Flexible Pricing and Overbooking: Maximizing Profit for Perishable Capacity
Many businesses sell products that expire quickly. Airline seats, movie tickets, hotel rooms, and event seats all share a common characteristic: once the time passes, the product loses all value. An empty airplane seat after takeoff or an unsold movie ticket after the show starts cannot be stored or sold later.
This type of product is called perishable capacity.
From a management perspective, the real challenge is not simply selling everything. The true objective is maximizing profit from limited capacity.
Understanding the Real Constraint
In industries such as airlines, cinemas, hotels, and live events, the main constraint is usually fixed capacity.
A plane has a fixed number of seats.
A movie theater has a fixed number of seats per screening.
A concert venue has a fixed seating capacity.
Because capacity cannot easily change in the short term, the key question becomes:
How can businesses generate the highest profit from each unit of capacity?
This is where flexible pricing and overbooking become powerful strategies.
Flexible Pricing: Selling the Same Seat at Different Prices
Not all customers value the same product equally.
For example, airline passengers often fall into different groups:
Early planners looking for cheaper tickets
Leisure travelers with moderate price sensitivity
Business travelers who may pay much higher prices for last-minute flights
Similarly, movie theaters see different behaviors:
Discount seekers attending weekday matinees
Casual viewers choosing weekend showtimes
Fans willing to pay premium prices on opening night
If a company sets one fixed price, it leaves money on the table.
Flexible pricing solves this by adjusting prices based on time, demand, and customer behavior. Some tickets are sold earlier at lower prices to ensure baseline demand, while other tickets are reserved for customers willing to pay more later.
This allows businesses to capture more value from the same limited capacity.
Why the Best Pricing Sometimes Leaves a Seat Unsold
At first glance, the goal might seem obvious: sell every seat.
However, if every seat always sells out quickly, it often means the price was too low. Demand exceeded capacity, which means customers were willing to pay more.
Optimal pricing usually means demand is very close to capacity, but not always perfectly equal. As a result, sometimes a seat may remain empty. Counterintuitively, this can signal that pricing is close to optimal.
Overbooking: Managing Uncertainty
Another common challenge is no-shows.
Passengers miss flights. Moviegoers change plans. Hotel guests cancel reservations. If businesses sell exactly the number of available seats or rooms, some capacity will inevitably go unused.
To address this, many companies use overbooking.
Overbooking means selling slightly more tickets than available capacity, based on historical data about cancellation or no-show rates. Airlines have long used this approach, but it also appears in other industries such as hotels and event management.
When managed carefully, overbooking helps businesses ensure that their capacity is utilized more effectively while keeping the risk of conflicts manageable.
Applications Beyond Airlines
Flexible pricing and overbooking are not limited to aviation. They are widely used in industries with perishable capacity, including:
Movie theaters
Hotels and resorts
Live concerts and sports events
Ride-sharing platforms
Public transportation
These strategies belong to a broader discipline known as revenue management, which focuses on selling the right product, to the right customer, at the right price, at the right time.
The Core Principle
For products with short shelf life, the objective is not simply maximizing sales volume. Instead, the real goal is maximizing profit from limited capacity.
Flexible pricing and overbooking help organizations allocate their scarce capacity to customers who value it most, ensuring that every seat, room, or ticket contributes as much value as possible.