There are three essential conditions for yield management to be applicable: • That there is a fixed amount of resources available for sale. • That the resources sold are perishable (there is a time limit to selling the resources, after which they cease to be of value). • That different customers are willing to pay a different price for using the same amount of resources. If the resources available are not fixed or not perishable, the problem is limited to logistics, i.e. inventory or production management. If all customers would pay the same price for using the same amount of resources, the challenge would perhaps be limited to selling as quickly as possible, e.g. if there are costs for holding inventory. Yield management is of especially high relevance in cases where the constant costs are relatively high compared to the
variable costs. The less variable cost there is, the more the additional revenue earned will contribute to the overall profit. This is because it focuses on maximizing expected marginal revenue for a given operation and
planning horizon. It optimizes resource utilization by ensuring inventory availability to customers with the highest expected
net revenue contribution and extracting the greatest level of ‘willingness to pay’ from the entire
customer base. Yield management practitioners typically claim 3% to 7% incremental revenue gains. In many industries this can equate to over 100% increase in profits. Yield management has significantly altered the travel and
hospitality industry since its inception in the mid-1980s. It requires analysts with detailed market knowledge and advanced computing systems who implement sophisticated mathematical techniques to analyze market behavior and capture revenue opportunities. It has evolved from the system airlines invented as a response to deregulation and quickly spread to hotels,
car rental firms,
cruise lines, media, telecommunications and energy to name a few. Its effectiveness in generating incremental revenues from an existing operation and customer base has made it particularly attractive to business leaders that prefer to generate return from revenue growth and enhanced capability rather than downsizing and cost cutting.
Airlines In the passenger
airline case, capacity is regarded as fixed because changing what aircraft flies a certain service based on the demand is the exception rather than the rule. When the aircraft departs, the unsold seats cannot generate any revenue and thus can be said to have perished, or have spoiled. Airlines use specialized software to monitor how seats are reserved and react accordingly. There are various inventory controls such as a nested inventory system. For example, airlines can offer discounts on low-demand flights, where the flight will likely not sell out. When there is excess demand, the seats can be sold at a higher price. Another way of capturing varying willingness to pay is
market segmentation. A firm may repackage its basic inventory into different products to this end. In the passenger airline case this means implementing purchase restrictions,
length of stay requirements and requiring fees for changing or canceling tickets. The airline needs to keep a specific number of seats in reserve to cater to the probable demand for high-fare seats. This process can be managed by inventory controls or by managing the fare rules such as the AP (Advanced Purchase) restrictions. (30 day advance purchase, 21 day advance purchase, 14 day advance purchase, 7 day advance purchase, day of departure/walk up fares) The price of each seat varies directly with the number of seats reserved, that is, the fewer seats that are reserved for a particular category, the lower the price of each seat. This will continue until the price of seat in the premium class equals that of those in the concession class. Depending on this, a floor price (lower price) for the next seat to be sold is set.
Hotels and multi-family residences Hotels use this system in largely the same way, to calculate the rates. Yield management is one of the most common
pricing strategies used in the hotel industry to increase reservations and boost revenue. In the
multi-family residential industry, revenue management software started to be used around 2001, with Archstone-Smith helping to develop the LRO (Lease Rent Options) Revenue Management System from Rainmaker. Another early system was the YieldStar Asset Optimization System from
RealPage. By 2024 the systems had been developed into
cloud-based platforms known as a Revenue Management Systems (RMS). These systems are widely used by hotels to help optimize their revenue, as they automate the booking system, dynamically pricing rooms based on real-time activity, thus increasing revenue and occupancy as well as providing improved forecasting. Some RMS software is bundled as a standalone system, but sometimes it comes as part of a larger Property Management System (PMS).
Rental In the rental car industry, yield management deals with the sale of optional insurance, damage waivers and vehicle upgrades. It accounts for a major portion of the rental company's profitability, and is monitored on a daily basis. In the equipment rental industry, yield management is a method to manage rental rates against capacity (available fleet) and demand.
Intercity buses Yield management has moved into the bus industry with companies such as
Megabus (United Kingdom),
Megabus (North America),
BoltBus, and
easyBus, which run low-cost networks in the United Kingdom and parts of the United States, and more recently,
nakedbus.com and
Intercape, which have networks in New Zealand and South Africa. Now operating and developed in Chile by
SARCAN, a Chilean company that provides revenue and yield management systems focused on this industry, with the company
Turbus as principal customer. Finnish low-cost inter-city bus service
OnniBus, as well as Polish
PolskiBus, bases its revenue flow on yield management.
Insurance Insurance companies use price (premium) optimization to improve profitability on policy sales. The method is widely used by property & casualty insurers and brokers in the UK, Spain and, to a lesser extent, in the US. Several vendors, such as
Earnix,
Willis Towers Watson, EMB, ODG, provide specialized pricing optimization software for the industry.
Telecommunications On average,
communications service providers use an average of just 35 to 40 percent of available network capacity. Recently, telecommunications software vendors such as
Telcordia and
Ericsson Approaches include basing a strategy on innovative services explicitly designed to use only spare capacity and borrowing proven methods from the airline industry. The approach can be more difficult to implement in the telecommunications industry than the airlines sector because of the difficulty to control and sometimes refuse network access to customers. Similarities that exist between the airline and telecom industries include a large sunk cost combined with low marginal cost, perishable inventory, reservations, pricing flexibility and the opportunity to upsell. Differences that present challenges for communications service providers include low-value transactions and overall network complexity. Suggested approaches to executing a successful yield management strategy include accurate network information collection, bandwidth capacity allocation that does not impact service quality, the deployment of service management software such as
real time policy and
real-time charging, and using new marketing channels to target consumers with innovative services.
Online advertising Yield management in online ad sales is in essence the same as in other industries above mentioned; managing the publishers supply/inventory (banner impressions) with the market demand, at the best price (CPM/RPM) while assuring highest possible fill rates.
Railways While railways traditionally sold fully flexible tickets that were valid on all trains on a given day or even trains on several days, deregulation and (partial) privatization introduced yield management in the United Kingdom as well as for high speed services in Germany or France. Tickets for the same route can be as cheap as €19 but also go into the triple digits depending on departure time, demand, and the time the ticket is booked.
Skiing Yield Management has shown increasing popularity in the ski industry, especially in the North American markets. This ranges from non-physical rate fences,{{cite web|last1=Revenue Management in Action|title=Revenue Management at Ski Resorts
Pet boarding With predictable demand far outnumbering fixed supply in the professional pet boarding industry, yield management has become an ever-popular practice for this segment of businesses. Much like the hotel industry, those systems help gauge which restrictions to implement, such as length of stay, non-refundable rate, or close to arrival, and also ensuring they are selling rooms and services at the right price to the right person at the right time. ==Econometrics==