Abstract

We consider a canonical quantity-based network revenue management problem where a firm accepts or rejects incoming customer requests irrevocably in order to maximize expected revenue given limited resources. Because of the curse of dimensionality, the exact solution to this problem by dynamic programming is intractable when the number of resources is large. We study a family of re-solving heuristics that periodically re-optimize an approximation to the original problem known as the deterministic linear program (DLP), where random customer arrivals are replaced by their expectations. We find that, in general, frequently re-solving the DLP produces the same order of revenue loss as one would get without re-solving, which scales as the square root of the time horizon length and resource capacities. By re-solving the DLP at a few selected points in time and applying thresholds to the customer acceptance probabilities, we design a new re-solving heuristic with revenue loss that is uniformly bounded by a constant that is independent of the time horizon and resource capacities. This paper was accepted by Kalyan Talluri, revenue management and market analytics.

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