wait for it, make room for those customers who are a great source of reliable repeat business. Use what you
know to divide customers and calendar into useful segments, which in turn helps manage your offerings.
3. Seeing the future (forecasting): Using newly collected data, the precision gained through useful segmentation and
historical data, you can start forecasting demand over time and by customer type. Sometimes this is a simple
process involving a baseline (e.g., how things have been going recently or what happened at the same time last year)
plus adjustments based on new learnings. But forecasting can also be as complicated as you want to make it —
sometimes it’s an automated computational process using regression techniques on time series data with influencing
effects from your data collection. The trick is to make sure the added benefit of a more detailed and sophisticated
model is worth the effort it takes to generate.
One useful source of input data for your forecasts is output from other forecasts. Forecasts about the weather,
consumer behavior and general economic trends can be useful in determining how your industry as a whole will fare
and, from there, how that will impact your particular competitive position.
As with all forecasting, remember: garbage in, garbage out. No matter how sophisticated and excellent the
forecasting model is, if the information put into it is low-quality and unreliable, the resulting forecasts won’t be reliable
either. It’s tempting to spend a lot of effort investing in excellent forecasting capabilities, but that must be matched by
good data collection or else the forecasting is all for show.
4. Planning and executing (decision-making and optimization): Forecasting can shine a light on what customers,
competitors and industries will do. In this step, it’s time to decide what your business should do. With detailed
forecasts about how many customers of which type are going to consider your business’s offerings on a given day,
you can mathematically calculate the revenue-maximizing response. Optimization can be complicated, but many
revenue management systems offer proven, built-in optimization formulas. With these capabilities in hand, the
question becomes: Should you simply execute the revenue-maximizing strategy that the math dictates? The answer:
Sometimes, but probably not always.
It’s important to remember that while the math is proven, the real-world data being fed into the formulas is never
perfect. Your forecasts and understanding of the demand curves are guesses, subject to error. So instead of just
trying to maximize expected value, you also want to manage deviations from that expected value — in other words,
minimize downside risk while pursuing some opportunities with high potential upside, even if they cannot be
forecasted with high accuracy.
There are a few important questions to ask when deciding how closely to follow the forecasted optimized prices. First,
is setting prices too high substantially more or less risky than setting them too low? If the risk is asymmetric — one
way is far riskier than the other — you may want to adjust prices to err on the side of caution.
Second, is there important information the forecasts couldn’t account for? Hotels underneath a rare solar eclipse, for
example, tend to sell out that night. When this last happened in the U.S. in August 2017, hotels that didn’t account for
the event either lost out on
Norevenue or wound
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Third, are there long-term considerations that outweigh short-term revenue optimization? A luxury product may have
a brand to protect, and managers could worry that pricing too low may undercut their ability to command a premium
going forward. With enough time and specificity, some of these extra considerations can be incorporated into data
and forecasts, but human judgment still has an important role to play alongside mathematical optimization in the
planning and execution of revenue management strategies.
If there’s one thing to take away from these steps, it’s, again, that everything depends on the quality of the data.
Business activities that bring in valuable information about customers and potential customers (e.g., an experimental
promotion you can’t forecast) may not immediately translate to revenue increases, but they have the potential to steer
the future of your business.
5. Iterating (dynamic reevaluation): In reality, a revenue management department will be cycling through all of these
steps every day. At the same time, they’ll be seeing results from past cycles coming in. It’s important to learn what
worked, what didn’t and — most importantly — why. Sometimes when a strategy doesn’t pay off, it will be because of
poor process execution. Or maybe one week a competitor simply outplayed you. But sometimes it’s because
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customers have changed and your old understanding is no longer true. This may be an early sign that important
changes are needed elsewhere in the business. A good revenue management process will make room for learning
and adaptation. How many articles have been published about millennials “killing” some company, product or
industry? That’s an unhelpful framing for an important truth: Competitive businesses that don’t listen to what their
customers want and note how they’re changing don’t succeed.
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While successful, this strategy raised some potential issues. How many seats would be available for the discounted price? If
prices were altered without controlling inventory, BOAC risked filling a plane with leisure travelers and missing out on
higher revenue from business travelers, who were its most frequent fliers. But if it didn’t offer enough seats at a discount
and a plane flew with empty seats, that ticket would expire with no value to anyone. The question of how many seats to
make available at the discounted price also had no straightforward answer — the season, the day of the week and the time
of day all made a difference. Leisure travelers tend not to fly out Monday morning, while business travelers were more
likely to fly between big cities than to communities with many resorts and spas. With airlines, there’s the added
complication that not every occupied seat flying between City A and City B gets occupied by a passenger whose origin is
City A and whose destination is City B. Flights can be legs in an itinerary, so if a route (say, to London) is full of passengers
making connections, you could have dozens of different itineraries on one aircraft at one moment.
