Are Airlines Intentionally Overbooking Their Flights? (popularmechanics.com)
"if you sell one seat to two different people, and only one of them shows up, you get extra money," explains an article in Popular Mechanics shared by schwit1. Citing a recent TED-Ed video, they argue that the airlines' strategy for booking flights "makes perfect sense, just not for you."
The most frustrating part? This math could be tuned to ensure the maximum number of tickets sold with a near zero percent chance too many people show up. Instead, the most profitable solutions often involve a decent chance a few passengers getting screwed, because the extra ticket sales outweigh having to put someone up in a hotel now and then.
Next question?
Yes, and they have been doing it for at least the last 30 years from my memory. From what my airline industry parents tell me, this practice was prevalent 50 years ago as well. Get with the times PopSci
Duh... the airlines will sell a ticket to every passenger willing to pay a sufficiently high price at the time of sale... and deal with the consequences later. They value your time at zero, so it is only accommodation expenses that they have to foot the bill for.
You need to understand how to protect yourself, especially on high risk tickets. Not rocket science.
Yes, of course they do. I thought this was common knowledge. From what I've seen, airlines typically deal with over-booking by offering passengers free first-class upgrades on a later flight, or other perks to induce people to voluntarily give up their seats.
I wouldn't be surprised if they *don't* overbook flights at the busiest time of the year, since that's almost a guaranteed money-loser for them, but I have no evidence either way. Has anyone ever experienced overbooked flights at busy holidays, etc? I suppose it's also airline-specific.
Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
They've been under-building their airplanes.
rewriting history since 2109
This has been standard practice for years. In fact, if you have status on some airlines, you can *always* bump someone else off of any flight with the right ticket type.
I flew a few times on a United IAD->SFO route, and of four trips, I got involuntarily deferred twice. The second time, I noted to the gate agent that there's always an equipment change that screws up the flight, and she said, I shit you not, "they do it every night so we can give vouchers instead of cutting checks, even though the change is for fewer seats than the flight was overbooked. It sucks every night."
So, yeah, I gave those vouchers away, because fuck if I'm going to fly United again, even for free.
Large corporate accounts have guaranteed seats, if they decide they need to fly.
Which can and does bump little guys which is to say "attention, we've overbooked the flight".
Who the fuck buys a plane ticket and doesn't show up?
And even on my cheap EasyJet flights I can know my seat number a month in advance. So to overbook they'd have to know exactly who will not show.
You can demand compensation (As in, hard cash, not a voucher) if you're booted off a flight. Usually at a minimum of 2x the cost of the ticket. They don't like to advertise it for obvious reasons, but I highly recommend it over the vouchers.
What earth-shattering fact are you going to drop on me next, that customer service is insincere when they tell me to have a good day?
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
The forecast model is inaccurate if it assumes customers will continue to have the same behavior towards an airline that regularly overbooks flights. I had two incidents with an airline 10 years ago where I got bumped because of overbooking and I just stopped flying with them. I've also told all my friends. The airline I use now is about 15% more expensive and the seats are slightly less comfortable (although that's improving), but I still don't want to risk being bumped off the flight.
I don't like tele-evengelists like Jim Bakker https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... But if he went to prison for fraud for overbooking his theme park time-share hotel, why aren't airline execs getting the same treatment?
I'm not repeating myself
I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
Source: I worked 8 different hotels in 6 years a long time ago. If they know especially that it's some kind of special event they ALL do it and will also triple the rack (regular) rate sometimes impose a minimum stay too - fuck locals they'll come back another night goes the thinking.
Oh, I understand why airlines overbook. But I just can't grasp why a significant number of people who've paid good money for airline tickets simply don't show up. If I spend several hundred dollars on something, I'm going to make sure I get what I paid for...
#DeleteChrome
Here are some fun stories to grasp:
I missed my flight from Miami to Dallas in ~2005 because I missed the 45 minute checkin time by 2 minutes due to misreading the ticket.
On an international flight home from Colombia to the United States I missed my flight by ~7 hours because my ~6 hour bus ride from Medellin to Bogota was delayed by 15 hours due to a mudslide that blocked the highway.
More recently my flight got pushed back one day and screwed up my onward travel from London to Budapest, so I had to eat that ticket (rebook fee was higher than buying a new one),
Then my new ticket, I booked for the wrong time because Iceland is in a different time zone than England (apparently! don't try booking this shit jetlagged at 4am in the morning) and missed my flight because 90 minutes to get from London Gatwick to London Luton is just not enough and we forgot to checkin online.
