In route research, I've seen some routes whereby the seats are a few hundred percent greater than the demand, yet others whereby the demand and seats are quite even.
Does the demand column show demand remaining or overall demand?
If it is overall demand, why do some of these routes have so many more seats than demand?
Thanks!
Demand Data
Started by leigh, Nov 21 2010 01:46 PM
#1
Posted 21 November 2010 - 01:46 PM
#2
Posted 21 November 2010 - 02:39 PM
The demand is the overall demand. It's called competition!
#3
Posted 15 January 2011 - 01:10 PM
Further to this, I am trying to understand what the data actually means.
Say for example if the demand is '48', is that 48 seats per flight, day, week, or just some arbitrary demand figure? It would be useful to understand in order to gauge the size of aircraft required for a particular route.
Say for example if the demand is '48', is that 48 seats per flight, day, week, or just some arbitrary demand figure? It would be useful to understand in order to gauge the size of aircraft required for a particular route.
#4
Posted 15 January 2011 - 01:55 PM
Welcome to AE!
Demand is by default (can change to weekly, monthly in the settings) calculated by day. When you start a route that is an interval of 7, you will get the seats number exactly that of the the aircraft times the daily frequency. If the flight is less than 7x a day, the daily seats is divided by the frequency.
Hope that helps.
Demand is by default (can change to weekly, monthly in the settings) calculated by day. When you start a route that is an interval of 7, you will get the seats number exactly that of the the aircraft times the daily frequency. If the flight is less than 7x a day, the daily seats is divided by the frequency.
Hope that helps.
R6 - NSW Airlines
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