What started as a simple promotion, one successful enough to be emulated by others, grew into what we now know as
revenue management. It jumped from airlines to hotels to many other industries, each of which adapted the practices to its
own idiosyncrasies. Most industries don’t have “legs” of an itinerary (though railways do), but hotels added their own
considerations like length of stay — the logic and mechanics of which are also used by car rental agencies. The
introduction of computers dramatically increased what revenue management could do. Today, the advent of artificial
intelligence may once again revolutionize how businesses tailor offerings to different customers. Call
Average daily rate: This is common in hotel and rental businesses. It’s the average revenue per unit per day. It
ignores other sources of income and unrented periods, and can be an indicator of the pricing power of a core
offering. For rentals that aren’t rented by the day, substitute the appropriate time period (hour, week, etc.).
Occupancy: This measures how full a hotel is, though the concept can generalize to other rental businesses as,
simply, the percentage of units rented at any given time. Related, average occupancy is the occupancy measure over
time instead of at a point in time.
RevPAR (revenue per available room): This is perhaps the most important go-to metric in the hotel industry, and it
combines the previous two concepts. It tells how much revenue each room is generating and includes nights a room
sits empty. Again, you can generalize this metric for any rental business, thinking of it as “revenue per available unit”.
ARPA (average revenue per account): The ARPA KPI takes a different perspective than the previous metrics: It
looks at revenue per customer account rather than per asset. It’s usually calculated as monthly recurring revenue
divided by the number of accounts generating that revenue.
Profit per unit: This comes in many forms (profit per room, per airplane, per vehicle) and many different measures
of profit. In the hotel industry, GOPPAR (gross operating profit per available room) is most common, but it’s easily
adapted to other industries. Many businesses using revenue management techniques have high revenues and high
costs, so focusing only on the revenue side can lead to an overly optimistic view.
PRASM (passenger revenue per available seat mile): This is the revenue management KPI for the passenger
airline industry. It takes passenger revenue (ignoring revenue from things like cargo and credit card loyalty programs)
and divides it by the total number of miles traveled by each seat in an airline’s fleet. Seat miles are correlated with fuel
burn and time in the air (and therefore wages paid for work in the air), two of an airline’s biggest cost drivers, and
they’re a good measurement of an airline’s capacity for delivering travel to customers. This metric goes down when
seats fly empty, accounting for the lost opportunity.
Other accounting and financial metrics: Revenue management KPIs can also include a variety of standard
accounting metrics, like total revenue and EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization).
Not every metric has to be special or customized like PRASM or RevPAR.
Your metric here: Knowing your business and what matters to it, what metric really captures what you’re going for?
What summary statistic goes up when the business does well and goes down when things go south? Think carefully
about what you really want to measure, manage and have business teams care about. That’s the metric you want.
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Inventory controls: Don’t make every room night, tee time or flight available for purchase all at once. You can hold
some back as you learn more about the micro-market for that day as it draws closer. You can also block off enough
inventory for large bookings by continuously coordinating with the relevant sales teams to figure out when there will
be a big event (like a wedding, conference, corporate golf outing or even a church retreat).
Distribution channel controls: Ideally, every customer would buy directly from your website. But in travel and
hospitality, aggregators and marketplaces have taken a chunk of the customer base and, with it, a percentage of the
revenue. Whether selling through Kayak, Trivago, GolfNow, AutoSlash or something else, thinking through how much
to offer and under what terms is a decision you can’t make lightly. You don’t want to sell out through a service that
takes a commission and be left without inventory for customers on your website, but you also might not want to
ignore the large boost in visibility you can get by participating on these platforms. Hotels in particular are known for
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offering non-price incentives for their most loyal customers to book on their websites or through their apps, typically
through loyalty program incentives (e.g., you can’t earn points or use your elite status benefits if you don’t book with
them).
Duration controls: Remember the earlier example about a beach resort selling room nights over a popular three-day
weekend? Selling the middle night for a one-night stay could make it harder to fill that room on the other two nights.
One possible way around this problem is by requiring a minimum length of stay, either around a special event or even
all the time.
Married segments: This is a term from the airline industry, but it applies to any transportation service offering
multileg itineraries. Two segments of an itinerary can be “married” if they are sold together, and they might not be
available separately. Airlines that have crowded flights coming into major hubs and flights departing soon after that
are empty may not want to sell the scarce inbound seats to customers traveling only to the hub city. Instead, they
might prefer to wait for a customer who will use that seat to build a longer itinerary — or, at the very least, charge the
customer taking a shorter trip enough to account for the lost opportunity of selling a connecting itinerary.
Open pricing: Open pricing is a policy that allows revenue managers to dynamically set prices with maximum
flexibility. They can change prices dynamically in real time without having to worry about syncing pricing across, for
example, room types, dates, distribution channels or lengths of stay. A word of caution when implementing this:
Sometimes contracts with distribution channels prohibit truly open pricing. So to give revenue managers open pricing
freedom requires systems in place to ensure compliance with those constraints.
Forecast pricing: Forecast pricing is used to set custom prices far in advance, as opposed to regular or standard
seasonal rates. A forecast pricing approach requires not only predicting what demand will be on a given day far in the
future, but also what competitors might do and what events might impact demand. It must also account for customer
type — when you set prices far into the future, you’re specifically making offerings to the customer types who book
far in advance.
