The earliest revenue management model is known as Littlewood’s rule, developed by Ken Littlewood while working at British Overseas Airways Corporation.
Littlewood proposed the first static single-resource quantity-based RM model.
[1] It was a solution method for the seat inventory problem for a single-leg flight with two fare classes.
The total capacity is
The demand has a probability distribution whose cumulative distribution function is denoted
The question now is how much demand for class 2 should be accepted so that the optimal mix of passengers is achieved and the highest revenue is obtained.
Littlewood suggests closing down class 2 when the certain revenue from selling another low fare seat is exceeded by the expected revenue of selling the same seat at the higher fare.
[2] In formula form this means: accept demand for class 2 as long as: where This suggests that there is an optimal protection limit
If the capacity left is less than this limit demand for class 2 is rejected.
can be calculated using what is called Littlewood’s rule:
This gives the optimal protection limit, in terms of the division of the marginal revenue of both classes.
Alternatively bid prices can be calculated via Littlewood's model is limited to two classes.
Peter Belobaba developed a model based on this rule called expected marginal seat revenue, abbreviated as EMSR, which is an