So shit happens. Or your car gets a flat taking your friend on the way to the airport. Or your friend's wife goes in to labor a week early so you need to pet sit for the next 48 hours because they have no immediate family in town. Or your grandfather has a health problem and has to go to the hospital during thanksgiving, so you eat your $79 ticket home and just take the bus the next day for $50 instead.
There are a million, billion reasons not to catch your flight.
Oh, one time I missed my flight from Manila, Phillipines to the island of Palawan ($69) because I was just too hung over that morning, so I booked a second flight that afternoon instead (also $69). Whatever.
moox. for a new generation.
This is not an open question and the answer is not news. Of course they overbook their flights, and you should be happy they do. Unused seats are inefficient and result in higher ticket prices. If x% don't show up to a given route, then the airline should oversell up to x% depending on the VDB cost (e.g. "500 Delta dollars") and the cost of the fare.
Most passengers have their tickets heavily subsidized by price insensitive passengers (e.g. Business travelers). If you're reading an article claiming that your average passenger is "getting screwed", you can be sure the author has no idea what he or she is talking about.
Have seen people access flight loads from employee databases on several major airlines. They always overbook a few seats, it shows right up in the system for all employees and pass riders to see on each system. And yes, it is actually uncommon for everyone to make the flight when it's booked as there are always a few random problems in any large group.
Because out of 100 people, one person will have a family emergency they have to attend to. 2 people will have mis-set their alarm clocks, 5 are first-time travelers and underestimated traffic and security delays. Then there are the business travelers who have a last minute change of agenda, and take a flight at a later time.
Another flight home from Cartagena, I was too hung over in the morning and nearly missed my flight home, but thank god, they held the flight for me by ~15 minutes as I didn't have any checked luggage and Spirit Airlines patiently waited for me to be expedited through security/customs.
Thursday, I nearly missed my flight from SFO to Dallas because I thought my flight was at 5:45 but really it was 5:25 and also I didn't count on SF traffic to the airport. Thanks to the miracle of online checkin I was able to make that flight.
moox. for a new generation.
I once bought a bus ticket from Iguazu, Brazil to Rio De Janiro for about $250, went to go see the falls that morning (they're amazing by the way, twice as wide and twice as high and twice as much water as Niagra falls), and the bus driver that takes us back in to town slept through lunch and I got back an hour later than I expected. Worse, I thought the bus started from the Argentinian side, so I had to get an international taxi for $80 to the bus terminal. Got my passport stamped sitting in the back of a ratty hundai taxi. Had they waited an extra 5 minutes to scrutinize my brazilian visa, I'd have been screwed and missed New Years in Rio.
moox. for a new generation.
I fly twice a month out of the Seattle airport, and I missed seven flights last year despite getting to the airport ninety minutes early due to TSA delays. Do you really not understand how people can miss flights because of TSA?
Next you're going to try and convince me that ISPs oversell bandwidth, hardware stores don't actually give me boards that measure 2"x4" in the cross section, that hard-drive manufacturers don't label drives as their formatted capacity, and printer cartridges don't let you utilize 100% of the ink inside.
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
The people not showing up aren't usually losing money. Here are three examples:
1. Corporate customers with fully refundable tickets. The can be refunded even in the event of a no-show.
2. Misconnects, especially at hub airports. A delayed inbound flight means passengers often won't make their connection.
3. Unforseen transportation problems (bad traffic, weather, flat tire, etc.) Most airlines have an unofficial "flat-tire" rule that you can invoke if something like this happens. If you politely explain the situation, there's a good chance they'll rebook you on the next available flight at no charge.
Bob Crandall of American Airlines started this because so many ppl would actually call in with false reservations so that they could fly standby. That kills the load factor. So, was AA's CIO that really created the hub/spoke system, along with dynamic pricing and slightly overbooked seats. Note that when overbooked, somebody gets nice things.
Sadly, the western based airlines are now a disaster due to de-regulations combined with MBAs that do not have an original thought. Worse, because the CEOs now have stock in the airlines, it is in their best interest to look at short-term stock value and not at long-term profits. Crandall REFUSED to have publicly traded stock to any executive when there. AA became the best. Once he left, the execs that took over ran AA into the ground.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Instead, the most profitable solutions often involve a decent chance a few passengers getting screwed, because the extra ticket sales outweigh having to put someone up in a hotel now and then.
What about the cost of lawsuits? Taking money for a good or service you have no intention of providing is a textbook definition of fraud.
