IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis

Global distribution systems (GDSs) and online travel agencies (OTAs) have been providing critical intermediation services for the air travel services industry. Their systems services have eroded the airlines' revenue by encouraging consumers to do price comparison-based purchases though, which...

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Main Authors: Granados, N.F., Kauffman, Robert John, Lai, H.C., Lin, H.C.
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2012
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/2192
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-31922014-04-02T10:22:16Z IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis Granados, N.F. Kauffman, Robert John Lai, H.C. Lin, H.C. Global distribution systems (GDSs) and online travel agencies (OTAs) have been providing critical intermediation services for the air travel services industry. Their systems services have eroded the airlines' revenue by encouraging consumers to do price comparison-based purchases though, which has caused the commoditization of air travel services. The airlines have begun to adopt à la carte pricing mechanisms in their direct distribution channel, especially through their Web sites. This way, they can provide travelers with an array of information for different airline product bundles and the flexibility to customize different bundles. This mechanism design may allow airlines to decommoditize their services in the minds of consumers. We analyze two years of data from a large international airline that sold airline tickets via several different direct and indirect distribution channels. Our results suggest that demand in the à la carte channel as a whole is less price-elastic. The results for price elasticity for different market segments and bundle types across channels were not altogether consistent with our predictions though. We find that, for some branded bundles of services, price elasticity is lower in the à la carte channel, and for others it is higher. We discuss the implications for managers and the design of à la carte selling mechanisms. 2012-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/2192 info:doi/10.1016/j.dss.2012.01.009 Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Air travel industry À la carte pricing Channel conflict Data analytics Decommoditization Intermediaries Mechanism design Computer Sciences
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Air travel industry
À la carte pricing
Channel conflict
Data analytics
Decommoditization
Intermediaries
Mechanism design
Computer Sciences
spellingShingle Air travel industry
À la carte pricing
Channel conflict
Data analytics
Decommoditization
Intermediaries
Mechanism design
Computer Sciences
Granados, N.F.
Kauffman, Robert John
Lai, H.C.
Lin, H.C.
IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis
description Global distribution systems (GDSs) and online travel agencies (OTAs) have been providing critical intermediation services for the air travel services industry. Their systems services have eroded the airlines' revenue by encouraging consumers to do price comparison-based purchases though, which has caused the commoditization of air travel services. The airlines have begun to adopt à la carte pricing mechanisms in their direct distribution channel, especially through their Web sites. This way, they can provide travelers with an array of information for different airline product bundles and the flexibility to customize different bundles. This mechanism design may allow airlines to decommoditize their services in the minds of consumers. We analyze two years of data from a large international airline that sold airline tickets via several different direct and indirect distribution channels. Our results suggest that demand in the à la carte channel as a whole is less price-elastic. The results for price elasticity for different market segments and bundle types across channels were not altogether consistent with our predictions though. We find that, for some branded bundles of services, price elasticity is lower in the à la carte channel, and for others it is higher. We discuss the implications for managers and the design of à la carte selling mechanisms.
format text
author Granados, N.F.
Kauffman, Robert John
Lai, H.C.
Lin, H.C.
author_facet Granados, N.F.
Kauffman, Robert John
Lai, H.C.
Lin, H.C.
author_sort Granados, N.F.
title IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis
title_short IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis
title_full IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis
title_fullStr IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed IT-Supported a la Carte Pricing in Air Travel: A Test of the Strategic Decommoditization Hypothesis
title_sort it-supported a la carte pricing in air travel: a test of the strategic decommoditization hypothesis
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2012
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/2192
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