Customer selection problem with profit from a sideline

Customer selection problem with profit from a sideline

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Article ID: iaor20084567
Country: Netherlands
Volume: 176
Issue: 2
Start Page Number: 1084
End Page Number: 1102
Publication Date: Jan 2007
Journal: European Journal of Operational Research
Authors:
Keywords: queues: applications, service
Abstract:

This paper deals with the problem of selecting profitable orders to accept out of customers sequentially arriving at companies operating in service industries which provide specialized services designed to meet the various needs of their customers. When all the orders accepted up to a point of time are completed and delivered, the companies provide subsidiary services as a sideline in order to prevent their system from being idle, and to yield extra income, referred to as the profit from a sideline. Further, a cost is paid to search for customers, called the search cost. We discuss the admission control problem and pricing control problem in an identical framework. Properties of the optimal decision rule maximizing the total expected present discounted net profit gained over an infinite planning horizon are examined and clarified. It is shown that when the profit from the sideline is large, the optimal policies may not be monotone in the number of orders in the system.

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