Christiaan Behrens , Gerben de Jong , Jos van Ommeren
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From silver to platinum: The impact of frequent flier tier levels on air travellers’ behaviour
We estimate the switching costs created by tier levels, one of the main components of airline frequent flier programs, by exploiting discrete tier thresholds. We first demonstrate that travellers increase their demand to reach a higher tier level just before the end of the calendar year when tier levels are determined, but do not manipulate demand in earlier months. This allows for a novel fuzzy discontinuity approach to identify causal demand effects of higher tier levels, from which we derive the airline switching costs. While the lowest level creates only negligible switching costs, the switching costs associated with the highest tier level are in the range of 30%–41% of the price of a ticket, representing an important determinant of travel behaviour in airline markets. These results especially provide evidence of the use of tier levels to induce loyalty from high-frequency travellers for whom free flight awards alone would not create substantial switching costs.
期刊介绍:
Transportation Research: Part B publishes papers on all methodological aspects of the subject, particularly those that require mathematical analysis. The general theme of the journal is the development and solution of problems that are adequately motivated to deal with important aspects of the design and/or analysis of transportation systems. Areas covered include: traffic flow; design and analysis of transportation networks; control and scheduling; optimization; queuing theory; logistics; supply chains; development and application of statistical, econometric and mathematical models to address transportation problems; cost models; pricing and/or investment; traveler or shipper behavior; cost-benefit methodologies.