Meetings run long. They get canceled or rescheduled. People oversleep and need to take a later flight. Or they get in a fight with their girlfriend and take an earlier flight. They misconnect because their first leg was delayed.
Heck, one time I was was at my gate really early (early enough that there was another flight at the gate before mine), working on my laptop until my flight. And I missed my flight at the very gate I'm sitting in because my laptop clock was in a different time zone and I was so focused on work that I didn't hear announcements that my flight was boarding.
Also changes made in the last 1-2 weeks are hard to resell. Most "subsidized" leisure fare buckets have advance booking rules, and leisure travelers won't pay full fare coach. So late changes are very similar to "no shows".
One reason people miss their flights is because they have busy, unpredictable schedules. They may be doing something like business negotiations that don't run on a nice schedule; they're finished when everybody agrees on terms. For someone like that, it's more convenient either to book multiple flights and then take whichever one works out or to pay the full, non-refundable fare that lets them keep changing their flight so they can push it back one day at a time. FWIW, this kind of thing is why there are still travel agencies specializing in business travel even in the day of online booking.
There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.
is it legal to sell one thing to two different people?
Tax deductions under Trump are going to exploit this.
Hold on a second, you're saying SPIRIT waited for you? The rock bottom, fuck all our passengers right in the ass while they lick our shit off the lavatory floor, airline HELD THE PLANE for you? There's got to be more to it than that.
Its cheaper for businesses whose plans may change to do this, and rebook, than to buy flexible fares whose dates are changeable.
But I just can't grasp why a significant number of people who've paid good money for airline tickets simply don't show up. If I spend several hundred dollars on something, I'm going to make sure I get what I paid for...
I see you don't fly much.
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
I see a lot of comments to the effect of "there's X percent of no-shows on this route"
Wouldn't it be more reliable to look at an individual's travel history/reliability, especially an individual corporate account's reliability?
Knock on wood, I've never been bumped from a flight due to overbooking, though there was one close call where I wasn't given a seat assignment until boarding began, and it was one flight I recall I literally could not miss.
Business travelers change their flights all of the time. If it wasn't for overbooking this would be prohibitively expensive. Meeting runs late, you call the airline, pay your change fee, and carry on. Also many business travelers don't know when they are going to be done their last meeting so they leave plenty of time and book the last flight of the night. Then when business is done, they show up at the airport and ask to get put on the next flight. For vacation-grade tickets, if you're going to miss your flight, just call the airline and let them know and you can pay the change fee up to like 10 minutes before the flight departs. For many higher-fare tickets you can actually call up to 2 hours after the flight leaves.
The Iguazu falls are only 50% wider, average somewhere around 50% taller and have only 73% of the water flow of Niagara Falls.
"Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
That is pure misinformation. What does happen is that 50,000 passengers a year get an offer to fly at a later flight for compensation, and they accept that offer!
The number of people who don't fly on a flight for which they have a confirmed ticket without their consent is near zero.
Shachar
Obviously the answer is yes.
Airlines have been overbooking for decades and this is common knowledge.
God damn this site sucks so badly now I wish there was a way to give terminal cancer
to the idiots who work for it.
This is a well known tactic that airlines have been using for many years. I used to be an airline pilot and it was common to see airlines have to entice passengers to give up their seats. Not only that, lots of people take advantage of this to get discounted/free flights. They intentionally book flights that are likely to be oversold with the hopes that they'll be able to give up their seat and take a later flight with money in their pocket.
You fly twice a month and don't use precheck?
Happens all the time in the executive world; The Boss doesn't know WHEN he'll make it to the airport so his assistant books him on every flight.
You have never watched a connecting flight be late and fifteen people no show have you? I've seen several races from the start of my plane where the stewardesses ask those who have certain tightly timed connecting flight to go first and quickly. Shit, I've been one of those people racing across the terminal.
Of course they are intentionally overbooking flights, based on statistical analysis of what percentage of people who book a flight don't show up for it, and actually data of what it costs them to bump people off flights.
The person I spoke with sounded very sincere when they told me to a great day.
Though, due to the very heavy Indian accent, they may have told me I was gay... either way though they sounded sincere.
There are almost always 1 or 2 cheapskates on a flight of 150+, whom can be bought off.
If you were paying sure. But if the company decides to delay that customer visit by a day or so and you already booked tickets on the company card, chances are you don't care about the late change fee since your not paying anyway. Airlines know that happens all the time at about a 2% rate per flight, so they sell 102% of the seats they have and end up with exactly the right amount of seats most of the time.
