Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search Costs

This paper presents a switching strategy between the admission control and the pricing control policies in a queueing system with two types of customers. For an arriving first-type customer, the decision maker has an option on which policy to choose between the two control policies; that is, one det...

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Main Author: Jae-Dong Son
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2015-01-01
Series:Advances in Operations Research
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/587103
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spelling doaj-ef64fac03a3c41f1bd3794d08b88b2a02020-11-24T20:46:22ZengHindawi LimitedAdvances in Operations Research1687-91471687-91552015-01-01201510.1155/2015/587103587103Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search CostsJae-Dong Son0Department of Industrial and Information Systems Engineering, Soongsil University, 511 Sangdo-dong, Dongjak-ku, Seoul 156-743, Republic of KoreaThis paper presents a switching strategy between the admission control and the pricing control policies in a queueing system with two types of customers. For an arriving first-type customer, the decision maker has an option on which policy to choose between the two control policies; that is, one determines whether or not to admit the customer’s request for the service (admission control) or decides a price of the customer’s request and offers it to the customer (pricing control). The second-type customers are only served when no first-type customers are present in the system in order to prevent the system from being idle. This would yield an extra income, which we refer to as the sideline profit. The so-called search cost, which is a cost paid to search for customers, creates the search option on whether to continue the search or not. We clarify the properties of the optimal switching strategy as well as the optimal search policy in relation to the sideline profit in order to maximize the total expected net profit. In particular, we show that when the sideline profit is sufficiently large, the two optimal switching thresholds exist with respect to the number of first-type customers in the system.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/587103
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jae-Dong Son
spellingShingle Jae-Dong Son
Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search Costs
Advances in Operations Research
author_facet Jae-Dong Son
author_sort Jae-Dong Son
title Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search Costs
title_short Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search Costs
title_full Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search Costs
title_fullStr Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search Costs
title_full_unstemmed Optimal Switching Strategy between Admission Control and Pricing Control Policies with Two Types of Customers and Search Costs
title_sort optimal switching strategy between admission control and pricing control policies with two types of customers and search costs
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Advances in Operations Research
issn 1687-9147
1687-9155
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This paper presents a switching strategy between the admission control and the pricing control policies in a queueing system with two types of customers. For an arriving first-type customer, the decision maker has an option on which policy to choose between the two control policies; that is, one determines whether or not to admit the customer’s request for the service (admission control) or decides a price of the customer’s request and offers it to the customer (pricing control). The second-type customers are only served when no first-type customers are present in the system in order to prevent the system from being idle. This would yield an extra income, which we refer to as the sideline profit. The so-called search cost, which is a cost paid to search for customers, creates the search option on whether to continue the search or not. We clarify the properties of the optimal switching strategy as well as the optimal search policy in relation to the sideline profit in order to maximize the total expected net profit. In particular, we show that when the sideline profit is sufficiently large, the two optimal switching thresholds exist with respect to the number of first-type customers in the system.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/587103
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