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  2. Revenue management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revenue_management

    Revenue management is a discipline to maximize profit by optimizing rate (ADR) and occupancy (Occ). In its day to day application the maximization of RevPAR (Revenue per Available Room) is paramount. For destinations with benchmark data available the maximization of RGI (Revenue Generated Index or RevPar Index) is the focus of this discipline.

  3. Littlewood's rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Littlewood's_rule

    Littlewood's rule. This gives the optimal protection limit, in terms of the division of the marginal revenue of both classes. Alternatively bid prices can be calculated via. Littlewood's model is limited to two classes. Peter Belobaba developed a model based on this rule called expected marginal seat revenue, abbreviated as EMSR, which is an ...

  4. Marketing mix modeling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing_mix_modeling

    Marketing mix modeling (MMM) is an analytical approach that uses historic information to quantify impact of marketing activities on sales. Example information that can be used are syndicated point-of-sale data (aggregated collection of product retail sales activity across a chosen set of parameters, like category of product or geographic market) and companies’ internal data.

  5. Revenue model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revenue_model

    A revenue model identifies which revenue source to pursue, what value to offer, how to price the value, and who pays for the value. [1] It is a key component of a company's business model. [2] A revenue model primarily identifies what product or service will be created and sold in order to generate revenues.

  6. Marketing management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing_management

    Marketing management is the strategic organizational discipline which focuses on the practical application of marketing orientation, techniques and methods inside enterprises and organizations and on the management of marketing resources and activities. [citation needed] [1] [2] [3] Compare marketology, [4] which Aghazadeh defines in terms of ...

  7. Yield management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yield_management

    Yield management. Yield management is a variable pricing strategy, based on understanding, anticipating and influencing consumer behavior in order to maximize revenue or profits from a fixed, time-limited resource (such as airline seats, hotel room reservations or advertising inventory). [1] As a specific, inventory-focused branch of revenue ...

  8. Expected marginal seat revenue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expected_marginal_seat_revenue

    Expected marginal seat revenue. EMSR stands for Expected Marginal Seat Revenue and is a very popular heuristic in Revenue Management. There are two versions: EMSRa [1] and EMSRb, [2] both of which were introduced by Peter Belobaba. Both methods are for n -class, static, single-resource problems. Because the models are static some assumptions ...

  9. Marketing mix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing_mix

    Marketing mix. The marketing mix is the set of controllable elements or variables that a company uses to influence and meet the needs of its target customers in the most effective and efficient way possible. These variables are often grouped into four key components, often referred to as the "Four Ps of Marketing." These four P's are :