OK, not to be all "the man", but you should seriously reduce your substance abuse if shit like that is an ongoing problem. Fat drunk and stupid is no way to go through life, or so I'm told.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
Heh, most concise answer in this thread.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
1) Missed connections. This happens way more often than you think - either the connection is impossible, delays, or longer than normal flight can easily cause a connection to be missed.
2) Cheap seats - a lot of these are non-refundable, and non-flexible (and thus, cheap). If you need to change it for any reason, (perhaps your paperwork isn't in place, you missed the checkin time,etc) well, you're stuck. Since you can't change it or refund it, well, you book a new seat and yours go unused.
3) Cheaper - Sometimes depending on the routing, taking a few extra legs may end up making the trip cheaper (e.g., Vancouver-Seattle-San Francisco - it may be cheaper to buy Vancouver-San Francisco via Seattle than Seattle-San Francisco direct, even if it's the same plane). In which case, if you want to board at Seattle, you simply ignore the Vancouver-Seattle route and take the second half of the flight, and save a few bucks.
So what if you write back and say that you've changed the terms. If they don't refund (and they never do: no process to do that), this is just as much an acceptance of YOUR terms as you buying the ticket accepts THEIRS.
This is part of the reason why most of the first world has consumer protection laws, and part of the reason why the USA sucks donkey balls to live in. No bullshit one-sided contracts have legal standing unless they are quid-pro-quo. See EULA (decided in Germany).
So the problem with cable is demonstrated to be far far less than airlines, where the general opinion seems to be "Yeah, all of them do, all the time" with airlines.
So your claim doesn't hold up.
try something else.
That's been known for about 40 years.
Sometime airlines effectively encourage people not to turn up. Example: A few years ago when my wife moved to live with me she needed to book a single ticket (i.e. not a return). She quickly discovered that a return cost less than a single (something which I think is common, but still mystifies me). So, she bought a return ticket and simply didn't turn up for the return flight. So, she was a no-show and it was effectively all the airlines doing.
"Of course they overbook their flights, and you should be happy they do. Unused seats are inefficient and result in higher ticket prices."
NO THEY DON'T. IF they book EVERY SEAT, then the seat, ***even if unused*** IS STILL PAID FOR. YOu don;t seem to know what the fuck OVERBOOKING means. It means you book every seat AND THEN SOME MORE. When you DON'T overbook that doesn't mean you haven't booked every seat.
SECONDLY you braindead moron, ever heard of STANDBY? You sit about waiting for a free seat, which you've paid money for, meaning if they DON'T book every seat, the seat is still goddamned PAID FOR.
There are enough people in flying populace who just can't make up their mind on when they are going to fly and what airline they are going to fly, so they buy a ton of refundable tickets at various times and most of the time cancel right before the plane is scheduled to depart.
Back in the 90s when I did some software consulting for AA, it was around 3% of all tickets sold for a given day would be canceled. While for some specific high
demand flights it was as high a 30% of the tickets would be canceled. AA's infamous nerdbird ( Austin, TX to San Jose, non-stop ) was routinely 30% oversold
and almost never bumped anyone. Departed Austin once in the morning and once in the afternoon, which allowed Austin and Silicon Valley tech companies to schedule people out for problems or meetings. Frequently, the problem/meeting would be fixed/canceled in the time between flights.
Seat load factor industry wide is nowhere near 1.0, it is more like 09.8 or 0.75. The problerm is that some people buy place, then refund, or even reserve and never pay/confirm. So there is a certain percentage of overbooking allowed. Want to have less overbooking ? Pay more for tickets, drop all refund or exchange possibilities.
Of course it isn't, because they don't offer you a refund or a ticket on an alternative flight and hey kick you in the nuts too. That's whey pretty much every time you go to an airport you see check-in agents being dragged away in handcuffs.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Rubbish. Demand is defined as the quantity people are willing and able to buy at a specific price.
Look at the graph. Is the line flat? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
The only knob that airlines use to control how many people buy tickets for a flight is the price, which is adjusted to maximize revenue. It is entirely possible that an airline makes more money selling fewer high priced tickets than filling the plan with lower price customers. In fact airlines have been increasing their high price seats - first and business class. Hotels face a similar optimization problem. Is it better to have a few vacant rooms at a higher price or be sold out at a lower price. It one knows how demands varies with price it is trivial to compute the optimum and both airlines and hotels make great efforts to price elasticity.
Why is this news? I can remember this being done all the way back to the 80s...
