Blog by Sumana Harihareswara, Changeset founder

12 Nov 2007, 12:50 p.m.

Boston Visit and Greyhound Game Theory

Hi, reader. I wrote this in 2007 and it's now more than five years old. So it may be very out of date; the world, and I, have changed a lot since I wrote it! I'm keeping this up for historical archive purposes, but the me of today may 100% disagree with what I said then. I rarely edit posts after publishing them, but if I do, I usually leave a note in italics to mark the edit and the reason. If this post is particularly offensive or breaches someone's privacy, please contact me.

On Saturday I took a Greyhound bus to Boston to visit Julia and Moss, who have a new place in Cambridge, Mass. Another objective: to get a day's head start on reuniting with Leonard, who had just spent a week and a half near Boston on business.

I found the one-day trip wonderful and intend on returning; what I saw of Boston I liked (what a civilized bus terminal they have!) and of course Moss and Julia are a powerhouse. And Greyhound has a deal where if you buy your round-trip ticket online, Boston-NYC roundtrip is $30.

However! A ticket from Greyhound using that special fare is not, despite the date and time and bus number printed upon it, a specific boarding pass for that bus. It is a general pass that can get you on any bus on that route, for something like a year after the purchase date. So if you arrive a half hour early for your bus, as the ticket suggests, and there's a bus right there and there's room, you can get on that bus! But that means that the bus is first-come, first-served. Should you arrive on time at 9am and find a huge line in front of you, even if your ticket says 9am and theirs don't, they'll get on before you. If the bus runs out of room, you'll have to take the 10am bus. A fellow behind me in line at the Port Authority was vocally unhappy about this with a Greyhound employee, who didn't sooth him terribly well.

And yet! I recently noticed a sidebar notice on Greyhound's web site, in the middle of the purchase process:

Reserve your seat and preboard the bus for only $5.

Available on select schedules only at select terminals.

Reserve Seating can only be purchased in station at the designated ticket line. Customers must be prepared to board 20 minutes prior to schedule departure. See ticket agent for details.

And indeed the not-terribly-amiable Greyhound employee at Port Authority mentioned this $5 reserved-seat upgrade to the disgruntled passenger, so he and a few others who overheard her took her up on it. I assured the people behind me that, despite how very much it sounded like a scam or entrepreneurialism on the part of the Greyhound agent, it was legit. The new VIPs clustered in a new, separate line; they'd board the next bus before our line did.

But then we wondered: what are the game-theoretic implications of this ticketing system?

  1. If the people in line behind me do it, and I don't, I lose out, so I have to do it.
  2. By induction, everyone has to buy the upgrade to get on the next bus. If everyone does it, no one benefits (except that Greyhound makes $5n). Prisoner's dilemma?
  3. But there is a limit on the number of seats on the bus! So only 60 people can be sold reserved-seat upgrades for the 9am bus, and everyone else has to wait for the next (10am) bus.
  4. So I should convince people ahead of me in line to buy the upgrade, so fewer seats are available to the people behind me.
  5. But the people in front of me have a lower incentive to buy them....unless they fear those behind them. Time to scaremonger?

I didn't buy an upgrade and I made it onto the next bus anyway. Thoughts?

Comments

Julia
http://www.m14m.net/julia
12 Nov 2007, 21:45 p.m.

Well, if you are in the front of the line and you are guaranteed a seat, but it's still an hour to the time, it might be worth it to pay the $5 and go somewhere to eat or browse the bestsellers or what have you and come back at the appointed time to board, secure that you will have a seat.

mikepop
http://bedope.com
14 Nov 2007, 9:31 a.m.

Have you tried the Chinatown-to-Chinatown bus?

Sumana Harihareswara
14 Nov 2007, 10:22 a.m.

Aha! Julia has a point.

Mike: I've done a Chinatown bus once or twice. The Greyhound buses go way more often, you get to wait for them indoors, the drivers and agents speak fluent English, and all the buses are legit and certified to travel on highways. And they usually don't inflict a DVD on you. So I'm willing to pay the extra $5.

Sarah
15 Nov 2007, 9:54 a.m.

DVDs on buses aren't afflictions, they're added value. Especially if they include fight scenes.