Guest-segment pricing: In this strategy, the business charges different prices to different types of guests for
essentially the same thing. It’s the most direct form of price discrimination in revenue management, and therefore it’s
important to make sure that any guest-segment pricing strategy complies with local laws as well as general ethical
principles. For example, you can offer a senior or early-bird discount in most of the U.S., but you can’t offer different
pricing based on race. With that disclaimer understood, segmenting promotions by guest type can be a good way to
reach out to customer types who might not typically consider you. For example, a hotel that prices suites at several
multiples of the regular room rate might consider offering those same accommodations with all their extra space at a
family discount to encourage leisure travelers who wouldn’t otherwise consider the hotel.
Length of stay: Similar to duration controls, length-of-stay pricing sets prices in ways that encourage longer stays.
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nights. This way the same night in the same room (or the same day in the same rental car) might have a different
price depending on when the customer arrives and leaves.
Competition-driven pricing: An important strategic decision to make is the extent to which a revenue manager
wants to set prices based on competitors’ prices. Price matching is the most extreme form of this strategy, though
using competitor prices to set guideposts can be useful. For example, a midtier hotel may want to make sure it’s never
more expensive than a nearby luxury property, though perhaps that rule gets broken when hosting a conference for
attendees who value convenience more than product quality. Another competition-driven pricing strategy would be
to explicitly undercut nearby competitors by a little bit, hoping to attract customers who are searching for options
using price as their most important factor.
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Always be learning. Revenue management is about making the most of available information. No one has perfect
information, and no one has perfect methods for processing that information. If information and know-how are
competitive advantages, the fastest learners will be the best revenue managers.
Don’t be afraid to experiment. Information has value, and sometimes the only way to learn important things about
a market is to try them out. A few thousand dollars of missed opportunity or promotional giveaways might be a
bargain if the trade-off is learning valuable information about what customers want and how they make decisions.
Collaborate. Don’t work alone. Businesses that use revenue management have a lot of departments handling things
like sales, promotions, retention, customer service, loyalty, technology, operations and more. All work toward the
same goal: to make money by providing value to customers. Don’t keep valuable lessons about customers to yourself,
and try your best to learn from others.
Think long term. The practices of revenue management tend to promote short-term thinking. You’re rarely selling
something more than a year ahead of time, and hard metrics are coming in every day to which you have to respond.
That’s important. But it isn’t everything. Don’t forget to think long term — you’re not just setting prices, you’re
collaboratively building a business and a brand. The urge to squeeze out every last dollar is strong (and explicit in
some organizations), but take a moment to think about how your strategy works long term. Unless the business has
some kind of market failure-style protection, like a natural monopoly, leaving customers happy is almost always more
important than the marginal dollar. Keep one eye on the horizon.
KPI tracking: A good RMS will help track key performance indicators and metrics for revenue managers. It should
provide updated metrics on where you are now, where you’ve been and allow you to calculate metrics over various
periods of time.
Competitor pricing: In the data collection phase, part of “knowing your market” is knowing what competitors are
charging. If competitors are in a well-known industry that puts pricing data online, a top-rate RMS will gather some of
that information for you. It might not sign up for your competitor’s emails and let you know about special promotions,
but it can do the basic job of scanning what they’re charging and when.
Restriction management: There’s no standard term for this, but a good RMS will account for rules and restrictions,
either rules custom-made by you to prevent errors from occurring, restrictions imposed by things like contracts with
distribution channels or requirements from a larger corporate owner.
Revenue estimates: With perfect data on what you’re charging, when and approximate forecasts for what you think
demand will be — which an RMS can help you develop as well — the software will often be able to estimate what your
revenue will be going forward. You can use this for “what if” analysis, but remember that the predictions are only as
good as the data, assumptions and forecasts upon which they’re based.
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Pricing recommendations: This is one of the most important things an RMS can do, especially for smaller teams
and those without a lot of quantitative firepower. You can reinvent the wheel of running complex models and
algorithms, or you can use models that have been vetted and come with your RMS. At the very least it gives you a
starting place with suggested prices, and you can apply your own analysis and knowledge to make adjustments from
there.
Keep in mind that software can only use information you give it or tell it where to find. It can’t scan calendars or read news
stories and predict how humans will respond (yet). An RMS will be better at processing large numerical datasets than you
ever could, but a revenue manager’s job is to also incorporate information that isn’t easily fed into the software.
Many sources will speak with authority about what you need in a revenue management system, but bells and whistles are
meaningless without a plan behind them. Sophisticated analytics are great, but only if you can use them. Many users love
cloud technology for data security and easy software updates, while other businesses already have solutions for storing
and securing data in place and prefer not to have to deal with software that changes frequently. Most users want help
running optimization algorithms and suggesting prices from their RMS, but if your business works best with a simpler
approach — and many do — it’s not worth paying for premium capabilities you won’t use. When choosing a revenue
management system, the goal is to find the best fit.
Conclusion
Many businesses face huge swings in demand over the course of a week, month or year, and the world is only getting
more variable. It’s hard for many businesses to prepare for and respond to these shifts in their customer needs — and
sometimes shifts in who their customers are. Revenue management software can be an essential tool for meeting
customers’ needs and providing them with the right product or service, at the right price and the right time.
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