My platonic ideal would be an online ticketing system with a built-in secondary market.
What I'd like to be able to do is buy a ticket online exactly the same way you make a reservation on OpenTable - you enter your desired time, and if it's not available, you can modify the inputs to see what fits into your schedule. This is much more convenient and efficient than a constant stream of emails and telephone calls.
The problem with ticketing systems is that the further in advance you book a reservation, the greater the likelihood that you're going to have to change it later on. If I book a table for 4 next week, chances are that everyone who agreed to the reservation will be able to make it. If I book it three months in advance, it's very probable that one or more people will have something come up. That's where the secondary market comes in.
Suppose, for example, you book a table for 4, only to discover the other couple has had an acrimonious split involving tears, highly improbable suppositions on each others' lineage, broken crockery, traumatized pets, police tape, and/or fire(s). Your four-top is now a two-top, and you're on the hook for two rather expensive tickets.
Instead of going online and stress out trying to find various buyers at the last minute, you should be able to cancel directly through the exact same system you purchased the tickets from in the first place. What happens next is as follows:
1. The tickets now become available via the original purchasing system. Between the time they are 'cancelled' and the date of the reservation, anyone trying to book online will see those spots available for purchase.
2. If those tickets are re-sold within a certain grace period (say, up to 7 days before the day of the reservation), then the original owners of the tickets are not charged. They've given up their spot, but somebody else was available with plenty of notice. Nobody's harm, no foul.
3. If those tickets are re-sold later than that (say, 6 days or less until the date of the reservation), then the price of the tickets for re-sale gets reduced in the hopes of increasing the chance of a sale, and the original purchasers are liable for the difference. The scale can change the closer it gets to the reservation date - an additional 10% off for each day headed into the reservation.
4. If those unused tickets are not sold, then the original purchaser is liable for the full cost of the tickets.
This manages to reduce risk for the restaurant owner, while also helping mitigate some of the risk borne by the customer.
phillipfoss wrote:Open table is a rip off. A lot of systems are trying to move in on their ground, but same story... So far.
Very curious to hear what you dislike about our system.
I don't know anything about the economics of OpenTable, so I'd love to hear more details about your issues with it.
One of the issues w our current system is the amount of time we spend telling guests we don't have space available. I would like to avoid ticketing b/c I like the interaction involved, and if we were to adopt it, we would do it differently.
As mentioned above, the calender system on OpenTable is its biggest appeal; it's much easier for both you and the customer to handle it electronically than to spend a lot of time trying to explain each others' schedules.
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