Article ID: | iaor20081219 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 54 |
Issue: | 5 |
Start Page Number: | 859 |
End Page Number: | 875 |
Publication Date: | Sep 2006 |
Journal: | Operations Research |
Authors: | Wein Lawrence M., Caldentey Ren |
Keywords: | yield management |
Motivated by recent electronic marketplaces, we consider a single-product make-to-stock manufacturing system that uses two alternative selling channels: long-term contracts and a spot market of electronic orders. At time 0, the risk-averse manufacturer selects the long-term contract price, at which point buyers choose one of the two channels. The resulting long-term contract demand is a deterministic fluid, while the spot-market demand is modeled as a stochastic renewal process. An exponential reflected random walk model is used to model the spot-market price, which is correlated with the spot-market demand process. The manufacturer accepts or rejects each electronic order, and long-term contracts and accepted electronic orders are backordered if necessary. The manufacturer's control problem is to select the optimal long-term contract price as well as the optimal production (i.e., busy/idle) and electronic-order admission policies to maximize revenue minus inventory holding and backorder costs. Under heavy-traffic conditions, the problem is approximated by a diffusion-control problem, and analytical approximations are used to derive a policy that is simple, and reasonably accurate and robust.