People are late all the time, plans change, sometimes return flight is cheaper than one-way or the previous flight runs late. All four have happened to me, there is nothing uncommon about missing your flight for one reason or another and you don't necessarily lose money over it.
Simple math. I wrote hotel yeild management systems, during the day when hotels where owned by airlines. The issue is fixed resources.
Rules are simple... ...) ...)
Limited items to sell (room or seat)
High cost to add more items (extra tower or extra plane ($150M plus staff and fuel)
Break even point is about 70% used, the extra 30% is profit. >100% pure cost (hotel room, giving free flights,
Failure rate of people not showing up or showing up late. (~3-5%)
Special events (big game, new years,
So now we have basics to "play".
As long as we are under 70% selling the item at cost protects investment, It way buying a ticket early is general a great price. Also know the failure rate is generally in here.
Once you cross 70%, you raise rates, since this is profit area. and you want to stop selling before 103%, Thing short lead time traveler (business).
Special events and toss this out of the window, since you know the big game day ALL airline and hotel are full, so your break-even maded before starting. So the whole all can be sold at a higher price, so more profit.
Now If you sold out at 100% everyday, then yes an airline will rotate stock to get more seats on the given flight. Cost do that is swap of bigger plane form lower user use flight, BUT that can cause issues since planes run routes, so moving larger plane to this route: (say NY-->LA --> Seatle --> NY) can cause "snowball" issues. Think of the number flights canceled after big storms, most cause two day sync issue trying to all planes into their routes again, for normalized travel again.
If they have an under-booked flight, they also will simply cancel it and move people onto other flights instead. This I had seen often enough too.
It's Christmas, so I'll assume you're basting a turkey, and sipping single malt at the same time you compose this. Otherwise you need to brush up on your language skillz.
This story is prehistoric, overbooking has been an algorithmically optimised practice by the airlines for at least 40 years. No recent news, but in 2011 the US increased the legally-mandated compensation for "involuntary denied boarding compensation" in 14 CFR 250.5 .
The loophole is the airlines try to get their victims to agree to substantially less, mostly by never giving the written notice they're required to, or by obfuscating it. Go google/duckduckgo it.
QUIET! If he's too stupid to know about TSA Pre by now, the LAST thing I want is him in the TSA Pre line asking "do I need to take my shoes off?" or trying to dig his iPad out of his bag... I fly weekly from LAX to SFO and back, typically catch the 8 AM Delta flight, and arrive at the airport at 7:30 AM to park my motorcycle. Never missed a flight yet, TSA Pre is always 5 minutes, I'm at the gate a solid 10 minutes before they close the door... If he was in the TSA Pre line, my margin gets a lot smaller...
Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
I'm not for government involvement in the economy, but when a company claims they need to keep the money from unused tickets instead of returning it, because otherwise they have unfairly lost money on an unsold seat if they return it (which is not nice, but reasonable), but then actually do this, where they have completely ameliorated that risk, then to continue to maintain that rational for not returning the unused seat's money when it gets re-sold anyway, i.e. double-sold, is flat out fraud.
Like banks charging $35 overdraft fees, over and over in a single month, because it's "costly" to them, or credit card companies charging outrageous interest rates, bumping you up because you have borrowed too much ("you are a 'higher risk' "), the actual behind the scenes math is oriented around the surface reason as fraud for a real, massively profitable business model.
These are frauds. They literally hope you get into trouble of some kind (forget to use the ticket, forget you're low on funds, borrow too much from them without even missing a payment) so they can "protect themselves". But when they hope you trip instead of fear it, because it profits them, there's the lie. There's the fraud.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Another fun story to add to the list: my mother has been visiting us in Cape Town and had a flight back to Durban (2 hours flying time). She misread her ticket: what she thought was her departure time was actually the arrival time in Durban. I realized her error too late, and we made it just as the baggage drop counter closed. Online check-in didn't save her since she had bags that needed to have been put in the hold; it would have saved her if she had carry-on luggage only (though, this is my mother -- she travels with the kitchen sink!).
It was also the last flight for that day, but the airline was very understanding -- they gave her a standby ticket for the next day at virtually no charge. We took her back the next morning, and she pretty much camped by the standby counter. Thankfully, there was a no-show on the early morning flight, so she managed to get on that.
Maybe if you're just missing a night flight arrival VS early the next morning, but getting bumped often can mean missing connections, missing events, paying for a hotel booking you don't use etc etc.
I've had flights delayed 2-3 and that was enough to f*** up my travel plans in some cases. Overbooking and bumping intentionally is just greed.
