Coaching

Dynamic Pricing

Ticket-sales company Ticketmaster might be adopting a dynamic pricing structure in the future, according to reports from CEO Sean Moriartyโ€™s keynote address at SXSW. The address came on the heels of several years of challenges to the once-dominant ticketing service, culminating in concert-promoter LiveNationโ€™s decision to end its deal with Ticketmaster and offer its own ticketing service.

Ticket-sales company Ticketmaster might be adopting a dynamic pricing structure in the future, according to reports from CEO Sean Moriartyโ€™s keynote address at SXSW. The address came on the heels of several years of challenges to the once-dominant ticketing service, culminating in concert-promoter LiveNationโ€™s decision to end its deal with Ticketmaster and offer its own ticketing service.

The proliferation of online re-sale services, which often use automated software to buy up hundreds of event tickets to then sell at multi-tiered (read: higher) prices, has set the course for industry-wide dynamic pricing, Moriarty said. In an effort to compete with, and hopefully neutralize, these re-sellers, Moriarty proposed a system where the price of your ticket might continually change from its on-sale date right up until the event.

โ€œItโ€™s going to take another five years to get very fluid dynamic pricing applied to wide swaths of inventory,โ€ Moriarty told the crowd at SXSW. โ€œThe technology is there … I donโ€™t think thereโ€™s any downside. The perceived risk would be that with greater transparencyโ€”if people look at a show and a show appears to be a dogโ€”it reflects poorly potentially on the artist, potentially on the promoter, potentially on the venue.

โ€œUltimately, when you look at what a ticket isโ€”a license to sit in a specific seat at a specific timeโ€”and recognizing how much the value may fluctuate, it lends itself to a marketplace approach.โ€

It remains to be seen how or when the changes will take place, or how they will affect the once-cooperative, now-competitive relationship between Ticketmaster and LiveNation.