Recently the question has been asked at events, in social media posts and industry articles if revenue management is stuck in a rut. The authors assert that revenue management has not really advanced in the last 10 years and revenue managers are not doing anything differently than in the past. What is your opinion of the state of revenue management in 2020?

Michael Schubach
Michael Schubach
Vice President of Product Management for Infor Hospitality

Is revenue management not keeping pace with today's world? How condescending to assume that a lack of reinvention every decade is a sign of incapacity. Think back to the promise that revenue management systems made: a property could see its revenue increase by a minimum of five percent by opting into an electronic revenue management system. It was an easy hurdle – going from zero to sixty was an achievable first-year challenge with a revenue management system but what happens in the second year? The answer is that the property goes from sixty to sixty-one or maybe even sixty-two. Why? Because their revenue management system is already doing all the right things: exploiting every opportunity, responding to every market change, manipulating rates a dozen times a day, and selling rooms at the right price at the right time, every time. What more were you expecting?

Yes, there could be a new formula – perhaps the sum of the square of the hypotenuse might give us another insight into demand pricing – but really, how far could it possibly move the needle? Will new guests suddenly appear in a puff of smoke?

I contend that the revenue management promise is alive, well and completely fulfilled. At the risk of declaring myself an elder statesman, I can remember a time when we updated room rates every calendar quarter instead of every quarter-hour. Is having that kind of exquisite control over our operations so passé? So five years ago? Hardly.  

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