Airlines always have certain days which never sell very well, such as December 25 or 31.
There seems to be a disconnect between what price sensitive passengers want to pay & what airlines will accept.
But if airlines either auctioned off some seats, with fixed dates, perhaps this might help them clear some seats without advertising lower prices.
Passengerscould have make an offer, so one one except those making the offer, could see the price (www.priceline.com used to do something like this) or simply do an auction on ebay.
Looking at flights, for example to LAX departing SYD December 25 coming home 2 weeks later.
The cheapest nonstop is around $1600 return for an adult & around $1200 for child.
If the auction started with minimum of $999 for everyone, which is a really good price point (so no age discrimination, except no unaccompanied minors), the airline would nearly get the same as the kids fare.
If a blind auction, they could accept whatever figure they wanted to.
Is this a good or bad idea ?
There seems to be a disconnect between what price sensitive passengers want to pay & what airlines will accept.
But if airlines either auctioned off some seats, with fixed dates, perhaps this might help them clear some seats without advertising lower prices.
Passengerscould have make an offer, so one one except those making the offer, could see the price (www.priceline.com used to do something like this) or simply do an auction on ebay.
Looking at flights, for example to LAX departing SYD December 25 coming home 2 weeks later.
The cheapest nonstop is around $1600 return for an adult & around $1200 for child.
If the auction started with minimum of $999 for everyone, which is a really good price point (so no age discrimination, except no unaccompanied minors), the airline would nearly get the same as the kids fare.
If a blind auction, they could accept whatever figure they wanted to.
Is this a good or bad idea ?