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Static and Dynamic Pricing of Excess Capacity in a Make‐to‐Order Environment
Author(s) -
Hall Joseph M.,
Kopalle Praveen K.,
Pyke David F.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
production and operations management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.279
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1937-5956
pISSN - 1059-1478
DOI - 10.1111/j.1937-5956.2009.01044.x
Subject(s) - revenue , dynamic pricing , constant (computer programming) , revenue management , order (exchange) , microeconomics , queueing theory , variable pricing , computer science , heuristic , set (abstract data type) , rational pricing , economics , econometrics , finance , capital asset pricing model , computer network , artificial intelligence , programming language
We consider a make‐to‐order manufacturer that serves two customer classes: core customers who pay a fixed negotiated price, and “fill‐in” customers who make submittal decisions based on the current price set by the firm. Using a Markovian queueing model, we determine how much the firm can gain by explicitly accounting for the status of its production facility in making pricing decisions. Specifically, we examine three pricing policies: (1) static, state‐independent pricing, (2) constant pricing up to a cutoff state, and (3) general state‐dependent pricing. We determine properties of each policy, and illustrate numerically the financial gains that the firm can achieve by following each policy as compared with simpler policies. Our main result is that constant pricing up to a cutoff state can dramatically outperform a state‐independent policy, while at the same time achieving most of the increase in revenue achievable from general state‐dependent pricing. Thus, we find that constant pricing up to a cutoff state presents an attractive tradeoff between ease of implementation and revenue gain. When the costs of policy design and implementation are taken into account, this simple heuristic may actually out‐perform general state‐dependent pricing in some settings.

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