Sunday, March 18, 2018

Inventory-management expert deplores airline price-gouging!

Airlines' willingness to gouge their customers has never been so painful. Even the man who  designed United Airlines' automated inventory-management systems says he’s appalled at how his former employer uses the technology to extract maximum value from passengers, by charging extra for window seats, aisle seats, overhead bins, and anything else that might be considered extra value.

A story on Inc.com tells of Bruce Mainzer’s disgust when he helped his wife, Beth Shadur, find a seat online for a flight from Chicago to New York. She ended up paying $76 extra for the window seat she wanted. "It shows sophisticated price gouging, and preying on the fears of inexperienced fliers like my wife,” said Mainzer. “I believe that is really taking advantage of people."

Denver Airport
According to writer Chris Matyszczyk, “Mainzer was surprised that a system that was once used merely to keep a few seats blocked for the high-falutin' flyers -- of which he's one -- is now being used wholesale to extract the maximum algorithmically possible from every single customer.”

Keep in mind that Mr. Mainzer is now a consultant helping hospitality businesses maximize new sources of revenue!

But that’s only the beginning. The writer, Matyszczyk, says airlines are now examining software that chooses to charge people not according to where they're flying or even what class of seat they're interested in, but according to who they are and their travel/shopping/browsing habits.

Using publicly available data, he writes, “It's entirely conceivable that an airline will know, the minute you land on its website, the precise reason why you're traveling, how desperate you are, how much you've paid for all your previous flights in the last five years, how great your net worth might be, and, who knows, whom you email about your more intimate affairs.”

Consumer watchdogs are concerned, and you should be, too. Transparency is going out the window, and you’ll have to work harder than ever to make sure you get the lowest prices whenever you shop online. Unless, of course, governments or consumer-watchdog groups can convince big marketers that conning your customers is not the right way to build a business – let alone a respected brand.

New Management Welcome!