The ability to manage the time involved in a service process is critical to effective revenue management (RM). At the same time, customer satisfaction is also a key element of time management in services. In this study, we explore the time component of RM in services that sell time implicitly by examining a dining experience. Although service managers can use pace to manage the duration of a service encounter and increase capacity during periods of high demand, manipulating the pace may interfere with customer satisfaction. Prior research has shown that the relationship of perceived pace with customer satisfaction follows an inverted U-shape. If the service pace misses the “sweet spot” that balances pacing with customer satisfaction, the re...
Revenue Management (RM) has been regarded as one of the most researched areas in hospitality operati...
10.1177/0010880407304020Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly483231-244CHRQ
This article tests and calibrates an often repeated assumption about the revenue benefits of reducin...
Purpose: Restaurant operators can process a greater number of customers and increase revenues by red...
Restaurant operators who seek to increase table turns during peak periods may want to speed up the m...
Purpose : The purpose of this paper is to investigate the application of revenue management practice...
A mystery shopper study was used to examine the influence of service times on customer satisfaction....
A mystery shopper study was used to examine the influence of service times on customer satisfaction....
Research shows waiting time in services is an important source of service evaluation by the customer...
Revenue management (RM) aims to maximize the revenue per available time-based inventory unit. For ex...
In this article, the authors examine how a common metric of revenue performance—RevPASH, or revenue ...
Purpose: The cause of this research is to determine the effect of timeliness on customer satisfactio...
In this article, the authors examine how a common metric of revenue performance—RevPASH, or reve-nue...
In many service industries, customers have to wait for service. When customers have a choice, this w...
In this research, the target is to create a “Service Performance Index” for food order mobile applic...
Revenue Management (RM) has been regarded as one of the most researched areas in hospitality operati...
10.1177/0010880407304020Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly483231-244CHRQ
This article tests and calibrates an often repeated assumption about the revenue benefits of reducin...
Purpose: Restaurant operators can process a greater number of customers and increase revenues by red...
Restaurant operators who seek to increase table turns during peak periods may want to speed up the m...
Purpose : The purpose of this paper is to investigate the application of revenue management practice...
A mystery shopper study was used to examine the influence of service times on customer satisfaction....
A mystery shopper study was used to examine the influence of service times on customer satisfaction....
Research shows waiting time in services is an important source of service evaluation by the customer...
Revenue management (RM) aims to maximize the revenue per available time-based inventory unit. For ex...
In this article, the authors examine how a common metric of revenue performance—RevPASH, or revenue ...
Purpose: The cause of this research is to determine the effect of timeliness on customer satisfactio...
In this article, the authors examine how a common metric of revenue performance—RevPASH, or reve-nue...
In many service industries, customers have to wait for service. When customers have a choice, this w...
In this research, the target is to create a “Service Performance Index” for food order mobile applic...
Revenue Management (RM) has been regarded as one of the most researched areas in hospitality operati...
10.1177/0010880407304020Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly483231-244CHRQ
This article tests and calibrates an often repeated assumption about the revenue benefits of reducin...