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IORA Seminar Series – Mika Sumida

December 6 @ 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM

Mika Sumida is an Assistant Professor of Data Sciences and Operations in the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California. Her research focuses on developing efficient, provably good algorithms for revenue management and resource allocation problems, with applications in the sharing economy, online marketplaces, and delivery systems. She holds a Ph.D. in Operations Research and Information Engineering from Cornell University, and a B.A. from Yale University. Prior to her Ph.D., she spent two years working in operations consulting at Analytics Operations Eng., Inc.

Link to Register

(Hybrid session)

https://nus-sg.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZctcuGvqDksE9HugB0-sYRJ-g5nksO-uEaG
Title Revenue Management with Heterogeneous Resources
Venue BIZ 1 – 0204
Abstract We study revenue management problems with heterogeneous resources, each with unit capacity. An arriving customer makes a booking request for a particular interval of days in the future. We offer an assortment of resources in response to each booking request. The customer makes a choice within the assortment to use the chosen resource for her desired interval of days. The goal is to find a policy that determines an assortment of resources to offer to each customer to maximize the total expected revenue over a finite selling horizon. The problem has two useful features. First, each resource is unique with unit capacity. Second, each customer uses the chosen resource for a number of consecutive days. We consider static policies that offer each assortment of resources with a fixed probability. We show that we can efficiently perform rollout on any static policy, allowing us to build on any static policy and construct an even better policy. Next, we develop two static policies, each of which is derived from linear and polynomial approximations of the value functions. We give performance guarantees for both policies, so the rollout policies based on these static policies inherit the same guarantee. Lastly, we develop an approach for computing an upper bound on the optimal total expected revenue. Our results for efficient rollout, static policies, and upper bounds all exploit the aforementioned two useful features of our problem. We use our model to manage hotel bookings based on a dataset from a real-world boutique hotel, demonstrating that our rollout approach can provide remarkably good policies and our upper bounds can significantly improve those provided by existing techniques.

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