Overbooking flights is the least of the problems that you (or I) have with the Airlines. Frankly, flying just sucks all around now.
How many seats can we cram in? How many more rows can we stuff them into? How small can we make the bathroom. Just how bad can the food get? What else can we possibly do to charge these slimy people we call customers? How much more miserable can we make them???
It's why I don't fly that much anymore. I'm talking maybe one flight every ten years now. If I can drive it -- I will. It's the reason I bought a really really nice fucking car.
Let's see -- be at the airport 2-3 hours BEFORE the flight. I remember showing up half and hour before the flight and it was no problem. That was then. This is now. It takes another hour to get to the airport (my problem, but now theirs). Sometimes two hours if traffic is shit like it is during the holidays. Plus flight time to get where ever I'm trying to go. Plus another hour or two at the other end to get to the final destination after getting a car, etc. Add it all up...it's almost 10-12 hours to get somewhere within 5 hours of flight. I can drive that in a couple of days -- and here's the thing ... be much more RELAXED when I arrive. Did I mention the nice fuckin' car? LOTS of room. I can get out and walk around any time I want. I pick the washroom I want to use. They're huge.
Thank god I don't need to travel for business. Suckers.
I wish I could drive to Hawaii. That flight sucks...
I remember going to the movies. Then the seats started getting smaller and smaller. Cram more people in. Just like the airlines. I stopped going there too. Except one recent movie trip -- and I was blown away. HUGE electric reclining seats. Almost as good as the ones in my home built theatre. I may just go back again.
Funny -- if the airlines would charge me TWICE as much, and cut the bullshit charges along the way. Remove half the rows (or more now) and give me a nice big lav -- perhaps the entire tail section would be nice. You know, make it like it was in the 60's and 70's ... or better. I just might consider flying a whole hell of a lot more than I do now (which is never).
Oh, and fuck United. I am a Delta share holder. LOL
Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you a rare exception to the "if an article title ends with a question mark the answer is no" rule! Because the answer is fucking obvious and has been for years!
Connecting flights + inclement weather can do quite a number on missed flights.
For #3, does your airline automatically remove you from the Seattle->San Francisco flight because you had missed your Vancouver->Seattle? UA did not allow me to do online check-in just because I had "missed" a flight and cancelled all my returning flights. (Short version of it was because of weather, I might miss my connecting flight, so the attendant booked the next day flight. I was able to get on my original connecting flight, thus "missed" the next day's).
... by amateurs reminds me of a true story:
I moved from the oil patch (layoff) to the legal field and one of my first recommendations to management was, "Hey! Let's stop doing all this copying crap that requires skill of a 13-year old and print to PDF and email attachments to clients!"
Fuck.
Those lawyers made 3 cents per page of copy.
I would learn all about "time and expense" billing.
--
So, some of the suggestions offering a better business model for the airlines in these comments show a lack of understanding similar to mine.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
Oh go get fucked. A few random stories are things you SHOULD have. My best flight miss was in Jakarta when a bunch of buddies told me I couldn't possibly make my flight given how much ecstasy we had consumed. They were right, I couldn't even make it down the hotel hallway before I got all paranoid.
I pity you not cutting loose in life. What a fucking waste.
The policy of rewarding people for getting bumped was instituted by Alfred Kahn under the Carter administration. After airlines were deregulated, they had no established policy for overbooking and they would either just hold the plane indefinitely until someone volunteered to get off for free, or they would just bump random people. Kahn established the policy of requiring them to first ask for volunteers and offering rewards.
Make the penalties for selling someone a seat they don't actually have far, far outweigh the marginal profits of over-selling tickets. Remember the Ford Pinto, and how the Ford Engineers decided paying off a few lawsuits was more cost effective than installing a $2 part that would keep the gas tank from exploding in a rear end collision? The airlines have obviously made a similar cost/benefit analysis and decided that comping a flight costs them less than they make by overbooking.
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
Company optimizes for money earned - shocking! finding the optimum overcommitment of resources was a homework in statistics in our class.
It's simple:
* Probability distribution of people appearing for a given flight
* take cumulative probability distibution
* multiply earning per ticket sold with number of tickets
* multiply cost per over committed seat with remaining probability
* subtract these two values
* find minimum as function of commited seats
And let me ask a question: Would you accept a several % increase in ticket price for reducing the risk from a small chance (i was offered compensation for voluntarily giving up a booking once and never not boarded) to 0?
Find and kill the CEO
So why isn't this done for concerts, sporting events, theater, movies, cruises, etc? Seems odd that it's only done for airlines.